From ronsmuerto@hotmail.com Sat Nov 14 08:39:25 1998
Death of a Scientologist
Studio Time: From Religion and Society
Narrator:
Scientology: The controversial organization has been leaning
increasingly toward politics in the past few years. The
psycho-group has been under surveillance by the Office of
Constitutional Protection since the summer of 1997. Some think
this to have been an overreaction on the part of the State, others
would rather ban Scientology, because the group, to them,
appears to be dangerous. In this discussion it is easy to lose sight
of the future of Scientology victims. According to the statement
of the organization there are about 30,000 members in Germany.
In the past year, one of these members died, Konrad A., under
mysterious circumstances. The Munich Chief District Attorney's
office is now investigating. In response, Scientology refuses any
responsibility for the death of the man, and is designated by the
the police investigation as a "malevolent third party under
suspicion." Hear the story of the death of Konrad A. from his
brother's side. "Deadly Career - in the Clutches of Scientology":
a broadcast by Claudia Sanders
1. VOICEOVER: In a car.
Narrator: A two hour drive from Munich. The farm house lies
somewhat off the road. In the front garden, across from the front
door, stands a small devotional picture, with red roses, and
candle, and a photo of Konrad. He died this past summer, after
he lie in a coma for three weeks. The 43-year-old was a
Scientologist. Today his family is still puzzled by the cause of
Konrad's death, who outwardly appeared hale and hearty.
2. VOICEOVER: In a large City.
Narrator: (Cutback:)
Fall 1974. Konrad had just finished his military service, he lived
in Munich and received training with the Department of
Transportation. This is when he encountered Scientology. They
promised him outright miracles if he would use the Scientology
technology - called Dianetics. They referred their novice to the
standard work of the Scientology founder, L. Ron Hubbard:
"Dianetics - the Textbook for Human Understanding." That is
where Konrad, then 20 years old, found the following, and more,
about Dianetics:
3. VOICEOVER/Quotation
"It enables a plane of ability and rationality for people which is far
over the average, and it does not destroy his life force or
personality, but raises it."
Narrator:
Scientologists, according to the standard text of the organization,
have at their disposal a higher degree of intelligence, become less
sick, and they do not even catch colds. This is what Konrad
believed. Even if he hardly spoke with his family about it.
Perhaps he was aware, because of his strong Catholic
environment, that it would have branded him as an outsider.
Konrad's brother Bernd recalls:
4. VOICEOVER:
The topic of Scientology was always off-limits with us. One
knew full well that he had contact with Scientology, but that was
not a topic of discussion with us. He had not brought up the
subject spontaneously, therefore he had tried neither to bring one
of us into SC nor to recruit for SC, nor had he expressed himself
about SC in any way, there was nothing like that.
Narrator.
It is really unusual that a Scientology member not recruit for the
organization. Even if Konrad himself had no interest in recruiting
his family, he would still have been under pressure to take as
many courses and buy as many books as possible. He had given
Scientology almost all of his money:
5. VOICEOVER:
We found piles and sacks of bills, the so-called donations to SC,
they were so scattered about, we could have bundled them
together in a large bag, that's how many there were. And books,
all the books there were, and other documents, everything that
could have had to do with SC, there you found it, in the room
where Konrad lived.
Narrator:
In spite of his long-term membership, Konrad's career as a
Scientologist did not run a smooth course: as soon as he would
reach his Scientology course goal, he would find out that he
would have to start all over again, and would have to take more
expensive courses. Naturally all of this was done with the
promise that one was only trying to help him to lead a successful
life.
Finally Konrad made what was to be for him a fateful decision:
He had a lifetime position; he worked as a bus driver. He gave it
up: be became an independent bus driver - Scientology would
help him with that:
6. VOICEOVER:
He made himself independent, so around 3 years ago and for the
past 2 years his personality was very, very much changed. He
had always been the life of the party, he was eager, was very
open, the last 2 years he became visibly more thoughtful, more
depressive, absent. We all thought that had to do with his
self-employment, but in hindsight I see it differently now. He had
other problems.
Narrator:
In particular, financial problems. Because in order to make more
money for Scientology, Konrad did not hesitate to take out
loans, even on his parents' house. His mother signed the contract,
she believed her son, that he would pay everything back -- an
investment in the future. That was the point of Scientology's
discussion with the family.
In Spring, 1997, a news story appeared on television about the
mysterious death of an American Scientologist, Lisa McPherson.
Apparently she wished to leave the organization before she got
into an accident with her car. Then she came into the
headquarters of Scientology, in Clearwater, Florida. She
remained there for 17 days, until she was delivered dead to a
hospital. The autopsy revealed that the 36-year-old was heavily
de-hydrated and had lain in a coma for days before her death.
The Scientologists had prescribed high doses of vitamins for her.
Konrad's reaction to this show:
7. VOICEOVER
While the show was running, my mother said to him, look at that,
what kind of thing is going on there, and he was terribly amused,
he laughed. He only laughed and said that what the media was
doing was a horrible injustice, nothing like that had happened, it
was all made up in order to do away with SC, the people are all
actors, the whole thing is made up, and I haven't seen a funnier
show in a long time. That's how he reacted.
Narrator:
Konrad did not realize that his death would prove to be parallel
to that of the American.
Several weeks later, it was July 17, 1997:
8. VOICEOVER:
That was on Thursday evening about 9 o'clock, I would guess,
or 9:30, when the call came, Konrad was lying on the couch
here, then he got the call, there were three or four of us. Here on
the table is where he took the call, and you could tell right away
that that was a call which deeply affected him. He got shaky right
away, started sweating, he was very nervous and he used
sentence fragments, he couldn't even speak right, that's how
nervous he was, and, in closing, he said, "yes is good, I'll do
that," or "yes I'm coming", I don't know any more. He then
hung up, packed his things and a half hour later he drove away with
the bus and we could tell by the sound of his engine that he was
headed for Munich.
Narrator:
How Konrad spent the last days of his life has not been fully
explained. Bernd had found out that his brother apparently
received the assignment to drive Scientologists to Frankfurt am
Main. They demonstrated there on July 21 for "religious
freedom" and against the "suppression of Scientology" in
Germany. On the way there, but still in Munich, Konrad got into
an accident with his bus - a moving violation - as the police
reported. No mention was made in the report, according to
Bernd, of his brother being hurt. Konrad left the bus there and
several Scientologists drove with their own cars to Frankfurt.
Konrad rented a car, which again, -- sometime later -- was
involved in a slight accident. The driver was not Konrad, but a
woman, apparently also a Scientologist. The trip continued
nevertheless, at least that is apparently what a Scientologist told
Konrad's brother later on. Arriving at a Frankfurt hotel, a waiter
allegedly noticed that Konrad was not doing well. The
43-year-old is said to have then been brought to Munich.
9. VOICEOVER:
The emergency doctor was notified about 10:30 at night, he
drive down Bergstrasse, since that is the location of SC and the
emergency doctor had then said, when I talked with him later, a
couple of days later, he had said, that my brother was hardly
breathing when he arrived, he was with the Scientologists, be
was barely still breathing, he had to resuscitate him immediately,
brought him to the hospital which was two kilometers [about a
mile and a quarter] away, the Scientologists drove with him and
went with him into the hospital where he then fell into a coma
towards one o'clock in the morning. And stayed in a coma for
three weeks and never woke up again.
Narrator:
The doctors were faced with a dilemma - no therapy could be
recommended for the patient.
10. VOICEOVER
The course of the illness, such as the story in the hospital, was
very atypical as far as the doctors were concerned, so they
recommended or asked us, that my brother should have an
autopsy, and we agreed, because we were also of the opinion,
from the start, that something about the matter had not gone
properly... It was determined at the autopsy, that Konrad had
very, very poor organs.
Narrator:
Bernd researched some more on his own -- he wanted to know
what role Scientology had played in the death of his brother. Not
least of all, he tried to understand what had so fascinated his
brother about this organization -- which is described by critics as
a "cartel which despises people."
11. VOICEOVER:
I drove there in anger, constant anger, because I knew that there
was something which the Scientologists knew that they would not
tell me about my brother's last hours or days. They appeased my
anger, showed sympathy, sympathy which I never see today,
where this sympathy came from, that was very unique at the time.
I was down there four, five times to find something out,
information about my brother, but I basically learned nothing
concrete.
Besides the documents and books which Bernd found in the
room of his dead brother, there is little else left over. Bills
indicate that Konrad had been taking mega-doses of vitamin
preparations for years. Scientologists are supposed to take
vitamins when they receive auditing. This auditing is a procedure
invented by Scientology. The adherents are supposed to be freed
from psychic problems by a constant stream of questions and
answers. The Federal Criminal Investigation Office (BKA) has
been describing this auditing as brainwashing since the Seventies.
Scientologists also take vitamins when they undergo a purification
process -- a so-called "rundown." A rundown is necessary,
according to Scientology text, if someone has taken drugs. The
use of drugs is prohibited in Scientology. However, for
Scientologists, not only alcohol and other narcotics, but also
medication -- even aspirin -- is viewed as a drug. How many of
these "cures" Konrad had undergone is still unclear. It is
also not clear what effects come about when someone takes high doses
of vitamins for years at a time. It is known that a long-term
overdose of certain vitamins can cause serious internal organ
damage. How much this explains the fact that Konrad's organs
were in such poor shape is uncertain.
What is certain is that Konrad believed that
Scientology-Dianetics technology could prevent illnesses. It was
for this reason that he, as a self-employed person, did without
health insurance. How much Scientologists trust the Dianetic
ability to heal is contained in the so-called "Book Zero",
the first Dianetic writing of the Scientology founder:
12. VOICEOVER/Quotation
Arthritis, dermatitis, allergies, asthma, some heart complaints, eye
trouble, sinusitis, ulcers, etc. are just a small sample of the list of
psychosomatic illnesses. Peculiar aches and pains, which appear
in various parts of the body, are generally of a psychosomatic
nature. Migraine is a psychosomatic illness and can, as can all the
others, be healed with the help of Dianetic therapy, without
exception (and healed in the fullest sense of the word.)
Narrator:
Healing with Dianetics? That and Konrad's death have reached
the ears of the Munich State Prosecutor. Is Scientology
practicing some kind of treatment that only doctors should be
using? This would be a violation of the law against quack
doctors. Does this include treatments with vitamin preparations
that could cause long-term health problems?
Over a month ago, more than 100 police swept through the
Munich Scientology buildings. They confiscated documents by
the box full; the information which comes from that is supposed
to disclose what actually happened to Konrad before his death.
It has not yet been determined whether the district attorney will
press charges against Scientologists. It may be weeks before the
documents are all appraised. In the meantime, Konrad's family
tries to find their way back to a normal life, though that will not
be easy for them:
13. VOICEOVER.
Today letters and newspapers from Scientologists arrive daily,
letters personally written, such as, "Hello Konrad! How are you
doing?" In closing, the letters offer, this week, to sell 6 books by
Ron, etc. Mail constantly arrives as if nothing had ever
happened. Mail arrives as if he were still alive.
Narrator:
Bernd and his family must pay dearly for the Scientology
membership of their brother. Moreover:
14. VOICEOVER.
We had already noticed, before the estate settlement, that we
would have to assume a huge debt, the debt to the bank was so
large and so high, that we had to sell the land, the farm and the
woods, we had to sell it all to settle the debt with the bank (and
this mountain of debt is, according to our research, all a result of
nothing else but Scientology.)
Narrator:
What has been left to the family is their parents' home only.
Bernd estimates that his brother must have given at least 600,000
marks [about $430,000] to Scientology. Add to that the hospital
bills of 40,000 marks, which must still be paid.
The family is financially ruined, but much worse are the doubts:
why was Konrad with Scientology? Could the family have saved
him? Could anyone, after 23 years, have freed Konrad from the
clutches of the organization? These are questions which remain
unanswered for Konrad's family.
As said, the story of Konrad is a subjective story. And not the
half of it is that Scientology denies any responsibility for Konrad's
death. Police investigation designates the organization as a
"malicious third party under suspicion."
German Scientology News:
http://cisar.org/trnmenu.htm
Was Hubbard Murdered?
http://www.innernet.net/joecisar/rvy.htm
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Newsgroups: alt.religion.scientology
Subject: Deaths in Scientology: Konrad Aigner
From: ronsmuerto@hotmail.com
Date: Sat, 14 Nov 1998 16:39:25 GMT
March 11, 1998
DLF
A Broadcast by Claudia Sanders
Length: 19 minutes
http://home.sol.no/~spirous/CoS/archive/events/9805henson-case/nots34_anal.html
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