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VII - Violations Of U. S. Title 18
Chapter 15 - Claims and services in matters affecting government
"Whoever enters into any agreement, combination, or conspiracy to
defraud the United States, or any department or agency thereof, by
obtaining or aiding to obtain the payment or allowance of any false,
fictitious or fraudulent claim, shall be fined under this title or
imprisoned not more than ten years, or both."
Sec. 287 - False, fictitious or fraudulent claims
"Whoever makes or presents to any person or officer in the civil,
military, or naval service of the United States, or to any department
or agency thereof, any claim upon or against the United States, or any
department or agency thereof, knowing such claim to be false,
fictitious, or fraudulent, shall be imprisoned not more than five
years and shall be subject to a fine in the amount provided in this
title."
Count 1: The violation of Form 906, Closing Agreement with the
Internal Revenue Service from October 1st, 1993 through the "Church
Tax Compliance Committee" by false representations and the intention
not to honor its terms.
On October 1st, several corporate officers of several Scientology
corporations (Religious Technology Center, Church of Scientology
International, Church of Spiritual Technology, Church of Scientology
Flag Service Organization, Inc., Church of Scientology Western United
States, Building Management Services, Church of Scientology Religious
Trust), namely David Miscavige, Norman Starkey, Mark Rathbun,
Heber Jentzsch,
Marc
Yager,
Jonathan Epstein, Nigel Oakes and four other
individuals, signed a closing agreement with the Commissioner of the
IRS that included
the granting of tax-exempt status under 501 (c) (3)
of certain Scientology organizations [Exh. No. 146]. The above
corporate officers assumed under the agreement the function of a
"Church Tax Compliance Committee," which would be held responsible to
fulfill the obligations of the various entities of Scientology towards
the IRS. The agreement contained the following provision:
"H. Finality.
"This Agreement is final and conclusive except:
"1. The matter it relates to may be reopened in the event of fraud,
malfeasance, or misrepresentation of material fact;
"2. It is subject to the Internal Revenue Code sections that expressly
provide that effect be given to their provisions (including any stated
exception for Code section 7122) notwithstanding any other law or rule
of law; and
"3. If it related to a tax period ending after the date of this
Agreement, it is subject to any
law, enacted after the Agreement date, that applied to that tax
period."
The agreement also contained the following certifications:
"D. Certifications.
"1. In general. by executing this Agreement, the Church signatories in
their trust or corporate capacities, and their subscribing officers or
trustees individually, certify under penalty of perjury the following
to the best of their knowledge, information and belief:
"a. that all Scientology-related entities are in compliance with the
Code, Treasury regulations and other Service pronouncements of general
guidance and applicability;
"b. that the Church signatories and CTCC will use their best efforts
to educate Scientology parishioners as to the nondeductibility of
donations to foreign organizations and the provisions of section VII.
paragraph B.;
"c. that no Scientology-related entity or Scientology-related
individual (in his or her capacity as such) has, after 1986, knowingly
committed any act of fraud or criminal conduct that might constitute a
violation of public policy endangering the tax-exempt status of any
Scientology-related entity (assuming for the limited purpose of this
paragraph that all Scientology-related entities are otherwise
described in Code section 501(c)(3)); and
"d. that all Qualified Written Material submitted in connection with
this Agreement was correct and truthful as of the date submitted
through the date of signature of this Agreement, as supplemented by
the Forms 1023 filed in August and September 1993.
"2. Section 501(c)(3). The Annual Report shall include a certification
to the Service from CTCC members, in their Corporate, At-large, or
Individual status, that Scientology related entities recognized as
described in Code section 501(c)(3) under section III, paragraphs B.
or C. will operate in conformity with Code section 501(c)(3) and the
regulations there under and that other Scientology-related entities
will operate in a manner that does not jeopardize the tax-exempt
status of any Scientology-related entity so recognized. Specifically,
but not by way of limitation, such certification shall include the
following Scientology-related entities: Church of Scientology
Religious Education College Inc., Church of Scientology Advanced
Organization Saint Hill Europe and Africa, Church of Scientology, Inc.
(Advanced Organization Saint Hill Australia, New Zealand and Oceania),
RTC Australia, San Donato Properties Corporation, Transcorp Services,
S.A., MCL Services, N.V., Media Storage, Inc, Mile High, Inc., Galaxy
Productions, Inc., Mastertech, Inc., Nesta Investments, Ltd., and FSO
Oklahoma Investments Corporation.
"3. Continuing certifications. The CTCC must certify in the Annual
Report that the certifications described in this paragraph D. continue
to be correct, to the best of their knowledge and belief. Such
certification shall be substantially in the form of Exhibit IV-3
hereto. In addition, the CTCC must certify as part of the Annual
Report that nothing has occurred that would significantly impair
(directly or indirectly) the efficacy of the guaranty contained in
section IV. paragraph A.3.d."
Under the agreement, a Scientology related entity was defined as
follows:
"5. Any entities subject to the ecclesiastical direction or general
guidance of Church of Scientology International or Religious
Technology Center, directly or indirectly, including but not limited
to any trusts, that hold assets (including but not limited to
intellectual property and mortgages) for any other Scientology-related
entity or for the advancement or protection of the Scientology
religion whether or not those entities were discussed at pages 1-43
through 1-56 of the June submission are Scientology-related entities.
This definition does not include the trust or estate of any
parishioner who has made an intervivos or testamentary transfer of
assets to the Church. This definition does not include financial
institutions that are not owned (directly or indirectly) in whole or
in part by any entity that otherwise meets the definition of
Scientology-related entity under another subparagraph of this
paragraph VIII. C. This definition does not include (i) any fiduciary
that is not a Scientology-related entity or a Scientology-related
individual (ii) the employee of any such fiduciary, (iii) any escrow
agent holding assets of a Scientology-related entity under and escrow
arrangement of a strictly temporary nature, (iv) any trustee under a
deed of trust upon real property to secure the debt of a
Scientology-related entity (v) any person acting under the power of
attorney to Scientology-related entity, provided that any such
fiduciary described in (i) through (v) above, and is nor otherwise a
Scientology-related entity under paragraph of this section VIII,
paragraph C. Pages 1-43 through 1-56 are attached as Exhibit VIII-3 to
this Agreement."
With respect to the above regulations the signatories David Miscavige,
Norman Starkey, Mark Rathbun, Heber Jentzsch, Marc Yager, Jonathan
Epstein and Nigel Oakes, in their capacity as corporate officers and
ecclesiastical heads of their respective Scientology entities and as
members of the CTCC, have violated the terms of the closing agreement
from October 1st, 1993 by having known and/or having been in the
position to know and/or having supervised and controlled various
criminal/non-charitable activities of U. S. based and foreign
"Scientology related entities" between 1986 and 2001. As these
activities have been conducted in accordance with Scientology's basic
and fundamental ecclesiastical policies and scriptures, formulated
either by founder L. Ron Hubbard or others, the above mentioned
individuals had never had the intention to honor the terms of the
closing agreement, thereby had engaged in a conspiracy against the U.
S. government from the outset of the settlement discussions.
Count 2: Covert intelligence operations executed by the "Office of
Special Affairs International" against British writer Russell Miller
during the years 1987 -- 1988, which included the attempt of false
incrimination.
The British writer Russell Miller published in 1987 the book
"Bare-Faced Messiah: The True Story of L. Ron Hubbard," a
controversial biography about the life of Scientology founder Hubbard.
Prior to the publication, Miller had gone to the United States to
conduct research in relation to the book and to interview people who
had personally known Hubbard. At the end of his research trip, Miller
was followed by private investigators, presumably working for the
Church of Scientology [Exh. No. 159].
When Russell Miller had returned to London, and the book on Hubbard
was about to be published, the Church of Scientology stepped up its
efforts and started a harassment campaign against Miller to stop the
publication of Millers book. At least five investigators were employed
by the Scientologists to achieve this.
First, several friends and business associates of Miller were
investigated, who received visits from private detectives. Then,
during the months of October, the "Sunday Times" which had planned to
do a serialization of the book during November, received threatening
phone calls by Scientologists. The first private investigator who
appeared then on the scene was Eugene Ingram from Los Angeles.
Together with another investigator from England Ingram gained access
to the offices of the "Sunday Times" with the use of false credentials
and tried there to discredit Miller and his sources with a senior
executive of the "Sunday Times."
During the following week, the second investigator from the United
States arrived. Peter Comras claimed to represent the family of late
Dean Reed, an American singer who had defected the East-Germany and
had died under unclear circumstances in East-Berlin in Summer of 1987
[Exh. No. 160]. Comras started a so-called "noisy investigation" on
Miller, by trying to link Reed's death with a visit of Miller in
East-Berlin. When the family denied that it had hired Comras, the
private investigator claimed not to know his client and referred to
the Washington lawyer Keith Adkinson, who had hired him originally.
Miller himself believed that Comras worked on behalf of the Church of
Scientology.
In November the "Sunday Times" learned that another private
investigator was surveilling Miller [Exh. No. 161]. Jarl Cynewolf
revealed to journalists that he worked on behalf of a third American
private investigator, Virginia Snyder from Florida, who had been hired
by the Scientologists. Cynewolf also stated that "Miller's phone calls
and mail were being intercepted and his house in Buckinghamshire was
under close surveillance.
Scientology also tried to stop the publication of Miller's book
through the courts. The Scientology publishing company New Era
Publications International ApS tried to enjoin the publication of the
book in England, Canada and the United States by claiming the book
violated the company's copyrights on the works of L. Ron Hubbard. All
of these attempts to stop the critical book on Hubbard failed. In the
U.S. the Federal Appeals Court in New York affirmed on April 19th,
1989 the decision of the lower District Court who found that the
reproduction of certain citations of Hubbard's writings by Miller was
well within "fair use." The permanent injunction Scientology had
seeked was not granted ("New Era Publications International ApS vs.
Henry Holt & Co., Inc." No. CV 88-7707, CV 88-7795).
Count 3: Covert intelligence operations against Danish protestant
priest Johannes Aargaard during the years 1987 and 1988 that were
supervised by the "Office of Special Affairs Europe" and included
committing burglary at Aargaard's "Dialog Center."
Johannes Aargaard, a professor for theological studies, is the
President of the "Dialog-Center International" in Ĺrhus, Denmark. The
Dialog-Center issues a periodic magazine, which reports about new
religious movements and cults. As a vocal critic of Scientology's
activities in Denmark for the past 25 years, he had been a target not
only for negative articles by Scientology's Danish version of
Freedom-Magazine [Exh. No. 162, Excerpt] but also for various
intelligence operations run by the
"Guardian's Office"
and later by
the Office of Special Affairs. When I met Mr. Aargaard in the summer
of 1999 he told me that the Dialog-Center had been infiltrated on
several occasions by at least nine agents, working on behalf of
Scientology. All those people had claimed to be either cult victims or
that they would want to work as volunteers in the Dialog-Center, but
had in fact tried to gain information about the Center and report such
intelligence back to Scientology. In one case, the detection of such
an agent led to the disclosure of an illegal conspiracy that ended
with a conviction by the court.
On November 29th, 1990 at a criminal proceeding before the Copenhagen
City Court two Danish private investigators, Jan Kristiansen and Erik
Clefert, were found guilty of having conducted a conspiracy to copy
computer discs and obtain information from Aargaard's Dialog Center
between August 1987 and July 1988 [Exh. No. 163]. The two
investigators worked on behalf of a Jan Hansen who had been a cut-out
of the Office of Special Affairs in Copenhagen. To gain access of the
Dialog-Center's internal files, Kristiansen and Clefert then hired an
additional agent, Lars Jřrgensen, who obtained employment at the
Center and delivered them later 16 floppy discs with inside
information about the Dialog-Center. The two detectives then delivered
the material to Jan Hansen.
The connection between the private investigators and the Church of
Scientology had already been established by the Danish newspaper "B.
T." in August 1988, when the whole affair was discovered and made
public [Exh. No. 164]. The article stated that the Church of
Scientology had paid 200,000 Danish Crowns towards the detective
agency to come up with inside material on Aargaard.
In a second related case, around the same time, the newspaper revealed
that a 33-year old Danish fire fighter had been found to have worked
as a paid agent for the Church of Scientology [Exh. No. 165]. For
1,100 Danish Crowns he was told to infiltrate a psychiatric hospital
and gather information for the Scientologists. The Copenhagen Fire
Department suspended him later from his job, after the matter had
become public.
Count 4: Covert intelligence operations against the "Aktion
Bildungsinformation, e.V.," a German non-profit association, and
against other Scientology critics in Southwestern Germany that were
conducted during the early 1990s under the supervision of the "Office
of Special Affairs Europe."
Internal documents of the "Office of Special Affairs" of the
Scientology organization in Stuttgart reveal that during the early
1990s OSA-operatives were systematically investigating individuals and
organizations in order to gain information on private and sensible
matters.
The first document is a memorandum on how to do a "dust bin
collection," written by an OSA-operative of the German
Scientology-organization "Dianetik Stuttgart e. V." [Exh. No. 166]. As
it is written in English it was obviously designated to be sent to the
OSA-headquarters in Copenhagen or Los Angeles. The target
organization, mentioned in the document, is the private consumer
information center "ABI e. V.," which has been providing information
about Scientology's activities since 1975 and which had been involved
in numerous lawsuits against several Scientology-organizations.
Evidently the "Office of Special Affairs" tried to get a hold of any
internal ABI-documents by going through its trash in order to use it
against ABI at a later date.
Infiltrating a consumer association had been done by Scientology
before. The FBI-raids in 1977 revealed that the "Guardian's Office"
had placed an informant inside the "Better Business Bureau" in
Washington, DC in order to obtain internal documents [Exh. No. 167].
The second document, dated June 18th, 1990, is a program written by an
OSA executive for a newly appointed Investigations Officer of the
OSA-office in the Scientology organization of Stuttgart [Exh. No.
168]. The persons and institutions mentioned in the document had been
critical of Scientology in the past. As a counter intelligence
operation, the Office of Special Affairs started to investigate these
critics and included in its program even the surveillance of the child
of one target person:
"Invest Off Stuttgart
" Production Cycles
"1. Make yourself a list of all institutions that might have important
information for us or distribute. (i. e. associations like ABI, EBIS,
the [State] Ministry for Cultural Affairs, religious associations like
catholic or protestant academies, EZW, publishing houses, newspapers,
etc)
"2. Start to order publications from them or [use] Scientologists, who
receive them already to review them for you using the following
criterions:
"a) Psychiatry scandals
"b) Events with the topic `cults', etc.
"c) Newly published books
"d) Everything concerning scandals at the Ministry for Cultural
Affairs
"e) Everything connected to ABI, EBIS, [Name of person, withheld upon
request], [Name of person], Scientology, cult opponents
"f) Changes of law that have to do with psychiatry and religion
"g) Scandals at associations or clubs
"4. Start immediately with the résumé of [name of person] and [name of
person] and find out what they have done and published in the past.
"5. Give me an up-date from time to time about your progress of the
above mentioned target areas. "
The second page of the document reveals the program targets, which
include the surveillance actions of the persons mentioned in the first
part of the document:
" 2) Search the Adresso of the org for names of Scientologists who
live in the Kirchheim/Teck area. Then ask only real dedicated
Scientologists for teachers and students of [Name of the school
withheld].
"3) Visit Mr. [Name withheld] again and question him together with
[Name withheld]; [Name withheld] pretends to be a former student of
[Name withheld] and mentions [Name withheld] relationship to other
students.
"4) Who was a member in the protestant youth group in [Name of town
withheld]? Get a list of names.
"5) [Name of person withheld] enrolls [as a student] at the University
of Tübingen. The product is a student identity card.
"6) Which school does the son of [name of person withheld] attend?
"7) What is he doing during the afternoons -- who is looking after him?
Is he at home or elsewhere?
"8) Where is [Name of person withheld] living?
"9) DBC [dust bin collection], Tuesday morning 5 am. "
1 Jan 2003
Sec. 286 - Conspiracy to defraud the Government with respect to claims
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