
April 10, 2004
Ex-Marin man ordered to pay
$500,000 in
Scientology case
By Nancy Isles Nation, IJ reporter
A Marin Superior Court judge agreed yesterday with the
Church
of Scientology that a renegade ex-official formerly of San Anselmo had
breached
a contract with the church.
Judge Lynn Duryee did not award the church the $10
million it
sought, but ordered Gerry Armstrong, a former researcher and archivist
for Scientology
founder L. Ron Hubbard, to pay $500,000 in restitution to the church.
Armstrong, who has moved to Canada, split from the
church in 1981
and has criticized it vigorously ever since. He says the church is bent
on world
domination, crushes internal dissent and violates its members' civil
rights.
In 1986, the church paid $800,000 to settle a civil
lawsuit filed
by Armstrong, who claimed he was being harassed by church leaders. The
settlement
required Armstrong to stop divulging information he gained as a highly
placed
church insider.
But Armstrong, 57, continued to speak out in media
interviews
and Internet postings, even after Marin Superior Court Judge Gary Thomas
issued
a 1995 injunction ordering him to stop. In 2002, the church sued
Armstrong for
$10,050,000, or $50,000 for each of 201 instances in which he allegedly
breached
his settlement agreement by publicly discussing the church.
At a recent hearing, Duryee disputed some of violations
of the
settlement, and the church whittled the number down to 131 acts for
yesterday's
hearing.
After opening statements by Ford Greene, the San Anselmo
attorney
for Armstrong, and Andrew Wilson, the church's Sausalito-based lawyer,
Duryee
said the defense did not provide evidence that the settlement was
ambiguous and
said she would treat the hearing as a sentencing because the issues had
already
been decided in Judge Thomas' court.
"There is no question the 131 acts did happen,
" Duryee
said. "There is no ambiguity in the agreement and the defendant did
take
the money."
Because a previous judgment had already awarded the
church $300,000
from Armstrong - who cited bankruptcy and did not pay it - Duryee
ordered the
defendant to pay the church another $500,000, or equal the amount the
church had
paid him.
Duryee sentenced Armstrong to 35 days in jail for past
contempt-of-court
citations, issued when he failed to show up for proceedings in Thomas'
court,
but said she considered his time served.
Wilson urged the judge to stiffen the financial penalty
to the
$50,000 per breach the church had asked for and to force the defendant
to serve
time.
"This wasn't contempt of the church, this was
contempt of
the court, not once, not twice but three times," Wilson said.
"He needs
to be put in jail not because he spoke out but because he thumbed his
nose at
the court."
Greene told the judge he agreed with her order and said
his client's
appearance in court showed he was not thumbing his nose at the court.
"He came to Marin County knowing there were prior
contempt
citations," Greene said. "He is not a scofflaw."
Outside the courtroom, members of the church did not
hide their
contempt for Armstrong.
"He passed himself off as a victim when in fact he
made a
career of it since 1986," said church spokeswoman Linda Hight.
"I'm glad we won because that is the only thing
that counts,
and I think Mr. Armstrong got the message," Wilson said. "The
point
is you keep an agreement and you do what the court tells you to
do."
When asked if he intends to turn over the money to the
church,
Armstrong responded: "The short answer is never. I will outlast
them."
Armstrong said the goal of the Church of Scientology is
to silence
him.
"When you can silence someone about a religion,
just imagine,"
Armstrong said.
Contact Nancy Isles Nation via e-mail at nnation@marinij.com
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