http://www.sptimes.com/News/040900/TampaBay/2_judges__2_counties_.shtml
2 judges, 2 counties, and a lot of baloney
Do you think it's possible that those Scientologists, those
believers in e-meters and psychological audits and goose-stepping
group-think, are transmitting weird radio signals that have addled
some of the best minds in Pinellas County?
How else to explain the mental nose dives of the medical examiner
and the chief circuit judge when they were confronted with the story o
f the slow, miserable death in 1995 of Scientologist Lisa McPherson
at the Fort Harrison Hotel?
In February, Dr. Joan Wood, the medical examiner, reversed herself
and ruled McPherson's death an accident.
Last week, Judge Susan Schaeffer, who is presiding over the
criminal case, dropped hints heavy as bricks that she may throw
out the criminal charges against the church, for negligence and
practicing medicine without a license.
She even said she "felt sad" that members of the so-called
church had to see pickets in Clearwater protesting McPherson's death.
Never mind that nobody takes much pity on Baptists, Jews,
Catholics, Muslims or any other religious group when they get
banged around. Did Schaeffer have any concern for the feelings,
confused, depressed and psychotic though they may have been,
once possessed by Lisa McPherson?
Apparently not. She even said McPherson went to the hotel, after
a car accident and a bizarre episode in which she took off her
clothes, quite willingly.
Schaeffer said she was troubled by the state attorney's decision
to prosecute the church, and not individuals, because this could
be taken as an infringement on the right to practice religion.
This is the part I gag on: The Internal Revenue Service gave
Scientology the tax-exempt protection of a religion. If what they
do at Scientology headquarters in Clearwater is a religion, then
I'm a planet. Saturn, say, rings and all.
All reason has not, however, been lost.
For while Judge Schaeffer was in St. Petersburg, on her way to
perhaps making it even harder to get justice for Lisa McPherson,
a Tampa judge was doing the opposite.
Schaeffer has the criminal case. Hillsborough Circuit Judge
James Moody has the civil case, a wrongful death suit filed by
McPherson's estate.
On Friday, church lawyers asked him to throw out the suit, based
on some of the nonsense Judge Schaeffer had swallowed. They again
said Lisa McPherson was not out of her mind and made a free and
independent decision after her car wreck to go to the hotel.
Moody refused. He said whether McPherson had acted freely was
in dispute.
The judge also said he would do everything possible to keep
religion out of the case. The suit was about the circumstances
of McPherson's death, not about Scientology, he said.
Now, criminal and civil cases are different legal creatures. The
standard of proof in a criminal case is beyond a reasonable doubt.
The winning side of a civil case needs the preponderance, or the
majority, of the evidence. But those standards don't come into play
until a jury gets the case.
So what explains the difference between Schaeffer's and Moody's
ways of thinking, other than the possibility that those weird radio
signals haven't yet crossed the bay?
Is it the differences between two judges and their personalities?
Or are the politics of placating Scientology in play?
Nobody in Hillsborough County has these people in his face all the
time, the way they do in Pinellas County, or more particularly, the
county seat. Clearwater's city manager, Mike Roberto, spends half
his time making nice with the e-meter crowd.
Could it be politics? If the answer is yes, then don't worry about
radio signals. Worry that some of the best minds in Pinellas County
have been cowed by Scientology.
Return to The Skeptic Tank's main Index page.
By MARY JO MELONE
© St. Petersburg Times, published April 9, 2000
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