Case Was Heresy Trial and Ruling will Lead to Courts Clogged with Frivolous Cases

-- French government pays front groups to bring trumped-up cases --

Responding to a decision today in a Paris court, the Church of Scientology International stated that the ruling is a politically motivated miscarriage of justice. Its main effect will be to ensure that despite rising crime, perpetrators will get away because the courts are clogged with such frivolous cases.

The case involved charges brought against the Church of Scientology and its president, Marc Walter, under the Data Protection Law.

"The decision is an attempt to apply commercial law to prohibit religious expression," said Leisa Goodman, Human Rights Director for the Church of Scientology International. "It is an intolerable interference by the state with the religious freedom won from 2,000 years of history in Europe. The Church in France will have a field day on appeal because the ruling violates the European Convention on Human Rights."

She described the case as a heresy trial and a shameful travesty of justice. "But we shouldn't be surprised at a time when Jewish synagogues in France get attacked and neo-Nazis make it to the presidential run-off. In a more civilized society, the case would never have come to court."

Ms Goodman said that the case is about two letters inadvertently mailed in good faith over the course of five years. "Now the courts are likely to be bogged down in similarly frivolous cases, when they should be delivering justice to the perpetrators of actual crimes," she said.

The Church in France will appeal the decision.

Ms. Goodman said the case was trumped-up as part of a French government-sponsored campaign to destroy religious liberty.

"Recent disclosures under the Freedom of Information Act have revealed that the French government funds the anti-religious hate groups that stirred up this case, to the amount of 1.8 million dollars per year. And out of a total of 3,000 complaints filed to the Data Protection Commission in the year 2,000, involving extensive violations, only a minor complaint against the Church of Scientology was prosecuted," she said.

She added, "The French government was so desperate to bring this bogus case against the Church that they used a completely discreditable witness, who was convicted for incitement to murder only four days after testifying for them."

She said the campaign against religious liberty in France is directed by an extremist official, Alain Vivien, who heads a so-called "Interministerial Mission to Combat Sects." International human rights organizations, the U.S. government religious organizations and many elected officials have condemned the human rights violations resulting from Vivien's actions.

"Three weeks ago the French people rejected extremism and intolerance at the polling booth. We call upon the French government to take that message to heart. Dismiss Vivien and disband his office," Ms Goodman said.

She said that the decision will have no impact upon the Church of Scientology in France. "We will continue our anti-drug and human rights activities while exposing the fanatics who perpetrate intolerance and hatred."

Churches of Scientology have achieved full tax-exempt status in the United States as religious and charitable organizations; religious
recognition in Canada, Sweden and South Africa; religious recognition by the Supreme Court of Italy; vindication in the courts in Spain, and
scores of other positive rulings by judicial and administrative bodies throughout the world, including in France.

The Scientology religion was founded by writer and humanitarian L. Ron Hubbard. From one church established by Scientologists in 1954, the Church has grown to 9 million members in 150 countries. The Scientology religion holds that man is a spiritual being, that he is basically good, and is capable of spiritual betterment.

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Freedom Magazine, Published by the Church of Scientology International