From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
|
Arnie Lerma |
 |
| Born |
November 18, 1950
|
| Residence |
Alexandria, Virginia |
| Occupation |
A/V technician |
Arnaldo (Arnie) Pagliarini Lerma (born November
18, 1950) is an American writer and activist, a former
Scientologist, and critic of Scientology, who has appeared in
television, media and radio interviews. Lerma was the first person
to post the court document known as the Fishman
Affidavit, including the Xenu
story, to the internet via the Usenet newsgroup alt.religion.scientology.
Time in
Scientology
Lerma started in Scientology at the age of 16 at the urging of
his mother, an executive director for the Washington, DC church. He
was impressed by L. Ron Hubbard's exaggerated account of
his military career and scientific credentials.[1] Lerma
joined Scientology's Sea Org
and was assigned in 1976 to a post working alongside Hubbard's
daughter Suzette. They became romantically involved and planned to
elope. Other
Sea Org officers discovered their plans and, according to Lerma,
threatened to mutilate him if he did not cancel the marriage. Lerma
quit Scientology soon afterward.[2]
RTC v.
Lerma
After Lerma posted the Fishman Affidavit in August 1995, his
home was raided by federal marshals
and lawyers from the Church of Scientology, alleging
he was in possession of copyrighted documents.[3][4] A
lawsuit was filed against Lerma and his Internet service provider
by the church's Religious Technology
Center, (RTC), claiming copyright infringement and trade secret
misappropriation.[4]
The Washington Post and two investigative reporters were added
to the lawsuit, as an article written about the raid contained
three brief quotes from Scientology "Advanced Technology"
documents.[5] The
Washington Post, et al. were released from the suit when USDJ Leonie Brinkema
ruled in a memorandum on November 28, 1995:
- "When the RTC first approached the Court with its ex parte
request for the seizure warrant and temporary
restraining order, the dispute was presented as a
straight-forward one under copyright and trade secret law. However,
the Court is now convinced that the primary motivation of RTC in
suing Lerma, DGS and The Post is to stifle criticism of Scientology
in general and to harass its critics. As the increasingly vitriolic
rhetoric of its briefs and oral argument now demonstrates, the RTC
appears far more concerned about criticism of Scientology than
vindication of its secrets."
(Memorandum Opinion of November 28, 1995, by U.S. District Judge Leonie
Brinkema; Religious Technology Center v. Arnaldo Lerma,
Washington Post, Mark Fisher, and Richard Leiby)
The Memorandum Opinion acknowledges what Scientology practices
to this day: the "Fair Game" policy, a written
directive by L. Ron Hubbard that encourages harassment of anyone
who speaks out against the church. In conclusion, the court awarded
RTC the statutory minimum of $2,500 for five instances of
non-willful copyright violation.
Lermanet
Arnie Lerma started a website "Lermanet" which concentrates on
news about Scientology and on documenting lawsuits by
Scientology.
Arnie Lerma is also noted for discovering an altered picture on
a Scientology website on New Year's Eve in 1999, one that appeared
to inflate the number of members attending a millennial event at
the Los Angeles Sports Arena in California. He posted the pictures
to his website identifying the alterations, with the most prominent
feature being the "man with no head." The story appeared on
national television and in the press.[6]
Writings
Notes
References
- "Church of Scientology
protects secrets on the Internet". CNN. 1995-08-26. http://www.cnn.com/US/9508/scientology/index.html. Retrieved
2007-10-19.
- Wendy M. Grossman (December 1995).
"alt.scientology.war".
Wired magazine 3.12 (Wired). http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/3.12/alt.scientology.war.html. Retrieved
2007-08-03.
- Kennedy, Dan (1996-05-15). "Getting Clear at BU?".
Media Circus. Salon. http://www.salon.com/media/media960515.html. Retrieved
2007-10-19.
- Prendergast, Alan (1997-08-14). "Hush-Hush Money". Westword. http://www.westword.com/1997-08-14/news/hush-hush-money/. Retrieved
2007-10-19.
- Grossman, Wendy (October 1997). "Copyright Terrorists".
Net. Wars. New York: New York
University Press. p. 9. ISBN
0-8147-3103-1. http://www.nyupress.org/netwars/textonly/pages/chapter06/ch06_09.html. Retrieved
2007-08-03.
- Morgan, Lucy (1998-01-28). "Hardball". Special
Report. St. Petersburg Times. http://www.sptimes.com/News/32899/TampaBay/Hardball.html. Retrieved
2007-10-19.
- Borland, John (1998-11-09). "Scientology loses copyright
round". CNET. http://news.com.com/2100-1023-217696.html. Retrieved
2007-08-03.
- Macavinta, Courtney (1999-03-30). "Scientologists settle legal
battle". CNET. http://news.com.com/Scientologists+settle+legal+battle/2100-1023_3-223683.html?tag=item. Retrieved
2007-08-03.
- Knight, Will (2000-01-10). "Scientologists admit to
altering New Year photos". ZDNet. http://news.zdnet.co.uk/itmanagement/0,1000000308,2076173,00.htm. Retrieved
2007-10-19.
External
links
- Lermanet.com: Exposing the con (Arnie Lerma's
Website) Media, Documentation and Pictures of 1995 Raid
- Church of Scientology
protects secrets on the Internet CNN, Washington, August
26, 1995
- Affidavit by Arnie Lerma
dated September 6, 1995.
- Brinkema, Leonie M. Civil
Action No. 95-1107-A: Memorandum Opinion Alexandria: US
District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia-Alexandria
Division, November 28, 1995
- alt.scientology.war by Wendy Grossman,
Wired Magazine, December, 1995