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The Intelligence Network
The Public Presentation of the Office of Special Affairs
In 1994 CSI distributed a booklet to journalists, which was titled
"Reference Guide To The Scientology Religion -- Answers To Questions
Most Commonly Asked By The Media." Next to other controversial issues,
such as Scientology's own penal colony, the "Rehabilitation Project
Force," CSI discussed the functions of its intelligence unit, the
"Office of Special Affairs." Under the chapter "What is the Office of
Special Affairs?" [Exh. No. 90, Excerpt] , CSI stated:
"The Office of Special Affairs (OSA) is the division of Church of
Scientology International responsible for interfacing with the society
at large, including legal affairs, public relations and community
outreach.
"Through a network of Directors of Special Affairs, who serve in local
churches, the Office of Special Affairs ensures that every church
maintains sound corporate status and complies with all legal and tax
requirements.
It also coordinates community affairs and outreach programs
participated in by the local churches, and national anti-drug
campaigns and interfaith activities."
A more detailed and acurate description of OSA's activities can be
found in Scientology's internal management guide, called "The Command
Channels of Scientology" where the organization had the following to
say [Exh. No. 91, Excerpt]:
"The Office of Special Affairs International (OSA Int) is a network
which extends through Continental Liaison Offices to org level
Department 20s, the Department of Special Affairs.
"The OSA Network is responsible for handling all external matters of
the Church (including legal, defense, government and media relations)
to the result of the total acceptance of Scientology and its founder,
L. Ron Hubbard. OSA helps create a safe environment for orgs to
operate in and expand by their actions. It gets this function done by
keeping orgs operating fully in accordance with the laws of the land,
by applying LRH Public Relations technology with the officials in the
org environment and ensuring the org is free of external enturbulence
and distraction so it can go on with the business of clearing its
community.
OSA Int is part of the Flag Command Bureaux and is headed by the
Commanding Officer OSA Int who is answerable to WDC OSA."
The Actual Activities of OSA
While the above mentioned internal description of OSA's activities is
certainly more specific than the one designed for the media, it
nevertheless omits one of OSA's principal functions, as it is indeed
Scientology's own intelligence service.
Within the last 18 years the OSA-network has conducted through its
employees, private investigators, attorneys and agents characteristic
intelligence operations. It has spied on critics and perceived
opponents of Scientology
- by the use of electronic surveillance methods through private
investigators,
- by means of infiltrating their social and professional life through
agents and
- by the use of legal discovery in civil cases through attorneys.
The intelligence gathered through the above operations has later been
used by OSA against these critics and perceived opponents of
Scientology for the purpose of
- discrediting them publicly by exposing details of their private and
professional life,
- declaring them as "criminals" for their "exposed" activities,
- finding reasons to start or expand litigation against them and
- using the information to turn third parties against them.
While individual activities of OSA will be described in a later
chapter, this sub-chapter details its theoretical and organizational
background.
Its Origins and the Basic Doctrines of the Office of Special Affairs
The Office of Special Affairs was officially founded in December 1983,
replacing the
"Guardian's Office"
(GO), Scientology's former
intelligence unit, which had been dissolved after eleven members were
sentenced to prison terms by federal courts for committing burglary
and infiltrating government offices. In its tax-exemption application
of 1993 the Church of Scientology submitted their side of the story
about the illegalities of the GO and its subsequent takeover by the
present Scientology-management under the leadership of David Miscavige
[Exh. No. 92]:
" CMO INT missions and investigations into GO WW in England and the
United States Guardian's Office in Los Angeles continued through the
end of 1981 and into 1982, weeding out anyone found to have had any
part in anything that appeared to have been illegal or who had
knowledge of and condoned the GO's illegal acts. Anyone found to be in
this category was removed from Church employ.
"The illegal acts of the GO and its perversion and abandonment of
Church policy were not taken lightly by Church management once they
became known. It required many months of investigation and severe
measures by dedicated members of CMO INT to finally cleanse the Church
of this corruption."
Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard laid out the foundation of GO's and
OSA's intelligence operations during the 1960s when he wrote several
confidential "Hubbard Communication Office Policy Letters" (HCOPLs),
"Guardian Orders" or unspecified orders that defined Scientology's
interest and methods in conducting such activities. These doctrines
are still part of the training material for OSA-personnel and a list
of them appeared in a so-called "checksheet" for the position of an
"OSA Investigations Officer." This document was issued in 1991 and
came to the surface a few years ago [Exh. No. 93].
In one of the documents that cover OSA's basic operating philosophy a
former dispatch of Hubbard was used to define the basic purpose of
intelligence. The "OSA Network Order No. 9" states [Exh. No. 94]:
"Intelligence is the process of informing one's command area of the
plans, characteristics and crimes of all opponents to one's own
activities and purposes."
In another document, "Intelligence Actions," Hubbard summarized the
fundamental activities that were required for such operations [Exh.
No. 95]:
"An Intelligence Officer collects data, files by name and area, writes
summaries and forwards the data to the correct terminal. This person
should never at any time consider themselves [sic] capable of giving
an estimate of the situation. This is done by the head of the
division.
"The Standard actions of intelligence are:
"1. Predict the trouble before it occurs by filing, cross indexing,
investigation of areas, statistics and other means.
"2. Investigate the for crimes, individual's who are creating trouble.
"3. Prosecute.
"This is standard, 1 2 3 action and should not be deviated from. The
maxim is ` when under attack attack'. The point is even if you
don't have enough data to win the case still attack LOUDLY. Reason
is, it is only those people that have crimes that will attack us, and
they will soon back off for fear of being found out when attacked
back."
A citation from a HCOPL, written in 1961 and titled "Department of
Government Affairs," stated the main goal for Scientology's
intelligence efforts, which has been deemed so important, that the
future Investigations Officer must demonstrate its understanding of it
through a "clay demo" [Exh. No. 93, page 6]:
"The goal of the department is to bring the government and hostile
philosophies or societies into a state of complete compliance with the
goals of Scientology. This is done by high-level ability to control
and its absence by low-level ability to overwhelm. Introvert such
agencies. Control such agencies. Scientology is the only game on earth
where everybody wins. There is no overt in bringing good order."
Under the chapter "Investigation Tech" another interesting document
can be found on that checksheet [Exh. No. 93, page 9], namely the "OSA
Network Order 35, Intelligence Estimations and Predictions" [Exh. No.
96]. While the Church of Scientology today tries to distance itself
from the Guardian's Office's activities, its current intelligence
service OSA has indeed inherited several of the doctrines, advices and
regulations L. Ron Hubbard had originally written for the GO. The
Network Order 35 is a prime example for the tactic of Scientology
management to let old GO-documents have a face-lift before re-naming
them "Network Orders" and using them again as official policy.
"Network Order 35" from April 7th, 1988 had actually been published 15
years earlier as "Guardian Order 907," issued on August 22nd, 1973
[Exh. No. 97].
Hubbard claimed that every opponent or critic of Scientology has in
fact crimes to hide, and that the task of Scientology's intelligence
service is it to uncover them and use them against the critics in
order to path the way for a future expansion of Scientology. Such
philosophy can be found throughout the writings of Hubbard, and
several of them are part of OSA's training material. One of those,
called "Enemy Names" [Exh. No. 93, page 14], stresses the importance
to fight Scientology's intelligence wars always on "enemy territory"
and explains how an interplay between the Intelligence section and the
Public Relations department can be used in such a battle [Exh. No.
98]:
"Intelligence data when gained can be fed back to PRO [Public
Relations Officer] for more spectacular confrontations.
"Intelligence uses the names for investigation, run back,
cross-filing.
"PRO uses the hostile confrontator [a Scientology critic] to guide his
own counter attacks.
"The effect at the least is to shut the hostile people up.
"This activity (press counter-attack such speakers) must not be
neglected.
"We happen to be fortunate, if you call it that, that persons hostile
to Scientology usually have criminal backgrounds even when in public
life. One doesn't always find these even when they exist but one at
least finds connections, which are useful.
"It is very sound strategy never to fight a battle on your own
territory or subject or even on the territory of an ally. Always fight
battles in enemy territory."
A big part of the earlier mentioned checksheet consists of various
policies that discuss either the tactics to be applied in
Scientology's war against its enemies (journalists, western
governments, psychiatry and Scientology critics in general) in order
to overwhelm them or how to protect the organizations against
government measures by safeguarding Scientology's status as a
religion.
The organizational structure of OSA
As the major activities of CSI are controlled and supervised by the
Religious Technology Center "to guarantee its orthodox use of the
religious doctrine," so are the intelligence operations of the Office
of Special Affairs. In a 1991-interview held with "Impact,"
Scientology's official membership-magazine, Mark Rathbun, then
"Inspector General for Ethics RTC," openly talked about various
OSA-operations against Scientology-enemies like Interpol, the
IRS &
Psychiatry and presented himself as its official supervisor [Exh. No.
99, Excerpt].
Asked for the purpose of his position within RTC, Rathbun, who had
"been working on external affairs for ten years," stated:
"To keep Scientology free from subversion, thus reinforcing the gains
of Scientology internationally."
Evidently, the OSA-network and its external affairs were areas that
came under the attention and supervision of Rathbun at that time.
The Office of Special Affairs International itself is the highest
echelon of the OSA-network. It is led by the "Commanding Officer OSA
International" (CO OSA Int.) [Exh. No. 91, Excerpt] and is solely
composed of Sea Org-members.
As OSA Int is part of the tactical management branch of CSI, its
primary purpose is to supervise and direct the activities of
OSA-Offices in the "Continental Liaison Offices" (CLOs) and in the
individual service organizations. While it normally doesn't become
directly involved in legal matters and intelligence operations on a
local level, OSA Int. conducts intelligence operations and litigates
in affairs that have national or international relevance for
Scientology.
To give an example for such relevance: When I participated in the
German television-documentary on Scientology in early February 1997
and the Church of Scientology learned that the producers would film in
the United States and interview American ex-Scientologists, mainly
public relations personnel from OSA Int. would deal from then on with
the television station in Germany and the producers in Florida.
On May 13th, 1996 a senior executive of OSA Int. was deposed during a
civil suit in Orange, California [Exh. No. 100, Excerpt]. During the
deposition Kurt Weiland, who identified himself as "Deputy Commanding
Officer OSA International," described the five main functions of OSA
Int.:
"OSA Int. has functions to the public representation of the Church and
to deal with the external affairs of the Church,
"Over the years, as the activities of the Church grew, and now we're
in over 120 countries of the world, the necessity to create a
department, that deals with legal and its corporate and tax affairs,
and of course, there's also increasing media interest if you grow, so
we also have a section that deals with the Public Relations affairs
and additionally, the Church has increasingly begun to affect the
environment within it exists not just here in the United States but
practically everywhere around the world.
"So we have a sizeable social reform function that is housed within
OSA Int. And there's some other departments which are purely internal
that facilitates the function of the Office of Special Affairs such as
personnel, hiring and accounting, things of that sort."
At a later point in the deposition, Weiland specified the individual
departments ("Bureaus"), which carry out those functions within OSA
International [Exh. No. 101, Excerpt]. Summarizing Weiland's
statements about the functions, the individual "bureau" designations
and additional information from a Scientology administrative
dictionary lead to the following organizational structure of OSA Int:
1 - Personnel Bureau Personnel
As it can be seen, "Bureau 4" combines the major external matters, in
which the Office of Special Affairs International is involved. More
specifically they comprise the following "Sections":
Public Relations Section: This involves all matters with media, press,
government and the general public. Scientology-staff that represent
organizations to the public, and especially media, are normally
so-called PR-Officers of the local, national or international
OSA-office. These staff are trained in "L. Ron Hubbard's
PR-technology" to turn any negative or controversial situation for
Scientology into a favorable one, while promoting Scientology's
"public work." They are also required to publicly attack Scientology's
enemies and destroy thereby their reputation.
Several OSA Int. staff have acted within the last years as official
spokes persons for CSI and OSA International: Gail Armstrong, Leisa
Goodman, Glenn Barton, the current Commanding Officer OSA Int
Michael Rinder,
Kurt Weiland and CSI's President
Heber Jentzsch,
who in fact is "ecclesiastically" a subordinate of Weiland,
although he is in fact the CEO of the whole corporation.
Legal Section: This section coordinates the legal & corporate
strategies and affairs of Scientology on a worldwide basis. It also
hires the attorneys in cases where CSI or one of the major Scientology
corporations are involved in. With the law firm "Moxon &
Kobrin" from
Los Angeles [Exh. No. 11, Excerpt] OSA International has an in-house
law firm whose personnel consists of Sea Org and CSI personnel. OSA
Int.'s principal in-house litigators are Kendrick L. Moxon, Helena
Kobrin, Ava Paquette and Jeanne M. Gavigan, while Lynn Farny heads the
Legal Section as its "Section In Charge." The law firm "Moxon &
Kobrin" also hires private investigators that conduct surveillance of
Scientology's critics on a national or on an international level.
Investigations Section: It supervises and coordinates all the
intelligence activities on a worldwide basis. It receives daily
surveillance and intelligence reports from its subordinate Offices of
Special Affairs, located in the CLOs and in the service organizations.
An internal "Executive Directive" from June 26th, 1995 [Exh. No. 102]
states that local OSA-offices are obliged to send written reports on
all matters of interest to the "Data Branch" of the Investigations
Section of OSA Int:
"The Data Branch of OSA Int is responsible for the collection of
information, for receiving all types of data and for digesting,
sorting, alerting, filing, and analyzing it. By collecting adequate
information and by analyzing it, Data can provide prediction to
management and other OSA Int staff, and accurate handlings can be
worked out.
"The Data Branch collects all reports coming to OSA Int: stats, media
reports, situation reports, answers to specific requests, PR debriefs
and routine reports such as Daily Reports, Compliance Reports and
Weekly Reports. The only reports that do not come directly to nor are
copied to Data Branch are specific Invest reports concerning ongoing
investigations. Such reports are addressed and sent directly to the
concerned Invest Bureau staff members."
Further on the document specifies the information OSA Int wants from
its local offices:
"Cont Daily Reports
"1. Situation/Threats
"A. Report any situation or threat which was terminatedly handled and
is no longer a situation or threat.
"B. Report any data on significant progress in handling an outstanding
situation. Include specifics on any reduction of a Claimed or Assessed
Liability.
"C. Report any data on worsening situations. Include specifics on any
additional Claimed or Assessed Liability.
"D. Any data on a new situation or threat is to be reported exactly by
giving the time, place, form and event of what the situation is, how
it came about, the names of the people involved, and how it is going
to be handled
"2. Any litigation data
"3. Debriefs of significant meetings and/or visits
"4. Media on Dianetics, Scientology "
Social Reform Section: This section is engaged in a private warfare
with Scientology's biggest rival, psychiatry. In an internal
memorandum from the mid-1990s, which was sent to its local branches,
the Office of Special Affairs International defined the functions and
the purpose of this section [Exh. No. 103]:
"Social Reform Section VFPs (Valuable Final Products):
"1. Rotten spots in society exposed and eradicated making way for the
broad introduction of Scientology tech into society.
"2. An established, productive and functioning social reform network."
The document identifies Scientology's proclaimed "rotten spots in
society" as the profession of psychiatry. Psychiatry is viewed by OSA
as "the opposition" that needs to be eradicated and replaced by
"Scientology technology." The success of such activity is measured by
certain objectives that are listed as well in that document:
"This statistic reflects that major losses created for the rotten
spots (opposition) in society. The points are counted only if Social
Reform has been actively involved in these activities.
"A. Criminal/Civil Prosecution -- 1 Point
"B. License suspended -- 2 Points
"C. License revoked -- 3 Points
"D. Psych(iatrist) arrested -- 4 Points
"F. Psych jailed -- 8 Points
"H. Institution closed down -- 15 Points
"M. National law passed that restricts the profession/agency -- 20
Points
"O. National law passed that outlaws a major aspect of the
profession/agency "
An important part of the Social Reform Section at the international
level of OSA is the "Citizens Commission on Human Rights
International" (CCHR Int.), a non-profit corporation from Los Angeles,
California [Exh. No. 104]. CCHR was originally founded in 1969 and
CCHR Int. has officially been incorporated in 1982 [Exh. No. 105].
While CCHR Int. claims to be an independent corporation that tries "to
guard against abuses of the fundamental rights of man" and "to
encourage and support into the effects of psychiatric and
psychological practices and procedures," its real purpose of existence
is to execute the above listed targets and eliminate psychiatry as the
major competitor for Scientology in the mental field.
CCHR Int.'s headquarters staff is solely composed of Scientologists
who work closely under the supervision of OSA International, while its
local CCHR chapters work in coordination with local OSA-offices [Exh.
No. 106].
The activities of CCHR are often covered by OSA's "Freedom"-magazine
and by the Scientology-membership magazine "Impact." CCHR Int.'s
current official agent is Ava Paquette who is also a member of "OSA
International" and an attorney of CSI's in-house law firm "Moxon &
Kobrin" [Exh. No. 11, Excerpt].
At the top of OSA International is the Executive Branch with the
"Commanding Officer OSA International." Currently this position is
held by Michael Rinder, originally a citizen from New Zealand. He
inherited it 1994 from Kurt Weiland, who had been the CO OSA Int from
1987 until that year. In 1987 Weiland had replaced Michael Sutter, the
first Commanding Officer, who left during that year OSA Int to work at
the Religious Technology Center under Mark Rathbun.
OSA International controls its worldwide OSA network in a similar way
the "International Finance Office" controls its Finance network. Each
Continental Liaison Office houses its own Office of Special Affairs,
which is answerable to OSA Int and directs the individual OSA offices
in the individual organizations. For example, the Office of Special
Affairs Europe, which is located within the Continental Liaison Office
for Europe, controls the Departments of Special Affairs in the
Scientology organizations, f. e., in Munich (Germany), Amsterdam
(Netherlands) or Athens (Greece), etc. At the same time OSA EU's
activities are controlled and supervised by OSA International,
including the intelligence reports it receives from the individual
OSA-offices.
In the attached exhibit, f. e., the "Commanding Officer
OSA for Europe" (CO OSA EU) directs the "Director of Special Affairs
Greece" (DSA Greece) on "unhandled threats" for Scientology in Greece,
while informing his superior, the "European Continent Programs
Operations Officer OSA International" (EU PGMS OP OSA INT) about that
order [Exh. No. 107].
The local Offices of Special Affairs are formally integrated within
the organizational structure of the individual Scientology
organizations, f. e., "Class V organizations," which exist in cities
like Dallas, Texas or in Paris, France. The "Department of Special
Affairs," Department 20, then is part of the so-called "Executive
Division" of such an organization [Exh. No. 108].
Each local Office of Special Affairs is similarly structured like the
Action Bureau 4 at OSA International and has an additional "Service
Section." While the individual "Director of Special Affairs" (DSA)
might officially be an employee or a corporate officer of that local
organization, he is always and solely answerable to his superiors
within the OSA-network.
31 Dec 2002
2 - Dissemination Bureau Publishing
3 -- Treasury Bureau Accounting
4 -- Action Bureau PR, Legal, Social Reform & Investigations
5 -- Qualifications Bureau Training of Staff
6 -- Port Captain Bureau Internal Legal & Social Affairs
7 -- Executive Bureau General Supervision
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