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 Palo
        Alto TimesAugust 29, 1978
 Church of Scientology members plead innocent to charges  
		
		
 
 
 WASHINGTON (UPI) - Nine members of the Church of Scientology, including
        the wife of founder L. Ron Hubbard, pleaded innocent today to charges
        they infiltrated federal agencies and stole government documents.
    U.S.
        District Judge George Hart made it clear during the hour-long
        arraignment that he would reject church attempts to turn their trial
        into a forum for alleging 28 years of government harassment.   
        "The Church of Scientology is not on trial here and it's not going
        to be on trial," Hart said.  "There will be no reference
        to religion throughout the trial   
        "We're talking about stealing," the judge said. 
        "That's a simple charge - like you went in a bank and took
        money."    It
        also was disclosed that grand juries in New York and Tampa, Fla., are
        investigating possible criminal conduct by the church, which already is
        accused in a 29-count indictment of placing members in typist jobs at
        the Justice Department and Internal Revenue Service to enable it to
        steal stacks of secret documents.    Hart
        denied motions by defense lawyers for a ruling sealing all documents in
        the case to protect the privacy of the defendants.  Prosecutors
        argued the maneuver was intended for public relations purposes, noting
        the church has called repeated news conferences to denounce the
        government and now wants to prevent any adverse publicity from its
        alleged actions.    The
        church has admitted copying government documents, but said it did so to
        defend itself against harassment by the IRS, which has opposed granting
        it tax-exempt status, the Justice Department and other federal agencies.    The
        case is built around thousands of documents FBI agents seized in raids
        on the church's Los Angeles and Washington offices on July 8, 1977.    Two
        of the 11 defendants - Jane Kember and Morris Budlong, whom prosecutors
        believe are in Sussex, England, did not appear for arraignment.    Those
        appearing before Hart included: Mary Sue Hubbard, Sussex, wife of the
        church founder; Henning Heldt, Los Angeles; Duke Snider, Mitchell
        Hermann and Cindy Raymond, all of Hollywood; Richard Weigand, Van Nuys;
        and Gregory Willardson, Beverly Hills.    They
        are charged with two counts of conspiracy, 10 counts of theft of
        government property, 10 counts of burglary and one count of intercepting
        oral communications.    Two
        other suspects who entered innocent pleas - Gerald Bennett Wolf of
        Areleta, Calif., and Sharon Thomas, Los Angeles - allegedly are
        low-level church members who "infiltrated" the IRS and Justice
        Department.  They face related, but slightly different charges. 
 
 
 
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