Clearwater Sun on Saturday 3-Nov-79
Scientologists plot city takeover
By Richard Leiby
WASHINGTON - The Church of Scientology of California had big plans for the
unsuspecting community of Clearwater when it arrived there in November
1975.
In essence, the sect wanted to control the city's politicians, media and
religious groups.
To that end, the Scientologists have evidently failed. Hardly any
Clearwater resident is not skeptical of the sect's proclaimed goals and
"reform" activities.
Nevertheless, the church has purchased $8 million in Clearwater buildings
and land and continues to work for the potential to exert the political
pressure it needs to gain acceptance.
Documents released here, as well as activities of Clearwater Scientology
groups, indicate the sect has no intention of letting up in its quest to
somehow "take control."
In December 1975, top church leaders were plotting to use the United
Churches of Florida, their front group, as an instrument to "make allies
of religious and local government opinion leaders," according to the
documents.
The next step, Scientology correspondence shows, was to attempt to
discredit or alienate groups or persons who did not support the United
Churches.
"If we unite all groups into an interplay and use all forces... and
channel them, we have a very big chance of winning. So we can and must
take the lead. And we will ourselves develop many leaders,"
the documents quote leaders as saying.
But secrecy was the prerequisite for achieving the goal, and that meant
controlling local media. As one guardian order states, Scientologists
must begin to "proof up ourselves against any threat by taking control
of the key points in the Clearwater area."
Of course, once local papers began investigations that culminated in the
disclosure of the Scientology link to the United Churches in January 1976,
that part of the plan was useless.
Scientology, criticized in other parts of the nation and the world as a
mind-control cult, certainly was not to be welcomed with open arms by
political and religious leaders in Clearwater.
The failure of those early public relations attempts apparently led to the
development of a news scheme: Operation "Snow White", part of a
larger worldwide Scientology drive to eliminate all negative publicity about
the group.
Documents show that in November 1976, and in the following months,
Scientologists sought to uncover what they said were "false" sect
activity reports allegedly contained in the files of scores of local, county
and state government agencies.
The documents indicate the targets included the Clearwater and Dunedin
city commissions, the mayors' offices, the city attorneys' offices, police
departments and even planning and zoning boards. Also put under
surveillance were county agencies, including the health department, the
department of consumer affairs and the school system, according to the
documents.
The cult demanded numerous state agencies - even the Division of Hotels
and Restaurants - relinquish Scientology files. And the documents
indicate Scientologists were planted in the agencies to ensure compliance.
In most cases - the Dunedin mayor's office, for example, no files on
Scientology existed, but church officials vowed to press on.
"These guys are clean," a sect member wrote in appraising the
Dunedin mayor's office. "But the Dunedin Police Department and city
attorney definitely are not."
No documents indicated why the latter offices were not "clean."
Even a concerned citizen's letter to the Clearwater City Commission was
reason enough for a full-scale probe. A Clearwater couple wrote on Feb.
17, 1976, that they were suspicious of the Scientologists' motives and
wondered what could be done. The church officials who obtained a copy of
the letter termed that attitude a "false report... which could stand
to be corrected."
The documents now on public file at the U.S. Courthouse here do not
precisely detail the xtent of the Scientologists' attempt to infiltrate
offices in Clearwater. But larger scale disclosures are expected to
result as thousands of more documents are cleared for release by U.S.
District Judge Charles R. Richey.
Because the most recent documents on file here are dated 1976 and 1977, it
also is unclear whether clandestine "Snow White" operations continue
today in the old Fort Harrison hotel and Bank of Clearwater buildings.
But recently, Scientology-affiliated groups have launched local extensive
investigative campaigns against private agencies and some state officials.
The "elimination of false reports" is the goal of the
Clearwater-based American Citizens for Honesty in Government, which as
boasted recently of its investigations into State Department of
Transportation and local IRS and FBI activities.
ACHG is headed by Milton Wolfe, who arrived in Clearwater in late 1975 as
a spokesman for the United Churches, the Scientology front group.
Another group, the Committee for the Protection of Mental Patients'
Rights, has probed alleged abuse at local hospitals such as Anclote
Psychiatric Center and Horizon Hospital.
Both groups say they are dedicated to "social reform."
But critics, such as former Clearwater mayor Gabe Cazares, himself a
target of a Scientology smear effort, call such groups a "front for
continuing illegal Scientology activities."
"They exploit people and intimidate public officials for political ends
that further the goals of (L. Ron) Hubbard, their illustrious founder,"
Cazares said earlier this week. "They have become a politically fascist
organization."
A documented dated Nov. 4, 1974, and signed by Mary Sue Hubbard, the
founder's wife, explained to church officials how Scientology must avoid
being labeled a political group. The solution: "All political activity
is to be carried on via front groups."
While local church spokesmen say they cannot speak for convicted leaders
such as Mrs. Hubbard, the documents make clear there always has been a
connection between the guardian offices in England, Los Angeles and
presumably Clearwater.
An undated memo from Jane Kember, the worldwide guardian, indicted for
conspiracy and awaiting extradition in Englad, tells of a
"nonexistance" policy to be used when eliminating "false
reports." In Scientology terms, this apparently means church members
should do all they can to fight negative publicity. The letterhead on Miss
Kember's memo reads: "The Church of Scientology of California - Your
Guardian Angel To Complete Success."
Cazares has said the only way the Clearwater community can fight Scientology
is to "alienate them completely. Ostracize them. This will destroy
their power."
Such vehement resistance apparently was anticipated by Hubbard himself.
In a 1976 policy statement included in a package summarizing local "Show
White" efforts Hubbard declared:
"This one we win. No matter was skill, exactitude, cleverness or
boldness is required, this one we win.
"We never had any real opponents, technically or ethically. Now we will
have a long hard-fought battle and we will have no opponents at all."
Further facts
about this criminal empire may be found at
Operation Clambake and FACTNet.
Sun Staff Writer
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