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Members of
the Church of Scientology walk past the
church's Flag Building in Clearwater,
Fla., in 2007.
(By Chris O'Meara, AP)
|
A widely
respected Scientology insider has gone public with a dramatic e-mail to fellow
church members that criticizes the church's leadership and describes what she
calls heavyhanded fundraising practices.
READ: The email.
The e-mail
blast to thousands of current and former Scientologists this weekend came from
Debra J. Cook, who was a top executive at the Scientologists' headquarters in
Clearwater, Fla.
In her
e-mail, Cook calls on members not to give any more donations unless it can be
justified by specific writings of L. Ron Hubbard, the founder of Scientology.
The story
first broke in The Village Voice, which published the e-mail. It was followed
by a story in the the Tampa Bay Times, formerly the St. Petersburg Times, which
recently published a multipart investigation on the church titled "The
Money Machine."
It is
particularly striking that the internal criticism came from a prominent leader
and not from a disgruntled defector of the highly secretive church, the
newspaper notes.
In her
e-mail, Cook said the church is hoarding "well in excess of a billion
dollars" yet continues to press members aggressively to contribute more,
using intimidation tactics including threats that their "spiriitual
progress" will be slowed, The Times reports.
The newspaper,
which has written extensively about Scientology over the years, says the church
did not respond to requests for comment.
Tony Ortega
of The Village Voice initially posted the e-mail, but took it down at Cook's
request. Cook has acknowledged its legitimacy on her Facebook page in a posting
that itself prompted a discussion.
Ortega, who
has often written about the church, says the e-mail "condemns church
leader David Miscavige for turning Scientology into little more than a
money-hungry fundraising machine."

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