Church sues former Scientologist
for $10
million
Keith Fraser
CanWest News Service
Friday, March 26, 2004
The Church of Scientology is suing a Chilliwack, B.C., man for more
than $10
million for violating an agreement to remain silent about the
organization.
A trial is scheduled for April in California.
The church says Gerry Armstrong, a long-time former church member,
made numerous
Internet postings that breached the deal signed in 1986.
The deal called for the 57-year-old Canadian citizen, a former
resident of
Marin County north of San Francisco, to be fined $50,000 each time he
spoke about
Scientology.
Armstrong, who joined the church in 1969 in Vancouver and moved to
California
and worked closely with Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard, admits that
under
the agreement he was also paid $500,000 to hand back documents he took
when he
left the church in 1981.
Armstrong admits he's breached the agreement "hundreds of
thousands of
times," but in a document filed in Marin County Superior Court he
adds that
he signed the deal under "shudder-inducing" duress and doesn't
intend
to abide by it.
Church lawyer Andrew Wilson said the amount of money the church paid
Armstrong
is closer to $800,000.
"He was paid a lot of money and he now says he was under duress,
but he
took the money," said Wilson, a California lawyer.
"Ironically when he was done spending or giving it way, about
1989, he
started breaching the agreement and decided he had a constitutional
right, to
freedom of speech, to say whatever he wanted."
© The Calgary Herald 2004