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June 29, 1990 THE BATTLE WITH THE I.R.S. When the Doctrine Leaves the Church By Robert W. Welkos and Joel Sappell, Times Staff Writer The Church of Scientology hates "squirrels." That is the scornful word L. Ron Hubbard used to describe
non-church members who offer his teachings, sometimes at cut-rate prices. Most
are ex-Scientologists who say they believe in Hubbard's gospel but left the
church because its hierarchy was too oppressive. "We call them squirrels," Hubbard once wrote,
"because they are so nutty." 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. As far back as 1965, Hubbard demonstrated his disdain for
breakaway groups, ordering his followers to "tear up" the meetings of
one such organization and "harass these persons in any possible way." The intolerance still exists. In 1988, the California Assn. of Dianetic Auditors--the oldest
Scientology splinter group in existence--said it uncovered a scheme by more
than 100 Scientologists to secretly infiltrate the association and seize
control of its board of directors. The association's then-vice president, Jana Moreillon, said she
discovered the infiltration after scanning some Scientology publications.
There, she found the names of many of her group's newest members listed among
Scientologists who had just completed church training. Moreillon said the association eventually purged or denied
membership to 116 suspected Scientologists. In recent years, a shadowy group of church members dubbed the
"Minutemen" crashed meetings of independent Scientologists. They
heckled speakers, screamed obscenities and threw eggs. Los Angeles police
officers had to be summoned by the owner of a Chinatown restaurant to evict
militant Scientologists who disrupted a fund-raising dinner held there by
breakaway church members. The church has denied any direct involvement in the raids. But a
former top Scientology official said in a recent court declaration that the
harassment campaign was ordered by church executives |