FBI’s Scientology investigation: Balancing the First Amendment with charges of abuse and forced labor

 

 

John Brousseau hadn’t been seen for hours, not at the afternoon muster and not at the dinner break. That’s when they got concerned.

At 6 a.m. he had driven his black Ford Excursion out of the Church of Scientology’s huge compound east of Los Angeles, guards at the gate waving as usual.

A 32-year member of the church’s religious order, the Sea Org, and a master craftsman, Brousseau often did special jobs for Scientology’s leader, David Miscavige. He could come and go from the church’s International Base with a freedom other workers didn’t enjoy. But now it was approaching 7:30 p.m. And he wasn’t back.

Two Scientology staffers found a note in his room.

By now you’ve noticed I’m gone. I couldn’t stand to see my Sea Org friends so mistreated. I won’t support it anymore. Goodbye.

Where had he gone?

Within days, church private investigators spotted him in south Texas. He was meeting with Marty Rathbun — a former top deputy to Miscavige and now his most vocal critic.

 

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