The Church of Scientology network operates as a multinational conglomerate of companies with personnel, executives, organizational charts, chains of command, policies and orders.[1][2][3]

David Miscavige, Chairman of the Board, Religious Technology Center

Religious Technology Center is the most powerful executive organization within the Scientology empire, and its current chairman, David Miscavige, is widely recognized as the effective head of the church.

— Hugh Urban [3]: 131 

Hierarchy of staff edit

Personnel are bound by policy as written by L. Ron Hubbard and by orders from any senior. Each staff member is junior to those above them on the organizational chart (called an "org board"[4]: 369 ) and is senior to those under them.

Scientology "members" are those public individuals who are not on staff, who pay the organization for training or auditing services, and who live and work separately from the Church of Scientology.[5]: 70  Members defer to all staff personnel, who are seen as their seniors. All members and staff defer to Sea Org staff. Even though public members are not part of the organization proper, they are ranked within the entire chain of command and are frequently pressed into service for clerical or promotional tasks or recruiting new members.[2]: 180  Members who recruit people for Scientology services are called "field staff members" (FSM) and are paid a commission of 10%–15% of the amount the new person pays.[6][7][2]: 181 

The recruit is transformed from a client to a follower and from a follower to a deployable agent.

— Roy Wallis in The Road to Total Freedom[2]: 188 

Staff contracts edit

Staff sign employment contracts, though in recent years these contracts label them as volunteers or "religious workers" to circumvent labor laws because staff are almost universally paid less than locally mandated minimum wage. However, all organizational policies written by L. Ron Hubbard refer to such workers as "staff".[8]

These contracts have lengthy durations. At a Class V organization, a contract may be as short as 2.5 years; extending to 5 years or more if they are sent to Flag Service Org for extensive training. Sea Org members sign billion-year contracts; effectively a perpetual contract with no expiration date. Sea Org personnel live in communal housing; Class V staff make their own living arrangements and sometimes even have second jobs.[2]: 182 

Pay edit

Staff hold posts where they are either given a small fixed allowance (Sea Org)[9] or are paid based on a share-percentage of the organization's weekly gross receipts.[8][2]: 135–136  Occasionally, those who work in sales or fundraising posts may have a chance for bonuses. Sea Org members who work for one of the for-profit corporations in the network are paid a minimum wage, reduced by deductions for housing and other expenses, bringing their pay back in line with other Sea Org allowances.

The employees of Hubbard's Org are not merely officials, but also disciples. Hence commitment of staff to the Org is secured by ideological means, replacing the need for the attractions of tenure, secure salary and orderly promotion through a work hierarchy.

— Roy Wallis in The Road to Total Freedom[2]: 137 

Production edit

Staff are required to keep "stats" (statistics)—a count of their production. They perform weekly evaluations of their own stats and are required to chart the stats on a graph, declare their "ethics condition" for last week's production, and write up their "ethics formula", laying out their plans for the next week. Personnel whose production stats were lower than the prior week, or whose graph shows a general downtrending pattern, are dealt with by the "ethics officer", often with harsh penalties.[5] For example, certain conditions below "Normal" may preclude getting paid at all.[2]: 183 

Staff may be punished, though usually for lack of production or insubordination; not usually for basic behavioral matters. In the Sea Org, staff are routinely removed from post and reassigned to the Rehabilitation Project Force (RPF), a forced labor and re-indoctrination program.[1][9] Removing a staff members completely from the organization is called "offloading".

Sea Org members are heavily discouraged from engaging in any family activities such as the raising of children, and are expected to spend their entire waking hours in service to the Church of Scientology.[1][9]

Further paralleling the institutional order of developed societies, ... Hubbard has strategically used that authority to establish Scientology upon the legal-rational basis of an almost ideal-typical bureaucracy. This social world is run along formal lines defined by "Policy"—the stream of bulletins and material written or authorized by Hubbard, periodically compiled into thick volumes and treated for all intents and purposes as law. Policy specifies every aspect of organizational life.

— Roger Straus in Scientology "Ethics": Deviance, Identity and Social Control in a Cult-Like Social World [5]: 70 

Training edit

Though formal training courses are available for all posts, staff members are expected to be proficient at all times, whether trained or not. All posts have a "hat writeup" ("hat" for short) which consists of Hubbard writings pertaining to that post and other writeups written by those who held the post before.[4]: 244–245 

Enhancement edit

Staff are recruited with promises that they are expected to train or be audited for 2.5 hours per day worked (called "enhancement"),[2]: 182  but in reality enhancement time is usually bumped for the latest emergency—called a "flap" [10]: 284 [4]: 131 —or expected to be performed outside of their normal work hours.

Staff receive Scientology training, and occasionally auditing, on a deferred basis. Invoices are written up for services taken, but no payment is expected while the staff member continues to work for the organization. If they complete their contract, they are pressured to re-commit for another contract term,[11] but if they leave having fulfilled their contract term their deferred invoices are forgiven or waived. While seeming to be free services, if a staff member is offloaded (fired) or breaks their contract by leaving before its term completion, they are immediately invoiced for all services rendered during their employment.[2]: 182  Since Sea Org members sign perpetual contracts, their invoice—called a "freeloader bill"—can be quite high; no waivers or reductions being given for years of service rendered.[9][12]

If a person leaves before their contract termination date without performing specific steps for leaving (called "routing out"[11]), they are considered "blown" and such individuals will often be declared suppressive.

List of Scientology officials edit

This is a list of current and former officials of the Church of Scientology.

Current edit

Bob Adams
A former professional American football player in the NFL,[13][14] Adams served in 2004 as senior vice president of the Scientology organization's Association for Better Living and Education (ABLE).[15] Adams worked in 2006 as a "communications executive with the Church of Scientology in Hollywood";[16] he was a vice president of the Church of Scientology in 2006.[17] He held the position of vice president of public affairs for the Church of Scientology International in 2009,[18] as well as vice president of the International School of Scientology.[19][20]
John Carmichael
Carmichael became a Scientology ordained minister in 1973.[21] Since at least 1987 he was the President of the Church of Scientology of New York, and as of 2006 was the spokesman for all the churches in the New York and New Jersey area.[22][23]
Leisa Goodman
Human Rights Director, Church of Scientology International.[24]
Heber Jentzsch
President, Church of Scientology International.[25]
David Miscavige
Chairman of the Board, Religious Technology Center and de facto leader of the entire Church of Scientology network of organizations.[26][27]
Shelly Miscavige
Wife of David Miscavige, formerly his "communicator" (executive assistant), not seen publicly since 2007, and reputedly still in the Sea Org.[28][29][30]: 303 
Kendrick "Rick" Moxon
Prominent Scientology attorney, previously member of Scientology division the Guardian's Office.[31][32][33]
Karin Pouw
Spokeswoman,[34][35] director of public affairs for Church of Scientology International,[36] and member of Office of Special Affairs (OSA).[37]

Eric Roux
Scientology spokesman, president of the Union of the Churches of Scientology in France, Vice-President of the European Office of the Church of Scientology for Public Affairs and Human Rights, chairman of European Interreligious Forum for Religious Freedom, and has authored the book Everything you need to know about Scientology (in French).[38]
Kenneth Howard Shapiro
Registar of Church of Scientology of Los Angeles branch.[39]
Michelle Stith
AKA Chel Stith. In 2005 was President of the Church of Scientology of Los Angeles, later Deputy Executive Director of the Church of Scientology of Pasadena.[40]
Kurt Weiland
Director of external affairs, Office of Special Affairs, and director, Church of Scientology International.[41]

Deceased edit

David Gaiman
(b.1933–d.2009) Former Scientology spokesman,[42] public relations director of Scientology in England.[43] Father of fantasy author, Neil Gaiman.[44]
L. Ron Hubbard
(b.1911–d.1986) Founder of Scientology.[45]
Mary Sue Hubbard
(b.1931–d.2002) Wife of L. Ron Hubbard, Controller of the Guardian's Office—former legal and public affairs branch of Scientology.[26]

Former edit

Gerry Armstrong
Former member of Scientology's Sea Org, whose members "occupy the most essential and trusted positions in the senior churches in the Scientology hierarchy";[46] went on to become an outspoken critic of Scientology.[47] While a member of the organization, Armstrong was "officially authorized by the Church of Scientology to write a biography" about L. Ron Hubbard.[48] He left the organization in 1981.[49]

Vicki Aznaran and Richard Aznaran
Vicki Aznaran joined Scientology in 1972. She was a Sea Org member who rose to be one of the top officials in the Church of Scientology, and was a deputy for Annie Broeker who had posted her as Inspector General of RTC (1984-1987).[50]: 119 [51]: 150  Vicki's husband, Richard Aznaran, was the Church's head of security.[6] When Hubbard died, David Miscavige made his play for power and displaced the Broekers, Hubbard's trusted aides.[51]: 154  By 1987, Miscavige installed himself as head of RTC and he purged anyone loyal to the Broekers or the Aznarans.[50]: 122  The Aznarans were sent to the Rehabilitation Project Force (RPF: Scientology's forced-labor reeducation camp) in 1987 but left the Sea Org shortly thereafter.[6][50]: 119 
In 1988 the Aznarans filed suit against the Church of Scientology for false imprisonment and emotional abuse. The complaint alleged staff were treated with physical abuse, lack of sleep, brainwashing and slave-like conditions. Among other deprivations, they alleged staff were paid with 'tokens' to be exchanged for room and board, and any dissatisfaction with their work or attitude would cause tokens to be withheld, resulting in staff sleeping outside and being fed only rice, beans and water. In the early 1980s, both Richard and Vicki Aznaran had been assigned to the RPF at different times, separating them from each other. Even when not on the RPF, they were separated at times for lengthy periods, including a time when Richard was sent to Hubbard's ranch and was made to sleep in a horse stable.[52]: 358–62 [50]: 124 
They cooperated with Richard Behar for his 1991 exposé, The Thriving Cult of Greed and Power, where Vicki is quoted as saying "This is a criminal organization, day in and day out".[6] In an interview with Forrest Sawyer which preceded Miscavige's only television interview, Vicki said Miscavige ordered attacks—"have them, their homes, broken into, have them beaten, have things stolen from them, slash their tires, break their car windows, whatever".[30]: 219  The Aznarans filed affidavits in support of Fishman in the case of Church of Scientology International v. Fishman and Geertz, however, at some point Richard Aznaran reached out to Mike Rinder to negotiate a settlement of their own case; they did settle and Vicki retracted her March 1994 affidavit just a month later.[53][50]: 124 
Tommy Davis
Former spokesman and director of Celebrity Centre International, Los Angeles.[54][55][56] Was listed as an "International Spokesperson" on Scientology Newsroom, the Church's official media resource center.[34]
Jessica Feshbach
Joined the Sea Org in 1994,[57] In 2005, MSNBC characterized Feshbach as a "Senior Scientologist",[58] and Fox News Channel called her "a high-level Scientologist" within the organization.[59] In 2006, MSNBC described Feshbach as, "a high-level Scientology practitioner and member of the church's influential Feshbach family".[60] Feshbach began working with assistants to celebrity Scientology member and actor, Tom Cruise,[61] in April 2005; she attended to Katie Holmes.[62] By 2009, Feshbach had become a public spokesperson for Scientology;[54] as of January 2011, she was listed as an "International Spokesperson" on Scientology Newsroom, the Church's official media resource center.[34]

Jefferson Hawkins
Joined Scientology in 1967 and was in for 37 years. Worked in the marketing unit. Creator of the 1980s Dianetics promotional campaign including the TV ads with the exploding volcano which landed the book onto The New York Times Best Seller list. The first of five assaults by David Miscavige was in 2002 when Miscavige leapt off a table on top of Hawkins, hitting and choking him.[63][54]: part 3 [30]: 275–6 [51]: 67–70, 177  His book Counterfeit Dreams: One Man's Journey into and Out of the World of Scientology was published in 2010.[64]

Warren McShane
McShane joined Scientology in 1973 and held numerous positions in the Church of Scientology including working in the Guardian's Office and holding the position of assistant guardian for intelligence in New York. In 1983 he joined Religious Technology Center and held the post of president of RTC, and later Deputy Inspector General for Legal Affairs RTC.[65][50]: 154  McShane registered numerous trademarks for Scientology.[65]
In RTC's attempt to stop the online publishing of their OT level texts in RTC v Wollersheim, McShane testified that "the church derives significant revenue from the fixed donations its members pay to study the texts".[66][3]: 185  According to Mike Rinder, his reputation with Miscavige was "he's the best liar I know", and McShane was frequently used in lawsuit depositions to deny Miscavige's involvement with day-to-day operations of the Church of Scientology.[50]: 154 
Mark "Marty" Rathbun
Former president[26][67] of the Religious Technology Center;[68] later left the Church of Scientology and took part in a St. Petersburg Times exposé on the Church; today practices Scientology outside of the Church,[54] operating a website that "has become an online community for what he calls 'independent Scientologists'."[69]
Mike Rinder
Former executive director of Office of Special Affairs International (OSA).[70]
Aaron Saxton
Former member of the Commodore's Messenger Organization,[71] and senior official within the Sea Org;[72][73][74] later a prominent whistleblower whose exposés prompted debates in the Australian Senate.[72][73]
Robert Vaughn Young and Stacy Brooks (formerly Stacy Young)
Vaughn (b.1938–d.2003) worked for the Church of Scientology for 22 years; was a national spokesperson and worldwide public relations officer; worked under David Miscavige at Author Services Inc. Stacey (b.1952–) worked for Scientology for 15 years; worked under Mike Rinder at Office of Special Affairs USA. In 1989 they left the Sea Org together and were fair gamed and surveilled for years by Scientology. Both later were expert witnesses against Scientology in several prominent legal cases. Vaughn went on to become an online critic of Scientology, and Stacey an anti-Scientology advocate with the Lisa McPherson Trust.[75][3]: 125 [51]: 155 [50]: 125, 172 [76]
David Mayo
Former auditor of L. Ron Hubbard, former Senior Case Supervisor International, ousted by David Miscavige and sentenced to physical punishment in 1982. Mayo escaped and in 1983 started his own splinter group called Advanced Ability Center.[50]: 99–101 

See also edit

References edit

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  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Wallis, Roy (1977). The Road to Total Freedom: A Sociological Analysis of Scientology. Columbia University Press. p. 128. ISBN 0231042000. OL 4596322M. Hubbard was well aware of the value of corporate structures as weapons in the control of both his movement and its environment. A complex corporate structure maximizes the difficulty of surveillance, or investigation of the movement's affairs.
  3. ^ a b c d Urban, Hugh B. (2011). The Church of Scientology: A History of a New Religion. Princeton University Press. p. 88. ISBN 9780691146089. More than one observer has noted that Scientology's early organizational structure resembles less a traditional church than it does multi-national enterprises such as the Ford Motor Corporation, Coca Cola or International Telephone and Telegraph.
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Further reading edit