Hollywood figures quit "rip-off" church as Australian prime minister threatens parliamentary inquiry into its activities.
The security at the red-brick and glass-walled horseshoe of the John
Joseph Moakley courthouse on Boston's waterfront was unusually tight.
Anybody who was not a member of the city's bar association was swept
with a search wand. Photo IDs were checked. Mobile phones were taken
from guests, who included the Hollywood star Tom Cruise.
The occasion was a memorial service for Scientology's
top legal adviser for a quarter of a century, Earle Cooley. The
controversial head of Scientology worldwide, David Miscavige, delivered
the eulogy, thanking his late friend for his contribution to the neo-religion during his career, much of which was spent pursuing journalists and former members who spoke out against it.
Miscavige
may since have wondered privately what Cooley would have made of the
events of last week. Scientology, founded in 1953 by the late science
fiction pulp novelist, serial fantasist and inveterate self-publicist L
Ron Hubbard, is under fire again across the globe, following years of
struggle to be recognized - with some success - as a legitimate church.
The
church has just been denounced in the strongest possible terms in the
Australian parliament. Prime minister Kevin Rudd has expressed his
concern over allegations of "a worldwide pattern of abuse and
criminality" and is contemplating a parliamentary inquiry. The
organization is under police investigation and yesterday angry
ex-Scientologists, spurred on by the claims, converged on its
Australian headquarters calling for its tax-exempt status to be revoked.
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