From: cerberus@medusa.com (Cerberus) Newsgroups: alt.religion.scientology Subject: SCIENTOLOGY CRITICS GET PAPERS BACK -- Rocky Mountain News 12-13-95 Date: Wed, 13 Dec 1995 10:35:38 GMT Message-ID: <4amadu$7c4@natasha.rmii.com> Not sure if this is good news or not, but here's the latest from the Rocky Mountain Snooze, a reliable source if you rely on it to get the details wrong. I particularly like the part about the CoS "selling" the OT information. begin RMN======================================== Rocky Mountain News, Wednesday, December 13, 1995, page 21A SCIENTOLOGY CRITICS GET PAPERS BACK JUDGE SAYS MEMBERS' SPIRITUAL CONCERNS CAN'T BE A FACTOR IN RULINGS by Karen Abbot, Rocky Mountain News Staff Writer Scientologists' fear for their immortal souls can't be a factor in court decisions, a federal judge has ruled. Denver U.S. District Judge John Kane, in an order he signed Monday, ordered some Scientology materials returned to Boulder residents Larry Wollersheim and Robert Penny, embittered former Scientologists who now distribute information about the organization on the Internet. The most controversial materials, Internet postings by anonymous people worldwide that claim to reveal some of Scientology's secret beliefs, will remain sealed and in the custody of the court clerk, Kane ordered. Church officials in October protested an order to return the documents saying they would be committing heresy, would be excommunicated and would be jeopardizing their immortal souls if they turned over some of the most sacred and secret materials. "The materials cannot be surrendered to apostates," they said in court documents, citing First Amendment religious freedom protections. Kane then ordered all the disputed materials into the custody of the court clerk. The Church of Scientology teaches that people can rise to higher levels of enlightenment through "auditing" sessions in which they purge themselves of negative energy from traumas, including those in past lives. Church officials did not respond to a request for comment on the ruling Tuesday. Tom Kelley, attorney for Wollersheim and Penney [sic], said Kane "has done the right thing." Kane cited two other court rulings on the question of religious beliefs that conflict with law. The church has sued Wollersheim and Penny on grounds they violated copyright and trade secret laws by distributing secret information the church sells to members. In August, with a court order, the church seized the two men's computer equipment and related materials in raids at their homes. In this week's order, Kane said Wollersheim and Penny should get back all materials on paper and all computer materials except the sealed Internet postings. On the religious freedom question, Kane quoted from a 1990 U.S. Supreme Court ruling: "The government's ability to enforce generally applicable prohibitions of socially harmful conduct...'cannot depend on measuring the effects of a governmental action on a religious objector's spiritual development.'" -30- end RMN========================================== So I guess the Honorable Kane in His Wisdom elected to keep the Fishman docs sealed. Easy for him to say. He ain't down there in the pits with the other "mutts." Too much capon makes you into one. Makes an old dog proud to be Dutch. Cerberus ____________________