http://www.sptimes.com/News/052300/TampaBay/2_attorneys_clash_ove.shtml
SPT: Minton trial
2 attorneys clash over tale of tapes
They dispute whether videotapes showing Robert S. Minton hitting a
Scientologist with a picket sign prove battery.
By THOMAS C. TOBIN
LARGO -- Four video cameras were rolling the night Robert S. Minton was
charged for striking a Church of Scientology staffer with his picket sign.
Three tapes show the staffer, Richard W. Howd, following Minton with one
of the cameras, often coming within 2 feet of Minton's face.
They show Minton telling Scientologists they are all complicit in the
death of Lisa McPherson, the 36-year-old Scientologist who died in 1995
while in the church's care.
And each tape ends the same way: A frustrated Minton calls police on his
cell phone. He crosses a side street, walking away from Scientology's Fort
Harrison Hotel in downtown Clearwater. In an instant, he yells at Howd to
stop following him and wheels around, pointing his picket sign in Howd's
direction.
Howd's face collides hard with the edge of the sign, his head snapping
back as he spins to the sidewalk.
Although no one disputed this chain of events, attorneys in Minton's trial
Monday couldn't have disagreed more on how a jury should interpret them.
Minton, a New England millionaire who is financing a campaign to reform
Scientology, is being tried on a charge of misdemeanor battery in the Oct.
31, 1999, incident.
"Mr. Minton is the one that lost his cool," Pinellas-Pasco Assistant State
Attorney Bill Tyson said in his opening statement to the jury of four
women and two men. "Mr. Minton is the one who was provoking people that
night."
But Minton's attorney, Denis de Vlaming, said Minton was the victim of a
Scientology plan to choreograph the incident and discredit his client. De
Vlaming said church staffers followed Minton that day after he arrived at
Tampa International Airport and, later, as he arrived to check in at the
Belleview Biltmore Resort Hotel and Spa in Belleair.
De Vlaming linked those actions to a 1967 Scientology directive known as
"Fair Game." Written by church founder L. Ron Hubbard, it stated that an
enemy of Scientology "may be deprived of property or injured by any means
by any Scientologist" and "may be tricked, sued or lied to or destroyed."
Fair Game was canceled the following year, but de Vlaming pointed to
wording in the cancellation notice that, he said, shows that its substance
is still in force.
Church officials say Fair Game has been grossly misinterpreted by critics.
"It is the manner in which they silence critics," de Vlaming said. Minton
"had an absolute right to prevent them from getting into his face any
further."
De Vlaming told jurors that Howd wanted to get hit in the same way a
basketball player sacrifices his body and commits a foul to block an
opponent from scoring.
The incident also was caught on tape by a church security camera and
another church staffer.
Tyson, the prosecutor, argued that Howd never said a word to Minton and
that three other Scientologists who were flanking Minton that night simply
told him to go home.
Tyson also noted it was 10:30 on a Sunday night, when few people were
around to see Minton's impromptu picket.
Howd told jurors he taped Minton closely so the church would have a full
record of what he said and did. He also said he did it to deter Minton,
whose anti-Scientology organization, the Lisa McPherson Trust, is based in
Clearwater.
Under questioning from de Vlaming, Howd said he caught up with Minton
after "somebody called in" to tip him off. He said Minton's language on
Internet postings sounded threatening and "I wanted to know where he was
staying for the safety and security of staff and parishioners."
De Vlaming also questioned Howd's reaction to being hit by the sign, which
consisted of two foam posters held together with small metal clips.
At 5 feet 11 and 210 pounds, Howd, 34, fell after the edge of the sign and
one of the clips hit him near the left eye, causing a small cut and a
scratch.
An ambulance took him to Morton Plant Hospital for X-rays. Howd said he
felt back pain and didn't want to take chances.
http://www.sptimes.com/News/052300/TampaBay/2_attorneys_clash_ove.shtml
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rkeller@netaxs.com (Rod Keller)
23 May 2000 11:15:31 GMT
St. Petersburg Times
May 23, 2000
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