credit to Andrew Robertson |
Families say rehab clinic opened credit cards without permission
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WSB-TV
The Narconon Georgia in Norcorss
NORCROSS, Ga. —
Local families desperate to save a loved one from drug addiction thought they had found the answer. But now several families tell Channel 2 Action News their enrollment at Narconon of Georgia came with a shocking price: thousands of dollars billed to credit cards they never opened.
"I said 'What are you doing? This is not what we agreed to,'" Mike Dacy told Channel 2 investigative reporter Jodie Fleischer, of his reaction upon learning Narconon opened two credit cards in his brother-in-law's name.
Dacy's son, Jonathan, enrolled at Narconon of Georgia in December 2009 for an addiction to pain pills.
"Jonathan was just full of love, he had a great sense of humor. Then there was the dark side that the addiction got a hold of," said his father.
Jonathan had been in and out of rehab for years. Dacy said the family was worried and desperate.
"This time he was really invested. He wanted to be a good dad to his son and he really wanted to change his life," said Terri Dacy, Jonathan's mother.
The Dacys found Narconon on the Internet and said, for the first time, Jonathan seemed excited and hopeful. When the family couldn't afford the $30,000 price tag, they said Narconon told them, "No problem."
"They would help with the financing. Everything we wanted to hear," said Mike Dacy.
But Narconon said the Dacy's credit history wasn't good enough, so in stepped Jonathan's uncle, Scott Maxey. Maxey said he gave his personal information over the phone simply to vouch that the family would pay.
"No one ever said,'We're going to open up two credit cards in your name,'" said Maxey, who lives in Chicago and has never been to Narconon.
He received two credit cards in the mail, followed by bills which showed they were already maxed out. Narconon of Georgia charged $3000 on a Capital One card and $7300 on a Citi card, all in one day, all in Maxey's name.
"I hit the roof, we all did," said Terri Dacy.
Tari Anderson had the same reaction after getting two cards in the mail. She had already written a $5,000 check to Narconon for her son's treatment.
"It seemed like what we needed. Then the next thing we know we have Discover card," said Anderson.
She and her husband also received a Capital One card and a total of $11,000 in charges. Then she said additional Narconon debits started showing up on her bank account. The family paid nearly $24,000 out of pocket.
"If they had asked me for a million dollars, I would have tried to find a way to get it to them," said Anderson.
But her son was only there for three and a half months, and a medical condition kept him from the program's main component, hours each day in a sauna.
"If all they want is your money, and they don't provide any services, then that could potentially become a criminal offense," said Gwinnett County District Attorney Danny Porter.
Fleischer showed Porter the families' credit card records. Days later, his investigators helped the Georgia Insurance Commissioner's fraud team execute a search warrant at Narconon.
They hauled away nearly two dozen hard drives and laptops, and boxes of financial and medical records.
"We're actively and vigorously pursuing an investigation," said Porter of the potential credit card fraud. He's hoping the computers will show which employees were using them when the cards were opened.
His office would also be the one to prosecute the state's ongoing insurance fraud case against Narconon, which resulted from a Channel 2 Action News investigation in January.
Fleischer exposed $166,000 in Narconon insurance bills for another family who had already paid for the program in full.
The Norcross facility continues to operate while appealing a license revocation by Georgia's Department of Community Health. That came just months after Channel 2, along with its news partners at WSB Radio and the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, exposed evidence that the facility was advertising as an inpatient residential facility, when it is only licensed for outpatient care.
A former employee admitted altering the facility's letterhead to remove the word "outpatient" when corresponding with drug courts and probation officers whose clients required the higher level of care. The whistleblower saidNarconon Executive Director Mary Rieser directed that. Rieser resigned in January.
"That's what Narconon really has a history of is saying one thing and doing another," said Luke Catton, who helped run Narconon's flagship Arrowhead facility in Oklahoma.
Catton, who has since become a Narconon whistleblower, helped expose the program's roots within the Church of Scientology, and questionable financial practices.
"They're doing whatever it takes to make sure somebody's going to come in the door. You remove all financial barriers and if it includes creative financing, then it does," said Catton.
The Arrowhead facility is named in a civil lawsuit filed by a former patient and her sister, who "Received two credit cards through the mail for which she did not apply." Her bills totaled $14,500 and now have a 23 percent interest rate.
"As soon as they have your money and it's really solidified then everything goes downhill after that," says Terri Dacy.
Jonathan left Narconon after only one month. He died three months later.
"My true feeling in the bottom of my heart is that they were directly responsible for my son's death," she said.
That was three years ago.
Capital One canceled the charge once the Dacys explained the situation.
Citi has refused to do the same, so the family is still paying off that Citi card.
"To this day, the pain is really harsh, really harsh," Terri Dacy said.
Narconon International and Narconon of Georgia both responded to Fleischer with statements.
"It would be contrary to Narconon's policy to engage in the type of conduct you are alleging. Narconon International and all Narconons are bound by strict state and federal privacy laws. Therefore, we cannot discuss any details about any individuals or their loved ones that claim to have been involved with our program without their written authorization," Clark Carr, President of Narconon International, said.
"Narconon is aware of the investigation. Narconon of Georgia follows customary and professional billing practices and procedures. Payment terms are clearly explained to all students. Narconon of Georgia has served the Atlanta community for the past decade offering drug education, prevention and rehabilitation services. Scores of successful Narconon graduates and their families can attest that the program has transformed lives through recovery and sobriety," Narconon of Georgia said in a statement.
"I said 'What are you doing? This is not what we agreed to,'" Mike Dacy told Channel 2 investigative reporter Jodie Fleischer, of his reaction upon learning Narconon opened two credit cards in his brother-in-law's name.
Dacy's son, Jonathan, enrolled at Narconon of Georgia in December 2009 for an addiction to pain pills.
"Jonathan was just full of love, he had a great sense of humor. Then there was the dark side that the addiction got a hold of," said his father.
Jonathan had been in and out of rehab for years. Dacy said the family was worried and desperate.
"This time he was really invested. He wanted to be a good dad to his son and he really wanted to change his life," said Terri Dacy, Jonathan's mother.
The Dacys found Narconon on the Internet and said, for the first time, Jonathan seemed excited and hopeful. When the family couldn't afford the $30,000 price tag, they said Narconon told them, "No problem."
"They would help with the financing. Everything we wanted to hear," said Mike Dacy.
But Narconon said the Dacy's credit history wasn't good enough, so in stepped Jonathan's uncle, Scott Maxey. Maxey said he gave his personal information over the phone simply to vouch that the family would pay.
"No one ever said,'We're going to open up two credit cards in your name,'" said Maxey, who lives in Chicago and has never been to Narconon.
He received two credit cards in the mail, followed by bills which showed they were already maxed out. Narconon of Georgia charged $3000 on a Capital One card and $7300 on a Citi card, all in one day, all in Maxey's name.
"I hit the roof, we all did," said Terri Dacy.
Tari Anderson had the same reaction after getting two cards in the mail. She had already written a $5,000 check to Narconon for her son's treatment.
"It seemed like what we needed. Then the next thing we know we have Discover card," said Anderson.
She and her husband also received a Capital One card and a total of $11,000 in charges. Then she said additional Narconon debits started showing up on her bank account. The family paid nearly $24,000 out of pocket.
"If they had asked me for a million dollars, I would have tried to find a way to get it to them," said Anderson.
But her son was only there for three and a half months, and a medical condition kept him from the program's main component, hours each day in a sauna.
"If all they want is your money, and they don't provide any services, then that could potentially become a criminal offense," said Gwinnett County District Attorney Danny Porter.
Fleischer showed Porter the families' credit card records. Days later, his investigators helped the Georgia Insurance Commissioner's fraud team execute a search warrant at Narconon.
They hauled away nearly two dozen hard drives and laptops, and boxes of financial and medical records.
"We're actively and vigorously pursuing an investigation," said Porter of the potential credit card fraud. He's hoping the computers will show which employees were using them when the cards were opened.
His office would also be the one to prosecute the state's ongoing insurance fraud case against Narconon, which resulted from a Channel 2 Action News investigation in January.
Fleischer exposed $166,000 in Narconon insurance bills for another family who had already paid for the program in full.
The Norcross facility continues to operate while appealing a license revocation by Georgia's Department of Community Health. That came just months after Channel 2, along with its news partners at WSB Radio and the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, exposed evidence that the facility was advertising as an inpatient residential facility, when it is only licensed for outpatient care.
A former employee admitted altering the facility's letterhead to remove the word "outpatient" when corresponding with drug courts and probation officers whose clients required the higher level of care. The whistleblower saidNarconon Executive Director Mary Rieser directed that. Rieser resigned in January.
"That's what Narconon really has a history of is saying one thing and doing another," said Luke Catton, who helped run Narconon's flagship Arrowhead facility in Oklahoma.
Catton, who has since become a Narconon whistleblower, helped expose the program's roots within the Church of Scientology, and questionable financial practices.
"They're doing whatever it takes to make sure somebody's going to come in the door. You remove all financial barriers and if it includes creative financing, then it does," said Catton.
The Arrowhead facility is named in a civil lawsuit filed by a former patient and her sister, who "Received two credit cards through the mail for which she did not apply." Her bills totaled $14,500 and now have a 23 percent interest rate.
"As soon as they have your money and it's really solidified then everything goes downhill after that," says Terri Dacy.
Jonathan left Narconon after only one month. He died three months later.
"My true feeling in the bottom of my heart is that they were directly responsible for my son's death," she said.
That was three years ago.
Capital One canceled the charge once the Dacys explained the situation.
Citi has refused to do the same, so the family is still paying off that Citi card.
"To this day, the pain is really harsh, really harsh," Terri Dacy said.
Narconon International and Narconon of Georgia both responded to Fleischer with statements.
"It would be contrary to Narconon's policy to engage in the type of conduct you are alleging. Narconon International and all Narconons are bound by strict state and federal privacy laws. Therefore, we cannot discuss any details about any individuals or their loved ones that claim to have been involved with our program without their written authorization," Clark Carr, President of Narconon International, said.
"Narconon is aware of the investigation. Narconon of Georgia follows customary and professional billing practices and procedures. Payment terms are clearly explained to all students. Narconon of Georgia has served the Atlanta community for the past decade offering drug education, prevention and rehabilitation services. Scores of successful Narconon graduates and their families can attest that the program has transformed lives through recovery and sobriety," Narconon of Georgia said in a statement.
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Posted: 5:27 p.m. Monday, May 6, 2013
Narconon patients allege credit card fraud
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By Pete Combs
Embroiled in state licensure revocation proceedings, civil lawsuits and criminal investigations, the Scientology-affiliated drug and alcohol rehabilitation organization known as Narconon faces new allegations of credit card fraud.
Four families – three from Georgia and another from Oklahoma – allege Narconon employees illegally obtained credit cards in their names without their knowledge, then charged those cards to the maximum credit limit as payment for treating their addicted children. In three of the cases, family members said the treatment was incomplete.
Each family said it was lured into trusting Narconon with the personal information needed to secure the credit cards by assurances from employees that the information would be used to apply for insurance coverage or financial aid in the form of grants or no-interest “medical” loans. Some families said they were on a “pay-as-you-go” plan for their children’s treatment, but found that they had been billed in full for treatment within less than 30-days of receiving the credit cards. Two of the four families told WSB their children were kicked out of the program as soon as the credit cards were “maxed out.”
The stories told by these four families and their lawyers are remarkably similar.
A “FALSE” SENSE OF SECURITY
Jonathan Dacy, 28, was at the end of his rope. Kicked out of his father’s house because of his continued overuse of medication for pain, depression and anxiety, Jonathan was arrested in November, 2009, for shoplifting. As he sat in jail on misdemeanor charges, the family tried to delay his release while frantically searching for a drug treatment facility that would take him.
They thought they found what they were looking for in Narconon of Georgia.
“They told us everything we wanted to hear,” said Jonathan’s mother, Terri. “They said they were 80-percent successful in treating drug addiction.”
But Terri Dacy and her former husband, Mike, had no way to pay for the treatment they said their son so desperately needed. Jonathan had no insurance.
“Don’t worry,” they were told by an employee of Narconon of Georgia. “Get Jonathan in here right away and we’ll worry about the financing later.”
So just before Christmas, 2009, the Dacys enrolled Jonathan in Narconon.
“(A Narconon employee) said they’d work with us on financing,” said Terri. They promised the family a $10,000 grant and financial aid in the form of interest-free loans, she said.
“But they called back later, after Jonathan was enrolled and said our financing was not approved.”
So the Dacys turned to Terri’s brother, Scott Maxie, who lived in Chicago. Maxie agreed to cosign a loan for the Dacys to pay for Jonathan’s rehab. Narconon agreed to bill Mike and to keep the payments under $300/month, said Terri. Narconon, she continued, also agreed that Scott would only be involved as a guarantor of the loan.
“All of a sudden, my brother started getting weird things in the mail,” Terri said. Maxie received a denial letter from Discover, saying he would not receive a new credit card because he already had a Discover account.
“He never applied for one,” Terri said. “At first, he thought he was the victim of identity theft.”
A day later, Terri said, her brother’s alarm increased dramatically when he found two new credit cards in the mail.
“That’s when he got a call from (Narconon). They said, rather than doing a loan, this would be easier. That’s why we got credit cards,” she continued.
Repeatedly assured by Narconon that the credit cards were approved by Mike Dacy, Maxim reluctantly agreed to authorize Narconon to charge them to the credit limits. In all, the charges amounted to $10,300.00. But Mike said he never talked with anyone at Narconon about credit cards. He was infuriated.
“I don’t lose my temper,” Mike said. But after learning about the credit cards and about what he insisted were false representations from Narconon about his endorsement of the plan, “I called them up and yelled at them. ‘What the hell is this?’”
Tari Anderson said she and her husband had no place to turn in trying to get their 24-year old son, Aaron, into a treatment program. Aaron had developed pneumonia. In November, 2011, he was hospitalized. Then, his parents found evidence that he had been shooting heroin. Aaron admitted he was addicted. Scrambling to find an inpatient rehab program, Tari said she stumbled upon Narconon while doing research on the internet. A Narconon employee urged her to get her son into the program “that night,” Tari said. She gave Aaron an ultimatum and he agreed to go.
“We were told we needed to pay $5,000 in cash and they would finance the balance for us,” she recalled. “The forms were filled out. They asked for our social security numbers, dates of birth, home address and our full names. I thought it was for medical financing. I wasn’t thinking credit cards. They never said that.”
A week later, Tari said, as her son was undergoing treatment, a Narconon employee called and asked if we had received any credit cards. The drug rehab facility had ordered a Discover Card and a Capitol One charge card in the Andersons’ names without notifying them. The cards had already been maxed out for a total of $11,000, she said.
“I was really, really surprised,” Tari exclaimed. “I asked if there were any other cards out there. They said they had applied for several and didn’t know which ones had been approved.”
The Andersons were furious, she said. “We were ripped off, very much deceived. I think it’s a criminal enterprise.”
Ben Burgess is an Athens-Clarke County firefighter. He and his wife, Rhonda, were desperate to help their son, Blaze, stop abusing the powerful painkiller Oxycodone.
“They got our name, address, phone number and social security numbers for insurance purposes,” said Rhonda. “But we were told that insurance wouldn’t pay for more than three to five days of inpatient care. So we wondered how to pay for this and were told, ‘Don’t worry, we’ll take care of it for you.’”
Ben Burgess said he was horrified to find that help had come in the form of credit cards.
“My statement is, the cards are from the devil!” Ben said. “I would have never agreed with a stinkin’ credit card!”
The Burgesses said Narconon ordered four unauthorized credit cards in their names, charging more than $19,000. When they expressed their concerns, however, they said Narconon turned up the pressure.
“When we hesitated, they would say, ‘Don’t you love your child? You know this is the best place for them,’” Ben recalled.
“They got him in there by telling us not to worry about the money. But once he’s in, then they have you in a corner,” said Rhonda.
Sue Ann Newman was hospitalized, sickened by her addiction. After helping her get medical attention, her sister, Dena Shobe Smith, searched frantically for a rehab program. She found Narconon Arrowhead in Canadian, OK.
In a lawsuit filed in Pittsburgh County, OK, Smith’s attorney said Narconon initially pitched her $30,000 rehab program for Newman. Smith said she couldn’t afford it. She was then pitched a $15,000 alternative program, intimating it could be the only thing standing between Newman and death caused by her addiction. But Smith said she couldn’t afford that either, according to the suit. So Narconon promised to secure an interest-free loan that would be combined with a work program. Newman entered treatment at Narconon Arrowhead in May, 2012.
But two months later, Smith was told by Narconon that Newman had never been approved for the interest-free loan or the work program. Without Smith’s knowledge, workers at the Oklahoma facility ordered a Discover Card and a Visa card in her name and used them to charge $14,700 for Newman’s treatment, according to the complaint.
“The alleged Program has the appearance of being nothing more than a pyramid scheme and sham of the Defendants, to extort money from the Plaintiffs through fraud and other means, based upon fraudulent and willful conduct, inducements and as a recruiting tool for Church of Scientology,” the suit claimed.
Newman and Smith are asking for damages in excess of $75,000.
“I have challenges calling (these) business practices,” said Tulsa attorney Gary Richardson, who filed the lawsuit on behalf of Newman and Smith. “I can’t imagine what they’ve done in this instance would fall under ‘business practices.’ We allege fraud.”
NO REFUNDS
Of the four patients (Narconon calls them “students”) whose families said treatment was paid for with illegally obtained credit cards, only Aaron Anderson completed the program. Newman’s mother “rescued” her from Narconon Arrowhead, according to the civil complaint filed in Oklahoma. Treatment for Blaze Burgess and Jonathan Dacy was terminated after they were accused of breaking the rules or simply not fitting the program – even though the treatment had already been paid for in full.
Ben Burgess said his son, Blaze, warned him ahead of time.
“He said they do that to everyone they get credit cards for. They max them out and know in a month or two or three they’ll be kicking the kid out and putting someone else (in his place),” Ben recounted. Blaze was ordered to leave Narconon of Georgia after an infraction that the family insisted had been fabricated after they fell a month behind in housing payments. He was told he could return, but would have to pay $4,500 up front. Already financially ailing and increasingly dubious of the program, the Burgesses declined.
Faced with more than $19,000 billed to credit cards they never asked for and never approved, the Burgesses had no idea how they would pay for it all. They decided to sell their home, but at closing, discovered they owed much more than the sales price. Instead of receiving money to pay off the Narconon credit card debts, Ben actually paid $10,000 to close the sale of his house. The family now lives in a single-wide mobile home.
“They pretty much ruined our lives,” Rhonda said.
Jonathan Dacy’s parents said he had a similar experience. He never underwent treatment at Narconon of Georgia – he remained in a doctor-supervised detoxification program required prior to treatment for the entire five weeks he was enrolled in the program. At the end of five weeks, after being falsely accused of failing a drug test, Jonathan was told that his detox was taking too long and that his problems were more than Narconon could handle. He was ordered to leave with just a few hours’ notice, his parents said. Their requests for a refund and an itemized bill of services went unanswered, Mike said.
“Eventually, they just stopped returning our calls,” said Terri.
The Dacys consulted a friend who was an attorney and wrote several letters to Narconon demanding a refund. They disputed the credit card charges, eventually getting Capitol One to agree to dismiss all fees charged on their credit card by Narconon. But they were not successful in obtaining such an agreement from Citi Financial, which issued the other credit card.
Jonathan went home to live with his father. In April, 2010, he married and was living in Rome. But two weeks after his wedding, Jonathan disappeared. His body was found May 4, 2010, in a ravine not far from his Floyd County home.
His parents are still struggling to pay off the Citi Financial card.
BUSINESS AS USUAL
“Sales people are trained how to bring people into the program and are told to focus on money,” said former Narconon Arrowhead President Lucas Catton. “They look for insurance, second mortgages and credit cards. They look for services that allow you to apply for credit cards on the phone or online. They have to find the money. Money is the driving force, without a doubt.”
Catton described the quest for financial gain as the primary purpose of Narconon – far outranking the treatment of addiction. Much of the financial issues are handled by former Narconon patients, who graduated the program to become counselors and office staff, he said.
“When you have people who’ve recently come from the program, they already have questionable morals and ethics. A few months ago, they were active addicts. Then they’re given the responsibility to get it all paid. It’s intense pressure…. Hurting someone’s financial status in the process is not a concern,” Catton said.
He said Narconon has obtained credit cards in the names of hundreds of people, many of whom did not know that was how treatment would be financed. The practice was ongoing at a number of Narconon treatment centers around the world and involved “multiple” people, he said.
The alleged practice has garnered the attention of Gwinnett County District Attorney Danny Porter. When his agents, along with those from Insurance Commissioner Ralph Hudgens, raided Narconon of Georgia April 26, they were looking for evidence of both insurance fraud and identity theft.
“The search warrants were primarily based on the Insurance Commission’s fraud case. But as a spin-off, we seized patient billing records to include ID theft and credit card fraud,” Porter said. “We’re working on five complaints now.”
But Porter said the case was complex because in at least one case, it appeared the unwanted credit cards were eventually authorized by the victims.
“It seems to me there would be some regulation on disclosing how (Narconon) obtains money,” Porter said.
Investigators seized dozens of computers and an entire truck load of documents. While Porter said there is a lot of material to sift, “We are in the analysis phase now.”
NARCONON STATEMENT
Asked for a statement, Narconon International President Clark Carr refused to answer specific allegations, citing privacy concerns. But in a statement to WSB, he said:
(I)t would, of course, be contrary to Narconon's policy to engage in the conduct you are alleging and I am unaware of it ever happening. Narconon International and all Narconons are bound by strict state and federal privacy laws. Therefore, we cannot discuss any details about any individuals or their loved ones that claim to have been involved with our program without their written authorization.”
May 6, 2013
Ex-Narconon Arrowhead president speaks out
By Jeanne LeFloreStaff Writer
McALESTER — A former president of Narconon Arrowhead said the four deaths at the facility were “beyond anything imaginable.”
Narconon Arrowhead is a drug rehab in Canadian that uses Church of Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard’s teachings to rehab it’s clients. It’s also where three rehab clients were found dead in a nine month span in 2012.
A fourth died in 2009 at local hospital.
The most recent, the July 2012 death of Stacy Murphy, 20, spurred a multi-agency investigation into the deaths.
And on Wednesday legislation spurred by deaths and allowing the Oklahoma Department of Mental Health and Abuse Services to oversee Narconon Arrowhead and other rehabs the Senate unopposed and was sent to Gov. Fallin’s desk. If signed, the bill could become law in November.
The deaths also brought several lawsuits against Narconon Arrowhead with allegations such as wrongful death, credit card and insurance fraud and allegations of employees trading drugs for sex.
Former Narconon Arrowhead President Lucus Catton said he was involved with Narconon Arrowhead and Scientology for more than 12 years before he was “excommunicated” for questioning the program and the church.
He said when he heard about the death of Gabriel Graves, 32, found dead in his bed at Narconon Arrowhead in Oct. of 2011, he figured it was an ‘isolated incident.’
“I just thought maybe something happened that wasn’t related to the program.” Catton said. “I never thought it could be the program.” Then six months later when Hillary Holten, 21, was found dead in her bed at the facility in April 2012, and he learned of the the 2009 death of Kaysie Werninck, 28, he became alarmed and he said worked to disassociate himself completely from any possible ties he had left with Narconon.
Finally when 20 year-old Stacy Murphy was found dead at the facility three months after Holten died, Catton said he had to speak out.
“It was beyond anything imaginable,” he said.
After those deaths, Catton said he began reading and learning more about the Narconon program.
“ I decided that the entire Narconon program is based on fraudulent practices.”
“The fact that they have a medical facility and that they are supposed to be monitoring these people and they died.” Catton said.
He said he was a Scientologist for 12 years and contributed to many Scientology-related activities.
“I was introduced to (Scientology) primarily through Narconon, and worked with them for over ten years in various capacities. I had served as President of Narconon Arrowhead and even signed the billion-year contract to join Scientology’s Sea Organization, but thankfully that was never activated.”
He said as president of Narconon Arrowhead that the facility was required to pay $30,000 a month in rent to a company called Social Betterment Properties International a non-profit group which he said is owned by the Church of Scientology.
The form 990 filed with the Internal Revenue Service states;
“Social Betterment Properties International was formed to acquire, develop and maintain buildings and other real estate utilized by social betterment organizations carrying out programs that utilize technology and methods developed by L. Ron Hubbard and that are associated with and supported by the Scientology religion.”
Catton he was asked to leave the church completely in 2011, when he began questioning the Narconon program and the beliefs of the church.
He was declared in a letter from the Church of Scientology as a “Suppressive Person.” “ It means I was basically excommunicated from the church and that church members including close friends and family could no have no contact with him.
“When I was declared a suppressive person ... it was because I knew too much at the time and wouldn’t accept their obviously false propaganda,” Catton said.
“They didn’t want me infecting others with truth.”
Catton said Narconon Arrowhead CEO Gary Smith read the letter to Narconon employees and they also no longer had communication with him.
Smith does not deny this.
“All members of the Church of Scientology would have either been sent a communication to this affect or would have been able to access this communication at any church,” Smith said in an emailed statement.
“As a member I did receive such a letter and I did share the letter with six Scientologists that are also employees here at Narconon, after hours. This was a personal matter for members of our faith only and did not concern any other Narconon employees or our work to help people overcome drug and alcohol addiction.”
Meanwhile Catton said he wrote a book on his experiences with Narconon and Scientology called Have You Told All ? Inside My Time with Scientology and Narconon.
On his website lucascatton.com, Catton explains the title “Have You Told All?” as a question used in Scientology confessional procedures which he said are supposed to be purely for therapeutic spiritual benefit.
He said the questions were used against him. He said other types are more punishable, called security checks or sec checks.
“If you disagree with Scientology, have an upset with something or have done something not deemed favorable in their eyes and are subjected to sec check, you are grilled trying to “find your crimes”.
“While holding cans at the end of (an) e-meter, you are asked if you have told all, is there anything you failed to reveal, are you withholding anything, and other similar questions to see if there is anything left you might be hiding from them,” Catton said.
“I went through several sec checks, and was honest every time. One major one occurred when I no longer wanted to be the president of Narconon Arrowhead and requested a transfer.”
Catton said he was punished for making the request.
He said “they figured I must have done something wrong ... but there wasn’t anything they could find to use against me and so I was just punished for being honest.”
He said when he was ready to leave Scientology completely, he submitted to a sec check in his hotel room in Clearwater by a member of Scientology’s Office of Special Affairs.
He said he was told was only going to be an interview and that he would have his questions answered. He said the interview lasted six hours and he was “100 percent honest” about everything, Catton said.
“(The information) was used against me and they refused to answer my questions about the organization.”
Catton said that in retaliation for publicly coming out against the organizations, Scientology and Narconon created website which he said contains written and video testimonials from “back when (I) worked at Narconon and (was) a “True Believer Scientologist, but they also contain outright lies.”
The website lucascatton.org also contains links to Narconon Arrowhead.
When asked if the Church of Scientology was behind the website Smith said,
“Narconon has many supporters and as you know the Church of Scientology is one of our biggest,” Smith said. “I viewed the web site and see that it has success stories about how the Narconon program saved Luke’s life and other positive public statements he made about Narconon when he was involved with us,” Smith said.
Meanwhile Catton after his experiences he has finally landed on his own two feet and is ready to tell his story.
“Now I have vowed to indeed tell all,” he said.
Contact Jeanne LeFlore at jleflore@mcalesternews.com
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