

Recently, we wrote about a police chief in a small Minnesota town who found himself being flown to Washington DC to be feted by the Church of Scientology and one of its celebrities, actress Erika Christensen. Why did he deserve this treatment? He was being celebrated because he had purchased anti-drug pamphlets from a Scientology front group, the Foundation for a Drug-Free World. After we wrote a couple of stories about how the police chief was being used in Scientology public relations, he had a change of heart and is no longer teaching the Foundation’s classes in his town. Now, contributor Jeffrey Augustine looks a little more closely at how Scientology uses the Foundation to lure in unsuspecting public officials.

How does the chief of police of a small town in Minnesota find himself in Washington DC unwittingly promoting a Scientology “drug prevention” front group? It was the result of a well-designed Scientology program that is intended to lure unwary educators, law enforcement figures, and other overworked public officials tasked with drug education. This machine has ten parts:

1. A lofty and noble-sounding name: The Foundation for a Drug Free World. Who would suspect that an organization with such a fine name and apparently noble purpose is actually a shill for the Church of Scientology and designed to spread awareness of its founder, L. Ron Hubbard?

2. An equally lofty and noble-sounding website name: drugfreeworld.org. Who doesn’t want a drug free world? Scientology uses the names of its front groups to paint itself as a champion of literacy, education, human rights, drug prevention, and drug treatment. Who would oppose such vital and important activities?


3. A highly aggressive, and very expensive Google AdWords campaign for key search terms. Spyfu.com estimates that the monthly advertising budget for drugfreeworld.org is $21,400:







4. Google AdWords work: The Church of Scientology’s Orgs, missions, and front groups are all legally separate non-profit corporations. Accordingly, each of these legally separate corporations qualify for $10,000 – $40,000 per month in AdWords campaign grants from Google. These legally separate corporations allow Scientology Inc. to cumulatively receive millions of dollars per year from Google’s AdWords donation program for non-profits, as church official Brandy Harrison boasted at a Scientology fundraiser in 2014, saying that Google had given Scientology $5.7 million in free advertising up to that point.

Google’s donations — along with additional Scientology monies likely paid by the IAS — are used to optimize search results. This is why The Foundation for a Drug Free World consistently comes up on the first page of Google when conducting a search using the keywords “drug and alcohol abuse.” This high Google placement lends an air of legitimacy to the covert Scientology front group:







5. A noble mission statement posted on the group’s website. This mission statement deliberately omits any mention of the Church of Scientology or L. Ron Hubbard. Coupled with the noble mission statement on the group’s website is the offer of a “FREE information Kit and Educator’s Package.” There is also a free “The Truth About Drugs DVD.” This offer of free help by a “Foundation” just might seem like a godsend to an overworked official:





6. A free and easy to use “plug and play” product line: On the surface, The Foundation for a Drug Free World offers educators, law enforcement, and other officials a free and easy to use series of booklets and DVD’s There is even a pre-prepared series of classroom lessons and tests about street drugs and their effects. This ready-made drug education curriculum is designed to meet the requirements for school districts or law enforcement to obtain grant monies, or, to satisfy the requirements of grant monies already received. The police chief in Minnesota needed to find a way to spend his city’s part of a $1.5 million federal grant, and fast. The Foundation for a Drug Free World’s materials must have seemed like a slam dunk. All he had to do was to pay shipping.

The Foundation for a Drug Free World’s free “plug and play” product line is very tempting for overworked cops and teachers. While the free booklets are vivid and attention-getting, they remind this writer of an update to the overheated and apocalyptic “Chick tracts” distributed by Christian fundamentalists:







7. All we ask of you is one little favor: The seemingly-innocuous cost of The Foundation for a Drug Free World’s generosity and “help flow” is that you agree to give the Foundation some feedback and testimonials. Just check the box and agree; it’s just a little formality:







8. Data harvesting and lead qualification: After you check the box and proceed, we at The Foundation For a Drug Free World just need a few more details. As I was going through the Foundation’s website and saw this form, I was reminded that a key part of any successful sales organization is to generate and qualify leads. Hence, the “free” educator’s kit order form is actually a way to harvest data and qualify leads.







9. Snap the trap: This information on the above form is everything to Scientology. A lone school teacher in a poorly funded parish school in, say, Louisiana, has limited PR and financial value to Scientology. However, a police chief in control of grant money is a major PR coup. This “hot lead” went right to CSI VP Bob Adams for immediate follow up. While Scientology’s Sea Org workers have no money for toilet paper or replacement uniform parts, the church has all the money in the world to fly a police chief and his wife to Washington DC and have his photo taken with Scientology actress Erika Christensen. A police chief lends incredible credibility to the Foundation. Indeed, this is why the Foundation for a Drug Free World advertises in The Police Chief magazine. I know this for a fact because I read about it in issue #120 of Impact, the official magazine of the International Association of Scientologists:







The Foundation For a Drug Free World exploits good people who have spent decades building their careers and reputations. This is how a police chief’s good name and image is used by the Church of Scientology.

10. Attack the attackers: Scientology’s noble-sounding front groups allow Scientologists to create an important tautology. Whenever Scientology’s “social betterment” groups such as Narconon are exposed as scams, Scientologists reflexively respond to criticisms by arguing, per Hubbard’s self-serving fallacy, that only SP’s don’t want people to get better. Therefore, those who “attack” Scientology’s “social betterment” campaigns are SPs working for Big Pharma, etc. This same line of attack is invoked against “bitter defrocked apostates” (former Scientologists) who expose the Church.

Even the title of Hubbard’s Dianetics: The Modern Science of Mental Health is based upon this same fallacious syllogism: Dianetics is committed to mental health; anyone who opposes mental health is suppressive and evil. Scientology really is a bubble world made of dense, hyperbolic, self-absorbed, and self-reinforcing language rooted in logical fallacies. One example: In Scientology, Hubbard declares his non sequiturs to be axioms, and, per Hubbard, science itself is built upon axioms. Thus, Scientology is scientific, and, science is true. Thus, to attack Hubbard or Scientology is to attack science and truth.

Speaking of science, I conducted a field investigation of the entity under discussion:

FOUNDATION FOR A DRUG-FREE WORLD

1626 NORTH WILCOX AVENUE NBR 1297,

LOS ANGELES CA 90028-6206

EIN 20-5812172

The address is a mailbox rental store in Hollywood located near the Scientology landmark, the Hollywood Guaranty Building:







A check with the California Secretary of State reveals that Scientology attorney and Snow White unindicted co-conspirator Kendrick Moxon is the agent of service for the Foundation For a Drug Free World:







The url drugfreeworld.org is registered to Pascal Cottier, the Foundation’s director, who has also been identified as a part of the Church of Scientology’s media relations office. An online check of IRS 990 forms shows that the Foundation last filed a 990-EZ in 2010. As of 2014, The Foundation for a Drug Free World has no assets or income listed. This suggests that either OSA or the IAS, or possibly both, are funding the Foundation’s activities.

The website drugfreeworld.org has an IP address of 50.56.4.226. A reverse IP check shows this IP to be shared by forty-one other Scientology entities…

scientology.org, narconon.org, humanrights.com, scientologycourses.org, youthforhumanrights.org (thanks, Legoland), thewaytohappiness.org, scientology.ru, volunteerministers.org, flag.org, freedommag.org, scientology.net, cchr.org, scientology.us, scientologyhandbook.org, oxfordcapacityanalysis.org, scientologynews.org, scientology.in, scientology.it, scientology.de, suncoastrehabcenter.com, szcientologia.org.hu, whatisscientology.org, scientology.org.uk, scientology.es, lronhubbard.org, scientology-newyork.org, wise.org, lrhquotes.org, bridgepub.com, twth.org, newerapublications.ru, smi.org, scientology.org.mx, elcaminoalafelicidad.mx, rtc.org, youthformhumanrights.ru (thanks, Legoland), scientology.org.il, scientologytoday.org, freedomdrugrehab.com, dianetics.org, scientologie.fr

With the exception of Narconon, the Foundation For a Drug Free World exists solely — like Scientology’s other “social betterment” groups – as a rented PO box linked to a website with a shopping cart. That’s it. This Foundation is an ankle-deep operation designed to generate PR for the Church and hopefully snag some grant money from unwary cops and teachers.

— Jeffrey Augustine



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Bonus photos from our tipsters

Well, there it is in their own words. Volunteer Ministers handing out “Dianetics kits” in Haiti. What a vital rescue service.







Katie Hawley is happy to have finished OT 2, which is criminally neglected by the press, in our estimation. It’s one of the wackiest of all the OT levels, even if OT 3 gets all the attention.







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Posted by Tony Ortega on January 17, 2016 at 07:00

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Our book, The Unbreakable Miss Lovely: How the Church of Scientology tried to destroy Paulette Cooper, is on sale at Amazon in paperback and Kindle editions. We’ve posted photographs of Paulette and scenes from her life at a separate location. Reader Sookie put together a complete index. More information about the book, and our 2015 book tour, can also be found at the book’s dedicated page.

Learn about Scientology with our numerous series with experts…

BLOGGING DIANETICS: We read Scientology’s founding text cover to cover with the help of L.A. attorney and former church member Vance Woodward

UP THE BRIDGE: Claire Headley and Bruce Hines train us as Scientologists

GETTING OUR ETHICS IN: Jefferson Hawkins explains Scientology’s system of justice

SCIENTOLOGY MYTHBUSTING: Historian Jon Atack discusses key Scientology concepts

Other links: Shelly Miscavige, ten years gone | The Lisa McPherson story told in real time | The Cathriona White stories | The Leah Remini ‘Knowledge Reports’ | Hear audio of a Scientology excommunication | Scientology’s little day care of horrors | Whatever happened to Steve Fishman? | Felony charges for Scientology’s drug rehab scam | Why Scientology digs bomb-proof vaults in the desert | PZ Myers reads L. Ron Hubbard’s “A History of Man” | Scientology’s Master Spies | Scientology’s Private Dancer | The mystery of the richest Scientologist and his wayward sons | Scientology’s shocking mistreatment of the mentally ill | Scientology boasts about assistance from Google | The Underground Bunker’s Official Theme Song | The Underground Bunker FAQ

Our Guide to Alex Gibney’s film ‘Going Clear,’ and our pages about its principal figures…

Jason Beghe | Tom DeVocht | Sara Goldberg | Paul Haggis | Mark “Marty” Rathbun | Mike Rinder | Spanky Taylor | Hana Whitfield