------------------------------------------------------------------- F.A.C.T.Net, Inc. (Fight Against Coercive Tactics Network, Incorporated) a non-profit computer bulletin board and electronic library 601 16th St. #C-217 Golden, Colorado 80401 USA BBS 303 530-1942 FAX 303 530-2950 Office 303 473-0111 This document is part of an electronic lending library and preservational electronic archive. F.A.C.T.Net does not sell documents, it only lends them according to the terms of your library cardholder agreement with F.A.C.T.Net, Inc. ===================================================================== ------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 Scientology Suit Against Drug Company Exec Dismissed [Eli Lilly and Company] Scientology libel suit against an executive of Eli Lilly and Company over comments he made about the group in a USA Today story last June 11 was dismissed in late May, affirming that what Lilly vice president Mitchell E. Daniels said was not defamatory. The summary judgment was granted by the U.S. District Court in Alexandria, Virginia. Daniels was quoted by USA Today as saying: "The source of virtually everything you've heard about Prozac [an anti-depressant drug manufactured by Lilly] has come from Scientologists with a boost from trial lawyers whose self-interest is obvious. One thing we want you to understand is that the Church of Scientology is no church. It's a commercial enterprise. Every judge and every investigative journalist who has ever looked at it has come away with that conclusion. It is organized for only one purpose, which is to make money." Commenting on the recent decison which exonerated him, Daniels said, "It was Scientology propaganda that generated the anti-Prozac publicity that has needlessly frightened vulnerable patients. To understand the Scientologists' commercial interest is to understand why this anti-Prozac campaign occurred, The outcome of the suit was entirely appropriate. I said only what has been found time and again by those who have investigated what Scientology is all about." Scientology has for years attacked psychiatry and psychiatric medicines through its Citizens Commission on Human Rights. The anti-Prozac campaign included a petition to the FDA to take the drug off the market, even though scientific studies have shown, contrary to Scientology claims, that it was effective in relieving depression and lowering suicidal ideation. The FDA denied the Scientology petition. (Cult Observer Report) New Suit vs. Lilly The Church of Scientology International sued Eli Lilly & Co. for $14.7 million in May, alleging that the pharmaceutical maker pressured public relations firm Hill and Knowlton to drop the church as a client. The suit also named Hill and Knowlton's parent company, British advertising con- glomerate WPP, and its head, Martin Sorrell. The suit also claims that two law firms representing the church were pressured to cut their relationships with Scientology. (San Francisco Chronicle, 5/5/92, A5) Firm Won't Represent Scientology The American Lawyer suggested, in its "Bar Talk" of December 1991, that the decision of Baker & McKenzie to stop representing Scientology was motivated by a conflict between clients, Lilly and Scientology. Herbert Rosedale, president of the American Family Foundation [publisher of the Cult Observer], in a letter published in the February 1992 issue of The American Lawyer, wrote: "I am not sure what the basis of the decision was. I would point out to you, however, that the public relations firm of Hill and Knowlton, Inc. reached a like conclusion not too long ago. "Before you reach your conclusion, I think you should be aware of the Church of Scientology and why a law firm might well decide that with their [Scientology's] view of the legal system, and the manipulative uses to which it should be put to achieve its ends, they [Baker & McKenzie] would not desire to represent such a client. Having been involved on a pro bono basis [in matters] involving the Church of Scientology and other destructive cults for the past several years, I think it would be appropriate for The American Lawyer to turn its attention to the abuse of our legal system . . . Do you really believe that a firm could not in good conscience refuse to act on behalf of such a client regardless of who its other clients are?" The Scientology president, in a letter published in the same issue of The American Lawyer, said that "Lilly's underhanded power plays have found a friend in attorney Herbert Rosedale. He is, in fact, a key player in a vicious propaganda campaign propagated by antireligious hate groups, the Cult Awareness Network and his own deceptively named American Family Foundation, a referral service for deprogrammers." 2 Multi-Million Dollar Decision Against Scientology Upheld [Lawrence Wollersheim case] The California Court of Appeal upheld in March a lower court ruling that the Church of Scientology intentionally inflicted emotional injury on former church member Lawrence Wollersheim. But the court ruled that the original $30 million judgment was excessive - Scientology was determined to have a net worth of only $16.5 million - and reduced com- pensatory damages to $500,000 and punitive damages to $2 million. The court made a similar ruling in 1989 but heard another appeal from Scientology following a recent Supreme Court ruling on the constitutionality of punitive damages. Wollersheim claimed that hypnotic psychological techniques allegedly used by Scientology for recruiting and maintaining members systematically robbed him of his ability to make independent decisions, and that Scientology's allegedly intentional, malicious, and coercive practices drove him to the brink of insanity, suicide, and financial ruin. Scientology claimed immunity from liability on the ground that its counseling program, called auditing, is a form of pastoral counseling, and that auditing and other church practices stem from religious doctrines, which are constitutionally protected. The recent appeal decision preserved intact and unaltered the opinion of the original California Appeal Court decision, which stated, among other things: "We hold that the state has a compelling interest in allowing its citizens to recover for serious emotional injuries they suffer through religious practices they are coerced into accepting. Such conduct is too outrageous to be protected under the constitution and too unworthy to be privileged under the law of torts . . Using its position as religious leader, the church and its agents coerced Wollersheim into continuing auditing even though his sanity was repeatedly threatened by this practice . . . Church practices conducted in a coercive environment are not qualified to be voluntary religious practices entitled to first amendment religious freedom guarantees." The foreman of the original trial jury apparently felt similarly, when he said, "The church has various policies we felt were in violation of civil law," and that it was Scientology's "outrageous" policies that led the jury to deliver an unanimous verdict in Wollersheim's favor. Wollersheim also points out, concerning his allegation that Scientology brought to bear policies that would entirely discredit him publicly, that the appellate decision stated: "Substantial evidence supports the conclusion Scientology leaders made the deliberate decision to ruin Wollersheim economically and possibly psychologically. . . Nothing . . . [in any] case we have been able to locate even implies a religion is entitled to constitutional protection for a campaign deliberately designed to financially ruin anybody - whether a member or non-member of that religion." In the wake of the recent decision, Wollersheim also disputed the finding that Scientology was worth only $16.5 million, and called it fraudulent. He also said that personal compensation has not been his focus in the long litigation with Scientology. He wanted, rather, "to stop what happened to me from happening to others or passing the danger of Scientology on to other unknowing and innocent children, teenagers, young adults, and families." (Cult Observer Report) 3 Yahweh Ben Yahweh Guilty [aka Hulon Mitchell, Jr. Conspiracy to commit murder, beatings] Charismatic Nation of Yahweh leader Yahweh Ben Yahweh (formerly Hulon Mitchell Jr.), who calls himself the son of God, was convicted in Miami of conspiracy to commit murder after a five-month trial filled with testimony about beheadings, mutilation, and brutal beatings. Yahweh was found guilty along with six followers in connection with the plotting of 14 separate murders and the terrorist firebombing of an entire block in Delray Beach. He faces up to 20 years in prison. Yahweh, once hailed by civic leaders as a saviour of blighted neighborhoods - the mayor of Miami declared Yahweh Ben Yahweh Day in 1990 - preached against drugs, offered a message of black power and hope to the urban underclass, and built a south Florida business empire of schools, groceries, and apartment buildings valued at $8 million. The prosecution alleged that Yahweh - who taught that whites are the devil and that blacks are the only true Jews - at various times ordered retributive killings as his economic clout grew in the 1980s and his patience became short with those who he thought disobeyed him or showed a lack of respect. Chief prosecution witness Robert Rozier, a former professional football player, testified that he killed six people on Yahweh's orders, often cutting off a victim's ear to offer Yahweh as proof of his deed. Yahweh's sister and nephew said he made them join in a fatal mob attack on a visitor inside his Temple of Love in 1983, and testimony from a former sect member, whose throat was cut after she quit, was particularly damning. The state failed to get a conviction on racketeering charges, which led Yahweh's attorney, Alcee Hastings, to say, "The prosecution suffered a major blow . . . it ain't over yet." Hastings charged that Yahweh was prosecuted for religious and racial reasons and that the law was used to destroy a movement that threatened the white establishment. The attorney for an acquitted Yahweh follower charged that the government "put a group of murder cases together, mixed [them] with the volatile teachings of a small religious group, and tried to make a racketeering enterprise out of it. But the jury didn't buy it." (From "Black Sect Leader Guilty in Death Plots," by Mike Clary, San Francisco Chronicle, 5/28/92, A1; "Sect leader convicted," Livingston [MT] Enterprise, 5/28/92, 7) 4 Critics Draw Scientology Litigation [CAN, Time magazine; Werner Erhard sues] The Cult Awareness Network News reported in May on the status of a number of Scientology-related suits against CAN. The national cult education organization filed a motion to dismiss a religious discrimination suit brought by a Scientologist in Illinois for refusing him membership. In northern California, meanwhile, a CAN affiliate filed motions to strike two religious discrimination complaints brought by Scientologists who also wanted to join CAN. And in Los Angeles, a Scientologist has appealed a Superior Court decision to deny his request for a preliminary injunction which would have forced the local CAN affiliate to admit him and other Scientologists as members. In Boston and Washington, DC, Scientologists in April filed two more religious discrimination suits against CAN, its executive Director Cynthia Kisser, and local affiliate members making essentially the same claims. (See page 6, "Scientology Wants to Join Critics" for related story) As to other Scientology-linked cases against CAN, three causes of action have been stricken and punitive damages removed from two other causes of action in a case brought by the Scientology-animated Sterling Management organization, which charged CAN and its Los Angeles affiliate with libel and a conspiracy to harm its business. In addition, the court struck from the case allegations by Sterling that CAN engages in forcible kidnapping, extortion, and assault and battery, that it destroys religious organizations with which it disagrees, that it violates its tax-exempt status, and, says CAN, "other typical Scientology propaganda." In another legal area, CAN has moved in Washtenaw County Court in Michigan for dismissal of a case brought by a woman who claims that CAN and its executive director invaded her privacy by working with the Sally Jesse Raphael Show on a program about Scientology on which the woman's relatives appeared. Finally, the filing time has been extended to defendants in a major suit brought in early March in Cook County (IL) Circuit Court by Werner Erhard, founder of est, against CAN, the Columbia Broadcasting System, and other national media, alleging libel, defamation, and invasion of privacy in reporting about Erhard. (Cult Observer Report) T I M E The Church of Scientology has filed a $416 million libel suit in the Federal Court for the Southern District of New York against Time magazine and associate editor Richard Behar alleging that Behar's May 6, 1991 cover story, "Scientology: Cult of Greed," was "filled with falsehoods, innuendo and name-calling while completely disregarding anything positive about the Church." [The article won two national journalism awards.] Behar said that the suit had no basis, and Time spokesman Peter Costiglio was quoted in The New York Post as saying that the article is a "solid piece of journalism, thoroughly researched, and we stand very much behind it." (Cult Awareness Network News, 5/92/8) 5 Northeast Kingdom Custody Case [Island Pond. Woodward Dawson. Myrtle Tree Farm.] A Kentville, Nova Scotia judge issued a Canada-wide warrant in early April for the arrest of Woodward "Isaac" Dawson, who has disappeared with his son in the midst of a custody battle with his former wife. Dawson lives at Myrtle Tree Farm, a religious commune in Waterville owned by the Vermont-based Northeastern Kingdom Community Church, a fundamentalist sect that distances itself from the secular world. Dawson was last in conflict with authorities in 1988, when he spent 23 days in jail for refusing to cooperate with the seizure of his son on accusations, never proven, of physical abuse. [In the mid-1980s, the Northeast Kingdom church was raided by authorities in Vermont who temporarily took a number of sect children into custody, because it was suspected that they were abused by their parents.] (From "Arrest Warrant issued for dad missing with son," by Rob Roberts, The Daily News [Nova Scotia], 4/1/92, 4) 6 Scientology Cited for Overcrowding [Clearwater] The Church of Scientology in Clearwater, FL, the organization's international headquarters, was cited by city building officials for overcrowding in apartments it owns. Housing inspectors say they found as many as 10 beds in an apartment, often set up not only in the bedrooms but in the living and dining rooms of apartments. Residents are Scientology staffers, members of its "Sea Org," or Sea Organization, who sign billion-year contracts and wear the Navy-style uniforms that are a famililar sight in downtown Clearwater. A Scientology spokesman said, "We're interested in efficient utilization of space." (St. Petersburg Times, 4/20/92, 1 7 Scientology Wants to Join Critics [Mind control, Dr. George Robertson, Barry Fisher] Free Minds, the Cult Awareness Network affiliate in Minnesota, reported for the period March/April 1992: "Our calls, which have slowed somewhat over the last two months, have been more varied than usual, including requests for information on Scientology, the Minneapolis/St. Paul Church of Christ, est/Forum, Church Universal and Triumphant, New Age, Satanism, Eckankar, plus many other unknowns. "We received a number of requests from Scientologists - 22 in all - who stated they wanted to help us fight mind control and destructive cults. As our current criteria for becoming a member of Free Minds includes a review of requests in December of 1992, we have ample time to evaluate their applications. This is happening nationwide to all the affiliates. Three known members of the Scientology group came to the meeting on Feb. 5. They were educated on how the Jehovahs Witness group uses mind control. Many former members of other cults were also present at the meeting. It remains to be seen if the Scientologists will want to keep coming to the meetings or no . . . We expect this to be an extra active year, with Scientology being the main reason." In April, meanwhile, a minister and an attorney associated with organizations hostile to CAN addressed a half-day conference - ostensibly called by "concerned members of the Cult Awareness Network (National)" - in Pasadena, CA, entitled, "Cult Awareness: Has the network been perverted? Conference on Critical Issues." Speakers included Dr. George Robertson, of Friends of Freedom, associated with the Bible Speaks organization, whose leader was found guilty of using undue influence to talk a follower out of several million dollars, and Barry Fisher, an attorney who has represented the Hare Krishnas against CAN. The organizers invited CAN local affiliate members from around the country to attend, saying that the conference would discuss issues such as CAN's alleged promotion of deprogrammers, wrongdoing among CAN leaders, lawsuits against the organization, and endangerment of the organization's tax-exempt status. (Cult Observer Report) 8 "False Memory Syndrome" Foundation The False Memory Syndrome Foundation (FMS) recently incorporated in Philadelphia with the aim of addressing what it sees as the problem, increasing throughout the country, that "grown children, while undergoing 'therapeutic' programs, have come to believe that they suffer from 'repressed' memories of incest and sexual abuse." FMS says that "while some reports of incest and sexual abuse are surely true, these 'decades-delayed memories' are too often the result of False Memory Syndrome caused by a disastrous 'therapeutic' program. False Memory Syndrome has a devastating effect on the victim and typically produces a continuing dependency on the very program that creates the syndrome." FMS adds: "False Memory Syndrome proceeds to destroy the psycho-logical well-being not only of the primary victim but, through false accusations of incest and sexual abuse, of other members of the primary victim's family." (Cult Observer Report) 9 Deadhead Church Founder "Abusive" Members of an officially celibate religious sect of Grateful Dead devotees, living in a monastery in Mendocino, CA, have denounced and expelled their founder, claiming he is guilty of adultery, hypocrisy and intimidation of its members. Ex-members of the Church of Unlimited Devotion also charged that Joseph Lian III violently abused some women followers. Reached at his parent's home in Worcester, MA, Lian, 31, said, "I definitely had a temper," but denied eyewitness accounts of choking his [secret] wife, striking his mistress, and kicking one of the young nuns. Members of the community say they have dropped "church" from its name, in favor of "family," and thrown out the celibacy rules. A representative said, "There will be more of a family focus. We're definitely going to have couples." He added that the group will meet soon to decide its "current theology." (From "Deadhead Church Expels Its Founder," by Mitch Clogg, San Francisco Chronicle, 4/9/92, A23) 10 Hockey Team Says No To Scientology The Montreal Canadiens hockey team is backing away from an anti-drug campaign they joined a week earlier [in February] after learning that "Say No to Drugs, Say Yes to Life" is sponsored by the controversial Church of Sciento-logy. The club's PR director, Claude Mouton, said a woman called asking players to sign posters for the cam-paign. Other professional sports teams, like the Toronto Maple Leafs, have joined the campaign, and Leafs spokesman Bob Stellick said, "The photo we had taken says we are anti-drugs. It doesn't say we support the Church of Scientology. The Scientologist directing the campaign said anyone who could oppose a group that believes that people ahould be drug-free has a problem." (From "Habs think again," by Nancy DeHart, The Gazette (Montreal), 2/26/92, A3) 11 Forum Training Dropped by Ohio Agency [Werner Erhard offshoot. Margaret Sandberg.] Franklin County (OH) Children [sic] Services in February abandoned the controversial staff training sessions run by The Forum following publicity that erupted over the three-day sessions, which critics describe as cult-like. The Forum is an offshoot of est, a self-awareness movement founded in California in 1971 by Werner Erhard, who is believed to have left the country amid numerous lawsuits and tax liens. Est was characterized by a boot-camp- like authoritarian indoctrination combined with psychological and emotional manipulation. The Forum has a somewhat gentler approach, but critics say the manipulation remains. Margaret Sandberg, Children Service executive director, attended a three-day Forum session in mid-1990, and since then she has sent 20 managers to similar sessions at a cost to taxpayers of $4,800. "From the feedback we have gotten," said the chairman of the Children Sevice Board, "we have no reason to believe that it (The Forum] was anything but productive." He went on to say that neither the board nor the executive staff was aware that Erhard was part of The Forum initially, and "it is my understanding that he has not been [recently involved]. But, he said, both management and board are "sensitive to the concerns of members of the community." The psychologist who is on call to help Forum participants if they become emotional during the seminars says he has seen no harm in the sessions. Employees who took the seminars provided mixed reviews. One said: "You get exhausted, then you get exhilarated . . . It was a profound experience for me. It really helps you get clear about what your professional and personal commitments are." But several other employees, who did not want their names used because they feared losing their jobs, said subtle pressure is put on employees to take the seminars. If employees do not attend, they said, they are labeled as resistant to change and as not being team players. Added one employee: "People who have attended The Forum fall into two groups, those like Mrs. Sundberg, who have almost acted like it is a new religion or mission, and those who went because they felt executive pressure." (From "Agency spends $4,800 on 'cultlike' seminars," by Sylvia Brooks, The Columbus Dispatch, 2/10/92, 1A, 2A); "Forum training dropped," and "Forum grads say seminars helped them," by Sylvia Brooks, The Columbus Dispatch, 2/14/92, 1B, 6C) 12 Failed Family Deprogramming Leads to Charges [The Way. Steve Skaggs. Stephanie Skaggs. Randall Burkey] An alleged cult deprogrammer and two others were charged in mid-March in Madison, WI, with the abduction of a local woman at the behest of her father in an effort to get her to leave The Way International. Steve Staggs, 44, of Garland, TX, called Madison police beforehand and told them he was abducting his daughter Stephanie, 21, and taking her to be deprogrammed. He called again, after she had been abducted, to confirm what he called the "cult interdiction." A police investigation led them to the isolated farmhouse where she was being held. Arrested at the farmhouse were Staggs, Tracy Clark, 20, of Wichita, KA, said to be a childhood friend of Stephanie Staggs, Randall M. Burkey, 34, of Poland, OH, identified by aurthorities as a cult deprogrammer, and the owner of the farmhouse. Burkey was charged with false imprisonment, Baar and Clarke with being party to false imprisonment. Staggs was scheduled to be charged where the abduction occurred. (From "Four face kidnapping charges," by Kathleen Ostrander, Wisconsin State Journal [Madison], 3/17/92, 1C) 13 Evangelicals to Build "Holy Ghost Town" [Dennis Peacocke, Barry & Anne Bird] A controversial Santa Rosa, CA Christian movement is settling an isolated Columbia River town in northeast Washington state in order, leaders say, to create a self-sufficient "biblical economy" and "alternative court system for resolving disputes biblically." According to the prospectus of their Marble Flats project, gospel singers Barry and Anne Bird are "governmentally accountable" to shepherding movement leader Dennis Peacocke. During the 1980s, Peacocke and other shepherding leaders were accused of authoritarian, cultlike behavior because of the control they allegedly assume over the personal lives of their followers. (From "Evangelicals build a 'Holy Ghost' Town," by Don Lattin, San Francisco Chronicle, 5/25/92, A1) 14 Refusing Ads for "Rama" [Heart Dance, New Age] The New Age magazine Heart Dance ( April 1992, 13) says it will refuse to continue to carry ads for organizations associated with the spiritual guru Frederick Lenz, called Rama, because the ads for courses, directed toward people in their 20s, did not make clear their link to Rama, and because former followers report financial exploitation, psychological abuse, and sexual coercion in Rama-associated programs. 15 Alamo Letter to Death Row Inmate Tony Alamo, the cult leader and preacher who is himself in jail awaiting trial on a number of charges including child beating, published an ad in the Tampa Tribune-Times (4/19/92) entitled "Death Row: A Letter from Tony Alamo to a Prisoner on Death Row," in which he tells the prisoner (unnamed) that he must seek salvation and forgiveness of his sins from Christ by reciting the prayer provided in the letter. ================================================================= If this is a copyrighted work, you are acknowledging by receipt of this document from FACTNet that on the basis of reasonable investigation, you have not been to obtain a copy elsewhere at a fair price, and that you are and will abide by the following copyright warning. WARNING CONCERNING COPYRIGHT RESTRICTIONS: The copyright law of the United States (Title 17, United States Code) governs the making of photo copies or other reproductions of copyrighted material. Under certain conditions specified by law, libraries and archives are authorized to furnish a photocopy or other reproduction. One of these specified conditions is that the photocopy or reproduction is not to be "used for any purpose other than private study, scholarship, or research." If a user makes a request for, or later uses, a photocopy or reproduction for purposes in excess of "fair use," that user may be liable for copyright infringement. FACTNet reserves the right to refuse to accept an order for copying or other duplication, or delivery of copied or duplicated material if, in its judgment, fulfillment of the order would involve violation of copyright law. ------------------------------------------------------------------- CARD CATALOG ENTRY DOS FILENAME OF TEXT FILE: E:\PCB\AFF\FILES\CO0592\CO0592AB.TXT DOS FILENAME OF IMAGE FILES: ADMINISTRATIVE CODE: SECURITY CODE: DISTRIBUTION CODE: NAME FOR BBS: SORT TO: CONTRIBUTOR: American Family Foundation (AFF) LOC. OF ORIG: American Family Foundation (AFF) NOTES: Back issues and selected reprints of the Cultic Studies Journal are available from the American Family Foundation, P.O. Box 2265, Bonita Springs, FL 33959-2265. For additional verification see image files contained in the file with same name and .ZIP extension. UPDATED ON: UPDATED BY: F.A.C.T.Net, Inc. (Fight Against Coercive Tactics Network, Incorporated) a non-profit computer bulletin board and electronic library 601 16th St. #C-217 Golden, Colorado 80401 USA BBS 303 530-1942 FAX 303 530-2950 Office 303 473-0111 This document is part of an electronic lending library. F.A.C.T.Net does not sell documents, it only lends them according to the terms of your library cardholder agreement with F.A.C.T.Net, Inc. ------------------------------------------------------------------- CARD CATALOG ENTRY DOS FILENAME OF TEXT FILE: CO0592AB.TXT DOS FILENAME OF IMAGE FILES: none ADMINISTRATIVE CODE: OK SECURITY CODE: SCO DISTRIBUTION CODE: RO DESCRIPTION FOR BBS FILE LISTING: The Cult Observer March 1993 SORT TO: AFF CONTRIBUTOR: American Family Foundation (AFF) LOCATION OF ORIGINAL: American Family Foundation (AFF) NOTES: Back issues and selected reprints of the Cultic Studies Journal are available from the American Family Foundation, P.O. Box 2265, Bonita Springs, FL 33959-2265. U.S.A. STORIES | 1 Scientology Suit Against Drug | Company Exec Dismissed [Eli | Lilly and Company] | 2 Multi-Million Dollar Decision | Against Scientology Upheld [Lawrence | Wollersheim case] | 3 Yahweh Ben Yahweh Guilty [aka Hulon | Mitchell, Jr. Conspiracy to commit | murder, beatings] | 4 Critics Draw Scientology Litigation | [CAN, Time magazine; Werner | Erhard sues] | 5 Northeast Kingdom Custody Case | [Island Pond. Woodward Dawson. | Myrtle Tree Farm.] | 6 Scientology Cited for Overcrowding | [Clearwater] | 7 Scientology Wants to Join Critics | [Mind control, Dr. George Robert- | son, Barry Fisher] | 8 "False Memory Syndrome" Foundation | 9 Deadhead Church Founder "Abusive" | [Grateful Dead. Celibacy dispute.] | 10 Hockey Team Says No To Scientology | 11 Forum Training Dropped by Ohio | Agency [Werner Erhard offshoot. | Margaret Sandberg.] | 12 Failed Family Deprogramming Leads | to Charges [The Way. Steve Skaggs. | Stephanie Skaggs. Randall Burkey] | 13 Evangelicals to Build "Holy Ghost | Town" [Dennis Peacocke, Barry & | Anne Bird] | 14 Refusing Ads for "Rama" [Heart | Dance, New Age] | 15 Alamo Letter to Death Row Inmate For additional verification see the contributor of the document. UPDATED ON: 8/24/94 UPDATED BY: FrJMc =================================================================