Los Angeles, CA
More about Los Angeles, CA
April 23, 1985: A public announcement by Los Angeles Police Chief Daryl Gates disavowing any cooperation with Eugene Ingram, longtime Scientology agent, who claimed to have obtained a letter from the LAPD authorizing Ingram to eavesdrop on others.
September 3, 2008: Former Scientologist Susan Lentsch describes the ordeal of waiting for a visit from her daughter Katherine, who is in the Sea Org, and who has never received the promised three weeks of annual vacation.
Los Angeles, CA in the News
Date |
Title |
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October 31, 1992 |
Los Angeles Times: Scientologists Win a Battle in Long War |
Founded in 1978, the nonprofit Cult Awareness Network provides callers and media representatives with information about Scientology and other groups, and it suggests ways of evaluating any organization to determine if it is a destructive cult. Eight Scientologists won the right to attend a CAN conference. |
Los Angeles, CA, Press |
June 29, 1990 |
Los Angeles Times: On the Offensive Against an Array of Suspected Foes |
The Church of Scientology does not turn the other cheek. Ministers mingle with private detectives. "Sacred scriptures" counsel the virtues of combativeness. Parishioners double as paralegals for litigious church attorneys. |
harassment, Los Angeles, CA, Press |
June 29, 1990 |
Los Angeles Times: Suits, Protests Fuel a Campaign Against Psychiatry |
The Ritalin controversy seemed to emerge out of nowhere. It frightened parents, put doctors on the defensive and suddenly called into question the judgment of school administrators who authorize the drug's use to calm disruptive, hyperactive children. The uproar over Ritalin was triggered almost single-handedly by the Scientology movement. |
Los Angeles, CA, Press, Scientology and Society |
June 29, 1990 |
Los Angeles Times: A Lawyer Learns What It's Like to Fight the Church |
Attorney Joseph Yanny says his Century City law firm was burglarized four times and that Scientology-related documents turned up missing; that he has been spied upon by a church "plant" working as a secretary in his office; and that private investigators have camped outside his Hermosa Beach residence and shadowed him when he left. |
harassment, Los Angeles, CA, Press |
June 29, 1990 |
Los Angeles Times: The Battle with the I.R.S. |
Among its many adversaries, the Church of Scientology's longest-running feud has been with the Internal Revenue Service. So far, neither combatant has blinked. The IRS has revoked the tax-exempt status of various Scientology organizations, accusing them of operating in a commercial manner and of financially benefiting private individuals. From the late 1960s through mid-1970s, IRS agents classified Scientology as a "tax resister" and "subversive," a characterization later deemed improper by a judge. |
Los Angeles, CA, Press, Scientology and Society |
June 29, 1990 |
Los Angeles Times: The Battle with the "Squirrels" |
Hubbard contended that only church members are qualified to administer his self-improvement-type courses. Outsiders, he said, inevitably misapply the teachings, wreaking spiritual harm on their subjects. But those who have launched "independent" Scientology-style centers say Hubbard concocted this as an excuse to eliminate competition so he could charge exorbitant prices for his courses. |
harassment, Los Angeles, CA, Press |
June 28, 1990 |
Los Angeles Times: Costly Strategy Continues to Turn Out Bestsellers |
In some cases, sales of Hubbard's books apparently got an extra boost from Scientology followers and employees of the publishing firm. Showing up at major book outlets like B. Dalton and Waldenbooks, they purchased armloads of Hubbard's works, according to former employees. |
L. Ron Hubbard, Los Angeles, CA, Press |
June 27, 1990 |
Los Angeles Times: Reaching into Society |
Scientologists are disseminating Hubbard's writings in public and private school classrooms across the U.S., businesses and business groups, and detox programs, using front groups that seldom publicize their Scientology connections. |
front groups, Los Angeles, CA, Press |
June 27, 1990 |
Los Angeles Times: Scientology and the Schools |
The Scientology movement has launched a concerted campaign to gain a foothold in the nation's schools by distributing to children millions of copies of a booklet Hubbard wrote on basic moral values. |
front groups, Los Angeles, CA, Press |
June 27, 1990 |
Los Angeles Times: Converting the Business World |
Scientology is using a network of private consulting firms to gain a foothold in the U.S. business community. The firms promise businessmen higher earnings but appear to be mainly interested in recruiting new members for the church. |
Los Angeles, CA, Press, WISE |
Los Angeles, CA in the News
Date |
Title |
Blurb |
Tags |
September 3, 2008 |
Update from Susan Lentsch - Still No Visit from her Sea Org Daughter |
Former Scientologist Susan Lentsch describes the ordeal of waiting for a visit from her daughter Katherine, who is in the Sea Org, and who has never received the promised three weeks of annual vacation. |
disconnection, Los Angeles, CA, Open Letters, Portland, OR |
April 23, 1985 |
Los Angeles Police - Public Statement Regarding Eugene Ingram's Wiretapping |
A public announcement by Los Angeles Police Chief Daryl Gates disavowing any cooperation with Eugene Ingram, longtime Scientology agent, who claimed to have obtained a letter from the LAPD authorizing Ingram to eavesdrop on others. |
crimes, Documents, Eugene Ingram, harassment, Los Angeles, CA |
October 6, 1976 |
Michael Meisner Moves to a Scientology-Rented Apartment; Coverup Continues |
Michael Meisner moves into an apartment at 444 South Burlington Street in Los Angeles. The apartment was rented by Paul Poulon (Collections Officer for the Information Bureau); the Guardian's Office wanted to reduce expenses and it was cheaper for Meisner to hide out in an apartment than in hotel rooms. Meisner spends most of his days at local libraries doing research on the security of government buildings, in order to support one of the cover-up stories, _viz._, that he had entered various government buildings to do an expose on the lack of security. Cinty Raymond and Meisner meet approximately twice a week to discuss the ongoing cover-up. |
crimes, Guardian Office, Los Angeles, CA, Michael Meisner |
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