Audio By Carbonatix
A couple has sued the Church of Scientology for deceiving them to donate monies to the church.
The couple who are former members of the church claimed in a lawsuit that the church and its affiliates deceived members into donating millions of dollars to misrepresented causes.
Luis and Maria Garcia of Irvine, Calif., filed the complaint in federal court in Tampa, near the church's national headquarters in Clearwater.
The couple claims they were duped into giving more than $420,000 for a building campaign, disaster relief efforts and other Scientology causes, only to find the bulk of the money went to inflate the church coffers and line the pockets of its leader, David Miscavige.
"The church, under the leadership of David Miscavige, has strayed from its founding principles," the lawsuit claims, "and morphed into a secular enterprise whose primary purpose is taking people's money."
In an emailed statement, Scientology spokeswoman Pat Harney said the church had not yet been served with the lawsuit, but challenged any contention that money was misappropriated.
"We understand from media inquiries this has something to do with fundraising and we can unequivocally state all funds solicited are used for the charitable and religious purposes for which they were donated," Harney said.
The Garcias were 28-year members of the church, rising to upper levels of Scientology. They left in November 2010 over their disenchantment with its direction under Miscavige, who has led the church since founder, L. Ron Hubbard's death in 1986.
The lawsuit names various trusts and nonprofits linked to Scientology as defendants and says they collectively engage in fraud, unfair and deceptive trade practices and breach of contract in their fundraising.
Attorney Theodore Babbitt of West Palm Beach, who is among those handling the suit, said it would be followed by other similar claims from former Scientologists.
Among the accusations made in the lawsuit is that the Garcias and others were repeatedly approached with urgent requests for funding of Scientology work around the globe, such as disaster relief or campaigns for causes such as ending child pornography.
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
Linda Ocloo warns Greater Accra on high flood alert and announces emergency measures
26 minutes -
CEO Summit: BoG Governor assures of monetary stability to drive industrial growth
27 minutes -
Anticipation builds ahead of 2026 Hitz FM ‘Rep Ur Jersey’
29 minutes -
CEO Summit: Deloitte Ghana urges government to turn policies into real jobs
36 minutes -
Photos: First batch of Ghanaians fleeing xenophobic attacks in South Africa arrive in Ghana
46 minutes -
Xenophobic attacks: Over 400 Ghanaians expected back home this weekend – Benjamin Quashie
47 minutes -
CEO Summit: Togbe Afede calls for bold leadership to sustain Ghana’s economic recovery
57 minutes -
Black Stars: I won’t be upset if I don’t start – Benjamin Asare
1 hour -
Senior Ghanaian miners in South Africa seek evacuation amid rising xenophobic tensions — High Commissioner
1 hour -
Zoomlion rejects Auditor-General’s allegations over African Games cleaning contracts
1 hour -
Claims that only 10 Ghanaian evacuees are legal migrants in South Africa are false — Benjamin Quashie
1 hour -
AG sues JA Plant Pool, Siaw Agyepong over alleged $2m DRIP overpayment
2 hours -
FDI inflows hit US$2.61bn in 2025 – GIPC
3 hours -
Sixteen pupils killed in Kenya school fire
3 hours -
Ghana’s tax gap: New levies loom in mid-year budget
3 hours