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VOLUME I TRIAL
TRANSCRIPTS, 2-10-01 1 1 IN THE CIRCUIT COURT IN AND FOR PINELLAS COUNTY, FLORIDA 2 3 CASE NO. 99-7430-CI-08 4 5 ----------------------------------------X : 6 CHURCH OF SCIENTOLOGY FLAG SERVICE : ORGANIZATION, INC., a Florida : 7 corporation, : : 8 Petitioner, : : 9 vs. : : 10 ROBERT S. MINTON, JR., ET AL., : : 11 Respondents. : ----------------------------------------x 12 BEFORE: The Honorable THOMAS E. PENICK, JR. 13 PLACE: Pinellas County Judicial Building 14 545 First Avenue North St. Petersbrg, Florida 15 DATE: February 10, 2001 16 TIME: 9:00 A.M. 17 18 REPORTED BY: JACKIE L. OSTROM Court Reporter 19 20 --------------------------------------------------- ORDERS TO SHOW CAUSE 21 --------------------------------------------------- Pages 1 - 176 22 Volume I 23 ROBERT A. DEMPSTER & ASSOCIATES 24 P.O. BOX 35 CLEARWATER, FLORIDA 25 (727) 443-0992 2 1 APPEARANCES 2 The Honorable THOMAS E. PENICK, JR. 3 CIRCUIT COURT JUDGE 4 F. WALLACE POPE, JR., ESQUIRE 5 JOHNSON, BLAKELY, POPE ET AL 911 Chestnut 6 Clearwater, Florida 7 MICHAEL LEE HERTZBERG, ESQUIRE 8 740 Broadway, Fifth Floor New York, New York 10003 9 Attorneys for Church of Scientology Flag Ship 10 Organization 11 12 JOHN MERRETT, ESQUIRE 13 2716 Herschel Street Jacksonville, Florida 32205 14 15 BRUCE G. HOWIE, ESQUIRE PIPER, LUDIN, HOWIE AND WERNER 16 5720 Central Avenue St. Petersburg, Florida 33707 17 18 Attorneys for Robert Minton and Lisa McPherson Trust, Inc. 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 3 1 PROCEEDINGS 2 THE COURT: All right, ladies and 3 gentlemen. We're here today on case number 4 99-7430-CI08, Church of Scientology Flag 5 Services Organization, Inc., a Florida 6 Corporation versus Robert S. Minton, Jr. et 7 al as respondents. And attorneys for both 8 sides, are we ready to proceed? 9 MR. MERRETT: Yes, Your Honor. 10 MR. POPE: Yes, sir. 11 THE COURT: Thank you, gentlemen. We 12 have on this morning the evidentiary hearing 13 to the orders to show cause and I believe 14 that Mr. Minton, or excuse me, Mr. Merrett, 15 sir, you had filed first and so we'll go with 16 yours first. 17 MR. POPE: Your Honor? 18 THE COURT: Yes, Mr. Pope? 19 MR. POPE: May I make a suggestion that 20 might assist some of the witnesses and that 21 is that we with have various nonparty 22 witnesses, including four police officers 23 present. I wondered if we might just be able 24 to take every side's nonparty witnesses first 25 so that we could excuse them and let them go 4 1 on about their business rather than keeping 2 them down here all day. 3 THE COURT: I have no problem with that 4 but I want to keep them in their respective 5 cases. In other words, I want to go with his 6 show causes that were filed by Mr. Merrett, 7 that side first. 8 They filed first, and as long as I keep 9 them straight to each particular defendant 10 because we've got keep that straight for the 11 record, so. 12 MR. POPE: I don't have a nonparty 13 witness that I know of for that particular 14 matter, so perhaps the court should proceed 15 without them. 16 THE COURT: Mr. Merrett and Mr. Howie, 17 you understand what I'm saying on this? 18 MR. POPE: Yes. 19 MR. HOWIE: Yes. 20 THE COURT: Okay. I don't know -- you 21 have any problem taking them, doing it that 22 way? I'd like to do it if at all possible. 23 MR. MERRETT: I'm not sure that is has 24 any meaning if the cases are going to be 25 tried separately. 5 1 THE COURT: Yeah. It will have to do. 2 I want to keep them in their respective 3 cases. That's all I can say and we'll just 4 do it that way. 5 So, let's go ahead. The first one, 6 Mr. Merrett, sir. 7 MR. MERRETT: Yes, sir. 8 THE COURT: And your defendant, if you 9 would, we're ready to proceed on those cases. 10 MR. MERRETT: Call Stacy Brooks. 11 THE COURT: And this is going to be for 12 the three or I believe it was two individuals 13 and the Church? 14 MR. MERRETT: Yes, sir. 15 Thereupon: 16 STACY BROOKS 17 was called as a witness and having been duly sworn, was 18 examined and testified as follows: 19 DIRECT EXAMINATION 20 BY MR. MERRETT: 21 Q Would you state your name please, ma'am? 22 A Stacy Brooks. 23 Q And you are the President of the Lisa 24 McPherson Trust? 25 A Yes, I am. 6 1 Q Let me ask you if you recall meeting an 2 individual named Ferman Geiger? 3 A Yes, I do. 4 Q And when did you meet him? 5 A On the evening of November 30. 6 Q What were you doing that evening? 7 A I was having dinner with the family of Lisa 8 McPherson, Ken Dandar, the attorney for the family of 9 Lisa McPherson, Bob Minton and several other people. 10 Q And who is Lisa McPherson or who was she? 11 A Lisa McPherson was a Scientologist who died 12 at the Ft. Harrison Hotel in 1995. 13 Q What is it that caused you to meet or become 14 acquainted with Mr. Geiger on that occasion? 15 A Well, in the middle of dinner he suddenly 16 thrust his hand in front of me with a sheet of paper. 17 Q Okay. Where were you at dinner? 18 A We were at the Ruth Chris Steakhouse on 19 Westshore Boulevard in Tampa. 20 Q Okay. 21 THE COURT: I'm sorry, the name of the 22 steakhouse, again? 23 THE WITNESS: Ruth Chris Steakhouse, I 24 think is the way you say it. 25 7 1 BY MR. MERRETT: 2 Q Okay. What happened when he stuck these 3 papers through to you? 4 A Well, I was extremely startled because we 5 were in the middle of dinner. We were all talking. 6 We were very glad to see Lisa's family. We hadn't 7 seen them for a while. They had just gotten into 8 town, and it was very upsetting to me really because 9 he was suddenly -- I mean, I was just sitting like 10 this and all of a sudden he really kind of bumped into 11 me and thrust these papers right here. 12 Q What were the papers? 13 A Well, I found out within a few moments that 14 it was a copy of the injunction that Judge Penick had 15 just signed that afternoon. 16 Q Okay, but the current injunction in this 17 case? 18 A Yes. 19 Q Were there any other papers that he was 20 trying to serve on you? 21 A No, not that he was trying to serve me. 22 Q Okay. Did he have any other papers with 23 him? 24 A Yes. 25 Q What else did he have? 8 1 A He had a piece of paper with my photograph 2 on it and a name and address written on it. I mean a 3 name and a phone number written on it. 4 MR. MERRETT: Your Honor, if could I see 5 the court file that has the motion for the 6 order to show cause in it? I believe I filed 7 it. 8 THE COURT: I'll put the court files up 9 here. I don't represent which one they are 10 in. You can go through them, sir. 11 MR. MERRETT: Thank you. 12 THE COURT: Might be there or it might 13 be one of these. 14 MR. MERRETT: This is probably it. 15 (Whereupon, a pause in the proceedings took 16 place.) 17 THE COURT: Tell you what let's do. 18 Let's put all these down here on the clerk's 19 table. You can all come up to the clerk's 20 table and get them as needed. 21 (Whereupon, a pause in the proceedings took 22 place.) 23 THE COURT: Let the record reflect, I 24 have put the court file on the clerk's table 25 due to the fact that this is being tried on 9 1 Saturday, the 10th day of February, 2001 and 2 Sunday, February 11, 2001, I do not have a 3 clerk present. 4 I'm going to ask the attorneys as 5 officers of the court to be responsible for 6 the court files and to look at them and see 7 that they are not damaged or anything is 8 missing. 9 (Whereupon, a pause in the proceedings took 10 place.) 11 THE COURT: Ian, come forward. Would 12 you sit up here? I'm going to have my staff 13 attorney, Ian Brewster, sit up here at the 14 clerk's table and see if he can assist the 15 attorneys in locating things. And, Ian, you 16 know those sticky tabs that you and I were 17 using this morning? They're right on my 18 desk. Go get those and mark these things so 19 they will be available for both sides. 20 (Discussion was had off the record.) 21 (Whereupon, a pause in the proceedings took 22 place.) 23 MR. MERRETT: May I approach the 24 witness? 25 THE COURT: You may, sir. 10 1 BY MR. MERRETT: 2 Q Ms. Brooks, let me ask you, tabbed with a 3 pink post-it note what appears to be a photograph of 4 you on an annotated sheet of paper? 5 A Yes. 6 Q Is this the document that Mr. Geiger had? 7 A Yes. 8 Q Or rather a copy of it? 9 A Yes. 10 Q Okay. Let me ask you, can you tell the 11 judge who Judy Ross is? 12 A She is someone who works for the Church of 13 Scientology. 14 Q Okay. Do you know her from your past 15 association with Scientology? 16 A Yes. 17 Q Okay. Do you know what division or 18 department within Scientology she works for then? 19 A She was in the legal department, the Office 20 of Special Affairs when I was also in the Office of 21 Special Affairs. 22 MR. MERRETT: Your Honor, I would tender 23 the document as our Exhibit One. 24 THE COURT: All right. Mr. Pope, any 25 objection? 11 1 MR. POPE: No objection, Your Honor. 2 THE COURT: Okay. That will be 3 Defendant Minton's Exhibit Number One is in 4 evidence. 5 MR. MERRETT: May I proceed? 6 THE COURT: Yes, please, sir, go ahead. 7 BY MR. MERRETT: 8 Q Did you have occasion to discuss with 9 Mr. Geiger how it was that he came to be at your 10 dinner party? 11 A Yes. 12 Q And what did he tell? 13 MR. POPE: Objection, Your Honor. I'm 14 not sure that Mr. Geiger has been served with 15 an order to show cause. I don't think he's a 16 party to this proceeding in an official 17 sense. I think that this is therefore 18 hearsay. 19 MR. MERRETT: He clearly is a party in 20 any sense. He has been served February 2 at 21 4:45 PM. 22 I'm now tendering to the court a copy of 23 the order to show cause and return of 24 service. 25 THE COURT: Mr. Pope, have you seen 12 1 this? 2 MR. POPE: I have not see this. 3 THE COURT: All right. Let Mr. Pope 4 look at it. 5 (Whereupon, documents were reviewed.) 6 MR. MERRETT: I would additionally point 7 out to Your Honor that statements by party's 8 opponent include agents, persons acting on 9 behalf of a party and if you recall, 10 Mr. Hertzberg was here in court last time 11 with a photostat of Mr. Geiger's process 12 server's license and I believe Mr. Pope 13 admitted on the record the last time we were 14 here Mr. Geiger had been retained by him for 15 the purpose of serving process on behalf of 16 Scientology. 17 MR. POPE: Your Honor, I would merely 18 point out that on December 1 you entered an 19 order acknowledging that a process server was 20 acting on behalf of the court, not for a 21 party. The process server is therefore an 22 agent of the court and not an agent of the 23 parties. 24 THE COURT: I did do that on that 25 particular date, but the event alleged 13 1 happened prior. We'll wait and see what's 2 been established or where he goes from there 3 and also in light of the fact that Mr. Geiger 4 had now been served, Mr. Pope, is he present 5 today so I can arraign him? 6 MR. POPE: I don't know. 7 THE COURT: Okay. 8 MR. POPE: I have not seen him. 9 MR. MERRETT: I wouldn't know him if I 10 saw him, Your Honor. 11 THE COURT: Mr. Bailiff, if you would 12 sound the halls for one Ferman Geiger? 13 THE BAILIFF: Yes, Your Honor. 14 (Whereupon, halls were sounded by the 15 bailiff and there was no response to the call to 16 the court.) 17 THE COURT: Let the record so reflect. 18 MR. POPE: Your Honor, we apparently had 19 a communication from Mr. Geiger yesterday to 20 the effect that he intended to appear at the 21 court at about ten o'clock this morning, so 22 we don't know if that's accurate of if he's 23 going to show up or not. That's the only 24 information we have about the matter. 25 THE COURT: Okay. Hold on. Let me look 14 1 at this. I'll come back to you in just a 2 minute. I want to see what's been handed to 3 me. 4 I have an affidavit of service. Let me 5 look at it. 6 (Whereupon, documents were reviewed.) 7 All right. I have before me an 8 affidavit of service. It's an affidavit by 9 one Michael Kortz, K-O-R-T-Z, being duly 10 sworn to depose and say that on the third 11 day of February, 2001 at 4:25 PM executed 12 service -- actually substituted service on 13 Ferman Geiger and it is under oath and 14 attached to that was the order to show 15 cause, which the order to show cause said 16 that Ferman Geiger and Judy Ross shall 17 appear before the undersigned judge, 18 Pinellas County Judicial Center, 545 First 19 Avenue North, St. Petersburg, Florida at 20 9:00 AM on Saturday, February 10, 2001. And 21 let the record reflect that by the court's 22 clock it is now 0922 hours. The halls were 23 sounded for one Ferman Geiger. He has 24 failed to appear. 25 According to go the service, he was 15 1 served, had notice to be here at nine 2 o'clock, there has been no attacks on the 3 notice of service. 4 Mr. Bailiff, we will continue to sound 5 the halls. If he appears if you would take 6 him into custody and hold him to bring him 7 forward in front of me and we will proceed 8 thus forth once he appears. 9 THE BAILIFF: Yes, Your Honor. 10 THE COURT: If he appears. 11 THE BAILIFF: Yes, Your Honor. 12 THE COURT: Otherwise I'll deal with it 13 with a capias at a later date. 14 THE BAILIFF: Yes, your Honor. 15 THE COURT: Today. All right. Let me 16 file this, please. 17 (Whereupon, a pause in the proceedings took 18 place.) 19 All right. You may proceed. 20 BY MR. MERRETT: 21 Q Thank you, Your Honor. What did Mr. Geiger 22 tell you when your discussion with him turned to the 23 issue of how he happened to be at the restaurant where 24 you were? 25 MR. POPE: I renew my objection, Your 16 1 Honor. 2 THE COURT: Overruled. Proceed. 3 THE WITNESS: He said I'm very, very 4 sorry to do this. I've never been asked to 5 interrupt someone at dinner before to serve 6 process on them, but I have specifically been 7 ordered to interrupt your dinner to serve 8 process on you. 9 BY MR. MERRETT: 10 Q And did you ask him specifically how he knew 11 to come to Ruth Chris Steakhouse as opposed to the 12 Crystal on Missouri Avenue? 13 A Yes. 14 Q What was his answer? 15 A He said there are OSA people in the dining 16 room here with you in this restaurant and they told me 17 where to find you. 18 Q Can you tell the court what or who OSA 19 people are? 20 A OSA people are Office of Special Affairs, 21 members of the Church of Scientology whose job it is 22 to deal with all of the legal matters, intelligence 23 matters, things like that and one of their jobs is to 24 harass critics of Scientology like me. 25 Q Did you have -- let me ask you this. The 17 1 conversation about how he knew that you were there and 2 that OSA was at the restaurant with you, did that 3 occur before or after you got the document that's been 4 introduced as exhibit one, if you recall? 5 A Well, it was after, because the first thing 6 that happened was he thrust the paper in my face. 7 MR. MERRETT: Okay. All right. I have 8 nothing further of this witness, Your Honor. 9 THE COURT: All right. Mr. Pope. Sir. 10 MR. POPE: May I exam from here, Your 11 Honor? 12 THE COURT: Yes, sir. That's fine. 13 CROSS-EXAMINATION 14 BY MR. POPE: 15 Q Now, Ms. Brooks, on the 30th of November, 16 you had knowledge, did you not, that on the 29th, the 17 day before, the court had entered an order joining you 18 as a party to this lawsuit and instructing the 19 plaintiff to serve you with a copy of the order and 20 summons and complaint; didn't you know that on the 21 30th? 22 A I believe so. 23 Q All right. So didn't you anticipate that 24 you were going to get served with papers in connection 25 with your now being a party in this lawsuit? 18 1 A Yes. 2 Q All right. Now, didn't Mr. Geiger identify 3 himself as a process server and tell you he was there 4 to serve process? 5 A After he apologized to me, yes. 6 Q Okay. Did he show you any identification at 7 all or did he simplify identify himself as a process 8 server? 9 A I don't recall actually. 10 Q Was Judy Ross anywhere present in that room 11 when you were served with those papers? 12 A I don't know. 13 Q Weren't you served with a copy of the 14 Temporary Injunction Number Two and a summons and a 15 complaint, amended supplemental complaint in this 16 action all at the same time? 17 A Possibly. 18 Q You don't know? 19 A It was in the middle of dinner, so it was a 20 little inappropriate at the moment. 21 Q So you don't know exactly what was served on 22 you at that time? 23 A I know I was served with the injunction. 24 Q All right, and you took the papers that he 25 handed you, didn't you? 19 1 A Yes. 2 Q And you actually got quite angry with 3 Mr. Geiger, didn't you? 4 A Yes, I was very upset with him. 5 Q All right. 6 A He was very upset also. 7 Q Did you also grab some other papers out of 8 his hands? 9 A No. 10 Q You didn't do that? 11 A Only the paper that Mr. Merrett showed, the 12 one with my photograph on it. 13 Q You didn't take papers out of -- snatch 14 papers out of Mr. Geiger's hand and refuse to return 15 them to him? 16 A No, I took the photograph of me with Judy's 17 name on it and her phone number. 18 Q You took that out of his hand, right? 19 A Well, he was extending his hand with those 20 papers in it like this. 21 Q And you took it, right? 22 A Yes, I did. 23 Q And you took the photograph as well and he 24 asked for it back and you refused to give it back to 25 him, didn't you? 20 1 A There was no separate photograph. It was a 2 photograph on that piece of paper with Judy's name and 3 number on it. 4 Q And you took -- he didn't serve that on you, 5 did he? 6 A Well, I don't know. It was in his hand with 7 the rest of the papers. 8 Q Okay, and didn't you snatch that away from 9 him and refuse to give it back to him upon his 10 request? 11 A Did I snatch it, no. I took it from him. 12 Q You took if from him? 13 A Uh-huh. 14 Q Okay. He asked for it back, didn't he? 15 A Yes. 16 Q And you refused to give it back? 17 A Well, I didn't give it to him. 18 Q Okay. And this whole episode lasted what, 19 three or four minutes? 20 A Actually, I would say probably more like 21 seven or eight minutes. Maybe up to ten minutes, 22 because Mr. Geiger and I had quite a lengthy 23 conversation about these circumstances under which he 24 was interrupting my dinner. 25 Q And you say Mr. Geiger told you that there 21 1 were people from the Office of Special Affairs 2 somewhere there in the restaurant observing you; is 3 that what he told you? 4 A Yes. He said there were OSA people in the 5 restaurant and that's how he knew where I was in the 6 restaurant. 7 Q Did you recognize any of these OSA people 8 that were purportedly there? 9 A You know, Mr. Pope, I wasn't looking all 10 over the restaurant for the OSA people. 11 MR. POPE: All right. May I have a 12 moment, Your Honor? 13 THE COURT: You may. 14 MR. POPE: I don't have any further 15 questions at this time, Your Honor. 16 THE COURT: Okay. Thank you, sir. 17 Redirect? 18 MR. MERRETT: Very briefly. 19 THE COURT: Proceed. 20 REDIRECT EXAMINATION 21 BY MR. MERRETT: 22 Q Ma'am, you were asked whether or not you 23 expected to be served with papers as a result of the 24 order entered on the 29th. Did you expect to have 25 somebody from Scientology walk in and stick his hand 22 1 in your face in the middle of dinner? 2 A Certainly not. 3 MR. MERRETT: I don't have anything 4 further. 5 THE COURT: Anything else, Mr. Pope? 6 MR. POPE: No. 7 THE COURT: You may step down and have a 8 seat back by your attorney. Yes, sir? 9 MR. MERRETT: Call J. R. Enerson. 10 THE COURT: All right. 11 Thereupon: 12 J. R. ENERSON 13 was called as a witness and having been duly sworn, was 14 examined and testified as follows: 15 (Whereupon, a pause in the proceedings took 16 place.) 17 MR. MERRETT: May I see that exhibit? 18 THE COURT: Yes, that's in evidence. 19 MR. MERRETT: Thank you, Your Honor. 20 THE COURT: It is marked into evidence. 21 MR. MERRETT: Thank you. May I approach 22 the witness? 23 THE COURT: You may, sir. 24 25 23 1 DIRECT EXAMINATION 2 BY MR. MERRETT: 3 Q Mr. Enerson, I want to show you what's been 4 received in evidence as Exhibit One and ask you to 5 take a look at the handwritten items on the document 6 and I want to direct your attention back to the time 7 to and between November 30 and December 4 of 5, that 8 weekend coming into the first part of the next week. 9 Were you requested by anyone to undertake any 10 investigation to determine what those phone numbers 11 were? 12 A Yes, I was. 13 Q And who is that it requested you to do that? 14 A You did. 15 Q And what did you do to find out what those 16 phone numbers next to Judy Ross' name were? 17 A I actually called those phone numbers. 18 Q What was the response that you got? 19 A There was a female voice on the other end 20 that answered -- 21 MR. POPE: Objection. This is hearsay. 22 There has been no predicate laid that this 23 can be attributed to the plaintiff or any 24 agent of the plaintiff. 25 THE COURT: Mr. Merrett? 24 1 MR. MERRETT: Your Honor, the statement 2 is the statement of a person who is an agent 3 or owner of the telephone number. The 4 purpose is to identify the telephone number. 5 THE COURT: Sustained. Proceed. 6 BY MR. MERRETT: 7 Q What did the female voice say? 8 A A female voice answered saying special or 9 public affairs. 10 Q And did you make further inquiry to find out 11 exactly what that was? 12 A I said is this Scientology. 13 Q What was their response? 14 A Yes. 15 Q That was their response? 16 A Yes, that was the response. 17 MR. MERRETT: Thank you. I have nothing 18 further of this witness, Your Honor. 19 THE COURT: Mr. Pope? 20 MR. POPE: No questions, Your Honor. 21 THE COURT: Sir, you may step down. 22 MR. MERRETT: Your Honor, at this time I 23 would tender into evidence as an admission of 24 Mr. Geiger and as an adopted admission of 25 Scientology by virtue of their having filed 25 1 it as an attachment to a motion, the 2 affidavit of Ferman Geiger dated December 12, 3 2000. 4 MR. POPE: No objection, Your Honor. 5 THE COURT: Okay. Hold on. Let me get 6 it in. This is Defendant's Exhibit Number 7 Two. 8 (Whereupon, Defendant's Exhibit Number Two 9 was admitted into evidence.) 10 THE COURT: That is in evidence. 11 MR. MERRETT: Thank your, Your Honor. I 12 would move the court to take judicial notice 13 rather than dig through the file, of the fact 14 that evidenced by the affidavit before you 15 and the photostat of Mr. Geiger's 16 identification card previously tendered by 17 Scientology, that Mr. Geiger is appointed in 18 Hillsborough County by Judge Alvarez as a 19 special process server or certified process 20 server. 21 THE COURT: All right. Bear with me 22 just a minute. 23 MR. POPE: We have no objection to you 24 so noting, Your Honor. 25 (Whereupon, a pause in the proceedings took 26 1 place.) 2 THE COURT: That's so noted. For the 3 record, as far as Mr. Geiger is concerned, he 4 is a failure to appear or respond to a court 5 order at this time. He has not been 6 arraigned on this and quite frankly, I think 7 any proceedings that we are doing that 8 involve him are going to have to be done 9 again if he does show up and give him 10 arraignment he did not plead to. 11 MR. MERRETT: I understand, Your Honor. 12 THE COURT: All right. I just wanted to 13 make that clear. All right, let's go ahead. 14 MR. MERRETT: Your Honor, we would call 15 Robert Minton to the stand. 16 Thereupon: 17 ROBERT MINTON 18 was called as a witness and having been duly sworn, was 19 examined and testified as follows: 20 DIRECT EXAMINATION 21 BY MR. MERRETT: 22 Q Mr. Minton, would you state your name? 23 A Robert Minton. 24 Q And were you present during the event 25 described by Ms. Brooks in her testimony? 27 1 A Yes, I was. 2 Q And can you tell the court what you recall 3 seeing and hearing as far as what Mr. Geiger did and 4 said? 5 A It was pretty much just like Ms. Brooks 6 said. You know, he appears, you know, on her left 7 side. 8 I was sitting to the right of Ms. Brooks. 9 Mr. Geiger, I later learned that's his name, appeared 10 over Stacy Brooks' left shoulder and he put these 11 documents right in front of her face. 12 Q Do you recall specifically what documents he 13 had in his hand? 14 A It was the injunction. 15 Q Do you recall whether there were any other 16 documents other than the injunction and the photograph 17 that's already been tendered in evidence? 18 A I'm not aware that there were any others. I 19 mean, I flipped through and it just looked like the 20 injunction to me. 21 Q Okay. Did you hear Mr. Geiger's response to 22 Ms. Brooks' inquiry regarding how out of all of the 23 gin joints in all the cities and all the world he 24 ended up at Ruth Chris Steakhouse? 25 A Yes. 28 1 Q What was his response? 2 A His response was about his OSA handlers were 3 in the restaurant. 4 MR. MERRETT: I don't have anything 5 further of this witness, Your Honor. 6 THE COURT: Mr. Pope? 7 MR. POPE: No questions, Your Honor. 8 THE COURT: Mr. Minton, sir, you may 9 step down. 10 Also, again for the purposes of the 11 record, Mr. Merrett has been asking the 12 questions and Mr. Pope has been doing the 13 cross-examination, but I don't mean to 14 slight Mr. Howie, sir. 15 MR. HOWIE: I don't feel slighted, Your 16 Honor. I have no questions for these 17 witnesses. 18 THE COURT: Okay. The thought occurred 19 to me I haven't given you an opportunity. 20 MR. HOWIE: I'll intervene if I do have 21 questions. 22 THE COURT: Yes, sir. All right. Okay. 23 Call your next witness. 24 MR. MERRETT: Prosecution rests, Your 25 Honor. 29 1 THE COURT: As far as? 2 MR. MERRETT: As far as the Church, 3 Mr. Geiger and Ms. Ross. 4 THE COURT: Okay. Mr. Pope, sir. 5 MR. POPE: I'll ask Mr. Hertzberg to 6 make a motion, Your Honor. 7 THE COURT: Okay. 8 MR. HERTZBERG: Your Honor, may I stand 9 at the podium? 10 THE COURT: You may, sir. 11 MR. HERTZBERG: Your Honor, at this time 12 on behalf of defendants Judy Ross, and Church 13 of Scientology Flag Service Organization, we 14 ask for a directed verdict or a judgment of 15 acquittal for the failure to prove. 16 As Your Honor knows, the standard for 17 this proceeding is proof beyond a reasonable 18 doubt and for a variety of reasons which I'd 19 like to touch on briefly, we would maintain 20 that that proof has not been made by the 21 party forward. 22 The overt action order of this court 23 that guides us here in determining whether 24 it is a violation of the injunction is this 25 court's order of December 1, of the year 30 1 2000, and in particular paragraph three 2 where this court made clear that it did not 3 intend for its injunction to bar the service 4 of process by a lawful process server. And 5 I will just remind the court of the specific 6 language that paragraph, quote: Any process 7 server obtained by any party to this action 8 pursuant to the laws of the State of Florida 9 and the applicable rules of court is free to 10 legally serve process on any person, 11 notwithstanding the terms of Temporary 12 Injunction Number Two, inasmuch as such 13 process server will be an agent of this 14 court for the purpose of the serving 15 process, end quote. 16 Now, they have established in many 17 different ways that Mr. Geiger was a process 18 server, a licensed process server in 19 Hillsborough County. They put into evidence 20 the photocopy of his license signed by Judge 21 Alvarez in Hillsborough County. I really 22 don't need anything further, although 23 Ms. Brooks also conceded on 24 cross-examination that he represented 25 himself to be a process server, and they put 31 1 his affidavit in, in which he also stated 2 that he was a licensed process server in 3 which he stated that the reason that he was 4 present on the 30th in that restaurant was 5 to serve process. 6 We also have the concession from 7 Ms. Brooks that not only was he serving a 8 copy of the injunction, but she said on 9 cross-examination, she conceded on 10 cross-examination that she could not rule 11 out the possibility that Mr. Geiger was also 12 serving a summons and complaint. 13 Your Honor may take notice of your own 14 order in this case dated the 29th of 15 November which is the day before these 16 events which are the subject of this 17 particular order to show cause in which Your 18 Honor stated in paragraph two, you ordered 19 quote: The clerk shall, upon plaintiff's 20 request, issue additional summonses with 21 respect to each of the foregoing defendants 22 and plaintiff shall serve upon each of said 23 defendants a summons, a copy of a verified 24 amended and supplemental complaint and a 25 copy of this order. And one of the 32 1 individuals listed in the paragraph above, 2 paragraph one which Your Honor was referring 3 to in paragraph two in which Your Honor 4 directed that those documents be served upon 5 various individuals is Stacy Brooks. In 6 fact, her name is the first name that 7 appears on your order of the 29th. 8 Now, some other important evidence, if 9 we needed anything more, came out in 10 Ms. Brooks' testimony. She conceded her 11 knowledge when she was asked to describe who 12 Judy Ross was, what her knowledge of Judy 13 Ross was she said Judy Ross worked in the 14 legal department at the Church. That's 15 totally consistent with this. 16 What we have then is testimony that a 17 process server appeared in a public place 18 after the order that Your Honor issued 19 directing that Stacy Brooks be served with 20 process. And that, we think -- we submit to 21 Your Honor, is clearly protected under the 22 terms of your order. 23 If there was any doubt about it, and I 24 don't think that there is at this point, I 25 think that for the reasons I've given 33 1 already the case has to be dismissed for 2 failure to prove. 3 Your Honor also has in the court file 4 and can take judicial notice of, a document 5 that I would like to hand up to Your Honor 6 through the bailiff and which is the proof 7 of service that Mr. Geiger swore to under 8 oath in which he states that he served a 9 summons and complaint, as well as Injunction 10 Number Two, Your Honor, if I may direct Your 11 Honor's attention is up here on this 12 portion -- 13 THE COURT: Okay. Hold on just a minute 14 please, sir. 15 (Whereupon, a pause in the proceedings took 16 place.) 17 MR. HERTZBERG: If Your Honor would 18 look, it's the proof of service which is 19 under oath by Mr. Geiger which describes -- 20 THE COURT: -- received it and served 21 it, up here? 22 MR. HERTZBERG: I'm sorry, it is up 23 here, Your Honor, that I'm directing your 24 attention to. May I approach? 25 THE COURT: You may. 34 1 MR. HERTZBERG: Summons and Complaint 2 and injunction Number Two. 3 THE COURT: Okay. Yes, sir. okay. 4 MR. HERTZBERG: And he describes that 5 pursuant to the request of an attorney 6 Mr. Moxon and Geitzen Associates, his 7 employer, he went to serve Stacy Brooks at 8 the steakhouse, in the public place in Tampa 9 and he swore to that on December 1 in the 10 return service. So, what we have here is the 11 proof of service for the summons and 12 complaint as well as the injunction. 13 I would submit to Your Honor that under 14 the terms of your order where you made clear 15 that it is not a violation of Injunction 16 Number Two for process to be served, I would 17 submit to Your Honor that even if, even if 18 the only thing that Mr. Geiger served on 19 Ms. Brooks that evening was the copy of the 20 injunction, that would not be sufficient to 21 make out an allegation of a violation of the 22 injunction whether under a theory of 23 harassment or any other theory that they 24 argue to the court, but we don't even have 25 to be restricted to that because, and this 35 1 is significant. We have the sworn affidavit 2 of Mr. Geiger in the file saying that he 3 also served a summons and complaint which is 4 what Your Honor directed be done. 5 You ordered that that be done, and we 6 also have Ms. Brooks on cross-examination 7 unable to deny, in effect, that she received 8 documents other than a summons, other than 9 the injunction on that evening and 10 Mr. Minton didn't help him at all because he 11 could not rule out that other documents were 12 being served by Mr. Geiger at that time. 13 And we also have in the comments if Your 14 Honor would look at the comments in the 15 sworn affidavit of Mr. Geiger in the 16 document that I handed up to you, we have 17 his account of what occurred in that 18 encounter with Mrs. Brooks on that evening 19 which is significantly different than the 20 testimony, but in addition -- just take a 21 moment if Your Honor wants to look at that. 22 (Whereupon, a pause in the proceedings took 23 place.) 24 MR. MERRETT: Your Honor, I would -- 25 MR. HERTZBERG: In addition to that, we 36 1 have -- 2 MR. MERRETT: Your Honor I object to 3 consideration of that as being inadmissible 4 hearsay. It's another part of the return. 5 THE COURT: Okay. 6 MR. HERTZBERG: It is part -- it is 7 part. It's part of the integrated document, 8 but beyond that Mr. Merrett put into evidence 9 Mr. Geiger's affidavit and in that affidavit 10 also -- but let me give the context for how I 11 want to use this affidavit. 12 I would submit that on the basis of what 13 I've said so far we are entitled to a 14 directed verdict or a judgment of acquittal 15 here because they have failed to establish 16 even a prima facie case of a violation of 17 the injunction. 18 THE COURT: Okay. 19 MR. HERTZBERG: But I will add, unless 20 you want to -- 21 THE COURT: I want to ask a question. 22 MR. HERTZBERG: Sure. 23 THE COURT: Mr. Hertzberg, when you 24 started here you cited an order 29, November, 25 year 2000? 37 1 MR. HERTZBERG: Yes, sir. 2 THE COURT: Could I see that? 3 MR. HERTZBERG: Yes. I don't want to 4 give you my marked up copy. 5 THE COURT: Just give me a copy. Let me 6 see. 7 MR. HERTZBERG: Here, Your Honor. And I 8 direct Your Honor's attention, please, to 9 paragraphs one and two on the first page. 10 THE COURT: Thank you, sir. 11 MR. HERTZBERG: Yes, Your Honor, so I 12 wanted to do two arguments. The first 13 argument, and I am sort of resting in the 14 middle of my argument, is that based on that 15 order and based on Mrs. Brooks' and 16 Mr. Minton's testimony, we are entitled -- 17 they just didn't make that a prima facie 18 case. 19 We win just based on what I've said so 20 far, but without being cumulative there is 21 also another reason that you should grant it 22 and that's because they have raised a 23 reasonable doubt. This is a sort of 24 separate theory, failure to make a prima 25 facie case. 38 1 They've also injected reasonable doubt 2 into the case by introducing Mr. Geiger's 3 affidavit because Mr. Geiger's affidavit has 4 some very interesting things in here. Does 5 Your Honor have a copy of it? 6 THE COURT: Let me ask you, which 7 affidavit are you talking about. I've got 8 affidavit of service and the one that I have 9 is -- I filed the one, just mark it filed 10 that he gave me for Ferman Geiger. 11 MR. HERTZBERG: That's correct. This is 12 the affidavit of December 12, 2000. 13 THE COURT: I'm sorry. Yeah, that -- 14 MR. HERTZBERG: That one, as well, Your 15 Honor. 16 THE COURT: Okay. 17 MR. HERTZBERG: Okay. Now, let's look 18 at that affidavit for a moment. Look at 19 paragraph three. Again, he's confirming that 20 he's a Hillsborough County certified process 21 server. Then in paragraph four he says that 22 on November 30, which is the date in 23 question, Geitzon and Associates contacted 24 him to do a service job in the early evening. 25 And he says Judy Ross gave him the paper to 39 1 be served. It's in the plural. He didn't 2 say "paper" like an injunction. She said 3 papers and information on where I might 4 locate the person. 5 I met Ms. Ross. She gave me the papers 6 that were to be served and also furnished me 7 a photograph of the person to be served, 8 Stacy Brooks, as I had never seen her 9 before. 10 Your Honor, this photograph which has 11 been introduced into evidence, there is some 12 suggestion that there was something 13 improper. There is nothing improper if 14 you're providing a process server with 15 photograph of the person who is to be served 16 and in fact that's done all the time and 17 Mr. Geiger, through the affidavit that 18 they've introduced into evidence, has given 19 the reason why he needed a photograph, 20 because he hadn't ever seen Ms. Brooks 21 before so he needed a photograph of her, so 22 this is totally corroborative of his going 23 out to his duty as commanded by the court's 24 order of the 29th to serve process on 25 Ms. Brooks. And he goes to the steakhouse 40 1 and he has his instructions where to find 2 her. 3 That's not a violation of the injunction 4 and he was given, in paragraph five he was 5 given a telephone number where Ms. Ross 6 could reached in case he had any questions 7 and that's not a violation of the injunction 8 and he goes to the restaurant, he identifies 9 Ms. Brooks in paragraph six by the 10 photograph he has. Not through any OSA 11 operatives through this testimony that they 12 gave here, the vague testimony about 13 so-called OSA operatives. 14 He states under oath in this affidavit 15 that Mr. Merrett put into evidence that the 16 way he found Ms. Brooks was through the 17 photograph and he goes to the table and he's 18 subjected to verbal abuse. That's in 19 paragraph six of the document that they put 20 into evidence. Making comments about me for 21 serving Scientology related papers, papers 22 again in the plural. 23 Ms. Brooks got very angry at me. She 24 forceably grabbed all the papers I was 25 holding from my hand. That's contrary to 41 1 her testimony. 2 She said, she tried to evade on 3 cross-examination, she refused to adopt 4 Mr. Pope's question that she grabbed and 5 said she took it. Well, the document they 6 put in contradicted that, Your Honor. it 7 says that she grabbed it. And then he asked 8 for the paper back. Quote: I explained I 9 was a process server performing my job, but 10 she refused to give them back to me. I 11 attempted to convince her that she needed to 12 give me back my papers, but the only thing 13 she finally gave back to me was the original 14 summons. 15 Your Honor, that is very significant 16 lest there be any doubt this is cumulative 17 of course of the proof the service which 18 says that the summons which Your Honor 19 directed to be served on them be served. 20 There's that word. It's the document they 21 put in today. 22 This fills in the gap Ms. Brooks said 23 she was uncertain whether she got a summons 24 but they put in evidence saying that it was 25 a summons from Mr. Geiger. That's their 42 1 exhibit. 2 Then in paragraph seven of this 3 affidavit, Your Honor, which they put into 4 evidence, Mr. Geiger gives a completely 5 different account than Ms. Brooks and 6 Mr. Minton about the Office of Special 7 Affairs. He denies even knowing what the 8 Office of Special Affairs is. 9 He says at the bottom of page two of his 10 affidavit quote: I did not tell Stacy 11 Brooks or anyone else that I was acting on 12 the instructions of and applying information 13 provided by the Office of Special Affairs. 14 Nor did I state that one or more members of 15 the Office of Special Affairs was involved. 16 Your Honor, they have raised, if for any 17 reason Your Honor concludes and I urge you 18 not to because I think we are completely 19 correct on this, but if Your Honor does not 20 agree that they failed to make a prima facie 21 case, then they, themselves, have raised a 22 reasonable doubt because this affidavit that 23 they put on in their case in chief 24 materially, materially contradicts in 25 significant ways the testimony of Stacy 43 1 Brooks and Robert Minton. So, I submit to 2 Your Honor this raises a reasonable doubt 3 we're entitled to an acquittal. Thank you. 4 THE COURT: Okay. Let me ask you 5 another question. You represent the Church 6 of Scientology. 7 MR. HERTZBERG: Flag Service 8 Organization and Judy Ross. 9 THE COURT: Is Judy Ross present, today? 10 MR. HERTZBERG: She is, Your Honor. 11 THE COURT: Who are you pointing to. 12 MR. HERTZBERG: Please stand. 13 THE COURT: Are you Judy Ross? 14 MS. ROSS: Yes, sir. 15 THE COURT: And you've previously plead 16 in this case? 17 MS. ROSS: Yes, Your Honor. 18 THE COURT: Okay. Thank you. Let the 19 record so reflect as to those two defendants 20 you made your argument at this time. 21 MR. HERTZBERG: Thank you, Your Honor. 22 THE COURT: All right. Mr. Merrett. 23 MR. MERRETT: Your Honor, I don't know 24 if the court wants to proceed at this point 25 or reserve at the conclusion of the case. 44 1 I'm prepared either way. 2 THE COURT: I'll reserve. 3 MR. MERRETT: Thank you. 4 THE COURT: Let's do this. We've been 5 going for about an hour. Let's take a break. 6 Take ten minutes and we'll come back. 7 (Thereupon, a short recess was taken, after 8 which the proceedings continued.) 9 THE COURT: All right. Mr. Bailiff, if 10 you would while we're getting started here, 11 would you again sound the halls for a Ferman 12 Geiger, sir. 13 THE BAILIFF: Yes, sir. 14 (Whereupon, a pause in the proceedings took 15 place.) 16 THE BAILIFF: Your Honor, he's being 17 detained down in the lobby. 18 THE COURT: You say he has appeared? 19 THE BAILIFF: That's right. 20 THE COURT: Would you please have the 21 bailiff bring him forward? 22 THE BAILIFF: Yes, Your Honor. 23 (Whereupon, a pause in the proceedings took 24 place.) 25 THE BAILIFF: He's in route, Your Honor. 45 1 (Whereupon, a pause in the proceedings took 2 place.) 3 THE COURT: Sir, are you Ferman Geiger? 4 MR. GEIGER: Yes, sir, I am. 5 THE COURT: Mr. Geiger, I have in front 6 of me an affidavit of service that you were 7 served with an order to show cause to appear 8 at this court here in the Pinellas County 9 Judicial Center, 545 First. Avenue North, 10 St. Petersburg, Florida at 9:00 AM on 11 Saturday, February 10, 2001. 12 MR. GEIGER: Yes, sir. 13 THE COURT: Halls were sounded at 9:15. 14 You were not present. Attorneys for the 15 Church of Scientology told me that maybe you 16 would show up around ten o'clock. You did 17 not respond to the sounding of the halls at 18 9:15. 19 The order that was served on you said 20 that you were to appear on Saturday, 21 February 10, the year 2001 at nine o'clock. 22 Your failure to be here at the time 23 appointed can be direct criminal contempt. 24 You can be incarcerated for up to six 25 months. I am dealing with it at this time 46 1 as direct criminal contempt. Do you have an 2 attorney present to represent you? 3 MR. GEIGER: No, sir, I do not. 4 THE COURT: Mr. Pope, do you represent 5 this man? 6 MR. POPE: I do not, Your Honor. 7 THE COURT: Mr. Pope, I'm appointing you 8 to represent him at this time in a direct 9 criminal contempt proceeding. 10 MR. POPE: Your Honor, I'm wondering if 11 I might not have a conflict in this matter. 12 THE COURT: Well, you might. Quite 13 frankly, I've looked at the case law and the 14 case law says he does not have to be 15 represented by counsel for direct criminal 16 contempt. 17 You, Mr. Geiger, were directly legally 18 served. 19 MR. GEIGER: No, sir, I was subserved. 20 THE COURT: I have not asked you yet for 21 any comment. If you want get double direct 22 criminal contempt just keep proceeding. 23 (Whereupon, a pause in the proceedings took 24 place.) 25 THE COURT: All right, now, I'll try one 47 1 more time. You were served. You did not 2 appear as ordered. You are now present. Let 3 the record reflect it is now 10:35 by the 4 courtroom clock. 5 I will give you an opportunity at this 6 time to explain yourself. Tell me why you 7 weren't present. If you have a valid excuse 8 or any mitigating circumstances. 9 MR. GEIGER: Thank you, Your Honor. I 10 apologize for being late. I underestimated 11 the time, the traffic and the location. I'm 12 totally unfamiliar with the area. I traveled 13 from my home and gave myself an hour and 20 14 minutes. 15 THE COURT: Where is your home? 16 MR. GEIGER: In Zephyrhills, Florida, 17 sir. 18 THE COURT: Okay. 19 MR. GEIGER: And I gave myself an hour 20 and 20 minutes and I ended up at the 49th 21 Street courthouse because I thought that's 22 where it was at. 23 THE COURT: You didn't read the paper 24 that was served on you? 25 MR. GEIGER: Yes, sir, but I'm totally 48 1 unfamiliar with St. Pete and I asked for 2 directions. 3 THE COURT: You're a process server? 4 MR. GEIGER: Yes, sir, for Hillsborough 5 County. 6 THE COURT: Okay. 7 MR. GEIGER: And I'm totally unfamiliar 8 with this area. And I went to the 49th 9 Street courthouse because in periods of time 10 as an investigator, as well, I have 11 associated myself with that courthouse. 12 It is error on my part and I apologize 13 for the lengthy time. I have no excuse 14 other than that, Your Honor. 15 THE COURT: Okay. All right. You did 16 receive the paperwork, the order to show 17 cause? 18 MR. GEIGER: Yes, sir. 19 THE COURT: Do you have an attorney to 20 represent you to that matter? 21 MR. GEIGER: No, sir. 22 THE COURT: Let he me ask you this. In 23 as much as the order to show cause against 24 the Church and Judy Ross with evidence 25 involving yourself had already been 49 1 presented, but I've also put on the record 2 that as far as you were concerned that would 3 have to be done again, but you weren't 4 present. 5 I'm going to put you at the end of the 6 line and I'll deal with you after I get 7 through everything else and because I'm 8 having to do it twice I'm still considering 9 the charge of direct criminal contempt and 10 we'll deal with that later. 11 Now, I'm continuing you and your matter 12 and it will be heard when the court can hear 13 it. 14 Now, you've been absent once. If you're 15 absent a second time I don't think there is 16 any mitigation or excuse you can come up 17 with, really. You're going to be hurting 18 real bad to come up with something. So, 19 rather than put you in the holding cell so I 20 know you're going to be here when I need 21 you, I'm telling you and I'll let you go at 22 this time, but I expect you to be ready at 23 the call of the court when I come back to 24 your case. Do you have any questions about 25 what I just said? 50 1 MR. GEIGER: No, sir, I do not. 2 THE COURT: All right. Mr. Bailiff, let 3 him sit out there with everybody else. 4 THE BAILIFF: Yes, Your Honor. 5 THE COURT: I will continue the matter 6 of the direct criminal contempt. I'll deal 7 with it later. We'll see how it goes. 8 (Whereupon, a pause in the proceedings took 9 place.) 10 All right. Let's go back. All right. 11 Now, as to the motion that was argued for 12 directed verdict, I'll hold off on that. 13 I've got that under advisement and I will 14 wait and see who that falls with all of the 15 other matters, especially if that Geiger is 16 going to have to be tried. Mr. Pope? 17 MR. POPE: Your Honor, as to Judy Ross 18 and the Church, they rest, and renew the 19 motion for judgment if acquittal. 20 THE COURT: Okay. Mr. Merritt? 21 MR. MERRETT: Yes, Your Honor, I'm 22 prepared to respond at this time. 23 THE COURT: Okay. Now, remember, I want 24 the record real clear this is as to the 25 Church of Scientology Flag Service 51 1 Organization and Judy Ross only. 2 MR. MERRETT: Yes, sir. 3 MR. POPE: Yes, sir. 4 MR. MERRETT: May it please the Court. 5 THE COURT: Yes, sir. 6 MR. MERRETT: Your Honor, the place to 7 begin, as in most things, is at the 8 beginning, and the beginning here is to the 9 extent that sheds light on the court's intent 10 in the injunction of November 30, your order 11 of December 1. 12 In response to the petitioner's first 13 motion for clarification or amendment or 14 whatever it was, but the December 1 order 15 that made the first expressed mention of 16 process servers and I think that the lesson 17 we have all learned is that we are in a 18 court where words mean something, sometimes 19 to a terrifying effect do they mean 20 something, and one of the words that the 21 court took the special pains interlineate on 22 that order of December 1 was word the I 23 believe "legally". It was either legally or 24 lawfully in the paragraph describing the 25 exception that the court was creating for 52 1 process serving, so what we begin with is 2 the fact that assuming that the intent of 3 the injunction was never to alter the law as 4 it pertains to service of process, ee have 5 to look at what service of process is. 6 The place where that starts and I'll 7 make this part of the argument brief because 8 I do not -- I cannot represent to you that 9 the record clearly establishes that there 10 was no service of anything other than the 11 injunction. I mean, I don't think that's 12 established. 13 THE COURT: Right. 14 MR. MERRETT: So where I would like to 15 start is briefly with section 48.011 Florida 16 Statute which defines process. Actually it's 17 not identified as a definition. It's the 18 second sentence that I'm looking at that says 19 that all process except subpoenas shall be 20 directed to all and singular the sheriffs of 21 the state and this is why we have what often 22 is the puzzler, the annotation at the top of 23 at summons or a writ that says to all in 24 singular the sheriff and deputy sheriffs of 25 the State of Florida because of this. 53 1 Now based on what section 48.011 says, 2 the document which is not directed to all in 3 singular to sheriffs of the state is not 4 process. Consequently, it necessarily 5 follows that the injunction, if the court 6 should find that the injunction was the only 7 document that was served by Mr. Geiger on 8 the night of the 30th, the injunction is not 9 process of court because it is not directed 10 to the sheriff. 11 Process of court is, of course, a term 12 of art. It is, you know, this is preaching 13 to the choir. This is not the legal 14 process. It's not due process. 15 It's a piece of paper, a specific type 16 and piece of paper which under section 17 48.011 must be, if it is to be processed, 18 directed to falling in singular to sheriffs 19 of the state. 20 The next place to which I would direct 21 the court's attention derives more directly 22 at the issue of legal service of process. 23 I'm directing the court's attention at this 24 time to section 48.021 Florida Statute which 25 when I was reading this it was another one 54 1 of the sections that brings home a thought 2 that just terrifies me as an attorney and 3 that is the extent to which I practice law 4 based on folklore. There are so many things 5 that we assume, that we think we know why 6 they are done. 7 If you recall there was a long period of 8 time when "The Rule" didn't exist. The Rule 9 is just the custom of the invoking the rule 10 of sequestration of witnesses. It was 11 actually relatively late grafted in the 12 Rules if Civil Procedure. 13 We all knew what it was. We all figured 14 there must be a rule, but there was an 15 interesting article in the Bar Journal a few 16 years back and found out that there really 17 wasn't one for the longest time. 18 What section 48.021 in sub paragraph one 19 provides is this. All process shall be 20 served by the sheriff of the county which 21 person to be served is found except initial 22 nonenforceable civil process may be served 23 by a special process server appointed by the 24 sheriff or by certified process server and 25 that refers you to the statute authorization 55 1 the chief judge to appoint certified process 2 servers. So, what you have is the full 3 extent of authority to special process 4 servers appointed by the sheriff and 5 certified process servers appointed by the 6 chief judge of the circuit. 7 Now, it is important to bear in mind 8 that persons who are special process servers 9 or certified process servers are not 10 authorized to serve any process of court 11 except -- I'm sorry, are not authorized to 12 serve any process except initial 13 nonenforceable civil process. 14 Now, one of the cases that I looked at 15 on this quoted Dean Trawick as holding that 16 that was an absurd locution and there is no 17 such thing as initial nonenforceable civil 18 process, but I think he has kind of a 19 different attitude toward the legislature 20 than most of us practicing lawyers do. 21 So there is a -- what process servers 22 are permitted to serve is initial 23 nonenforceable civil process and then 24 pursuant to the rule of civil procedure I 25 think it's 1.410, they're authorized to 56 1 serve subpoenas in civil cases because 2 anybody's authorized to serve a subpoena. 3 So that's where we are so far. 4 Now, I would next ask the court to 5 direct it's attention to section 48.27 6 Florida Statutes which is the statute that 7 essentially ratified what I assume would be 8 the inherent authority of the court to 9 appoint process servers because I'm sure the 10 court is aware that practice was previously 11 limited to appoint on a case-by-case 12 officials who were known as deleasors (sic). 13 THE COURT: Okay. 14 MR. MERRETT: Which were special process 15 serves appointed in a given case to serve a 16 given instrument. If you look at 17 subparagraph two of section 48.27, what that 18 provides is that when a person becomes 19 certified by the chief judge, it authorizes 20 him or her to serve initial nonenforceable 21 civil process and it's important to listen 22 here because this becomes critical, on a 23 person bound within the circuit where the 24 process server is certified when a civil 25 action has been filed against such person in 57 1 the circuit court or in a county court in the 2 state. 3 THE COURT: I'm sorry, where did you 4 read that? 5 MR. MERRETT: This is from subparagraph 6 two. This is the end of the first sentence. 7 THE COURT: Where it says authorized him 8 or her to? 9 MR. MERRETT: Yes, sir. 10 THE COURT: Okay. 11 MR. MERRETT: To serve initial, 12 unenforceable civil process on a person found 13 within the circuit. 14 Now, the question is for Mr. Geiger and 15 Scientology is what circuit, right? What 16 circuit is the process server authorized to 17 serve process in the circuit where he is 18 certified, when? When a civil action has 19 been filed against such person in the 20 circuit court or in the county court. 21 These are the statutes that we're 22 working with when we turn to the judicial 23 gloss regarding the authority of Mr. Geiger 24 and people in his position. 25 Factually, if the court will recall 58 1 we've heard three different ways that 2 Mr. Geiger is a certified process server 3 appointed by the chief judge in the, is it 4 the Thirteenth Circuit or the Sixth Circuit? 5 THE COURT: Thirteenth is Hillsborough. 6 The Sixth Circuit is this one. 7 MR. MERRETT: So he's appointed by the 8 chief judge in the Thirteenth Circuit in 9 Hillsborough County. You remember his little 10 card that Mr. Hertzberg presented to you. 11 That raises an interesting question. 12 And the answer to the question is this. I 13 would refer to court first to -- I have no 14 idea how this name is properly pronounced. 15 It's spelled A-B-D-A-T-E, Abdate versus 16 Providence National Bank, 631 So. 2d. 312. 17 That is a Fifth District case from 1994. 18 In that case Providence National Bank 19 initiated the suit by filing in the circuit 20 court in orange county. Thereafter the bank 21 caused a summons and amended complaint to be 22 served on Mr Abdate in Palm Beach County by 23 Charles Smith was what? A certified process 24 server like Mr. Geiger certified to serve 25 process in Palm Beach, County. So the 59 1 situation here is that we have an Orange 2 County case being served in Palm Beach, 3 county by a process server who is certified 4 in Palm Beach, County. Held that -- I'm 5 turning here to the next to the last page of 6 the copy of the opinion that you have, the 7 statutory language, reading from just below 8 the last time that it says in the footnotes, 9 the statutory language indicates that a 10 certified process server may serve civil 11 process on a person found within the circuit 12 only when the action has also been filed 13 against this person in the same circuit. 14 And service of process on Mr. Adbate was 15 quashed because the case had not been filed 16 in Palm Beach, County of in the circuit that 17 includes Palm Beach, County but in Orange 18 County which was a different circuit. 19 The rule as enunciated in the statute 20 and affirmed by this case is that a process 21 server who is certified, judicially 22 certified and only authorized to serve 23 process within the jurisdiction in which he 24 is certified when the process originated 25 from the court within the jurisdiction in 60 1 which he is certified and if you look again 2 at the fourth page of the Adbate opinion 3 you'll see that it's laid out quite neatly 4 and it is on all fours with the evidence as 5 adduced in this case, that is in the second 6 and third paragraph, lawsuit was filed in 7 Orange County, the summons and complaint 8 were served in Palm Beach County by a 9 process server certified to serve in Palm 10 Beach County. 11 The situation that we have, here unless 12 I'm sadly mistaken is we've got a case that 13 was filed in Pinellas County which is not 14 part of the judicial circuit encompassing 15 Hillsborough County where Mr. Geiger is 16 appointed and authorized to serve process. 17 We have a Pinellas County case being served 18 in Hillsborough County by a Hillsborough 19 County process server, exactly like the 20 situation in the Adbate case. 21 Consequently, what Mr. Geiger was 22 attempting to go do was not within the ambit 23 of either the court's intent on the 24 December 1 order because that wasn't legal 25 service of process. They picked the wrong 61 1 process server. They should have used the 2 sheriff. 3 They should have decided and I'll come 4 back to this point again, they should have 5 made the thought that civilized human beings 6 let other people eat and waited until 7 Ms. Brooks went back in Pinellas County and 8 served her like civilized human beings do, 9 instead of taking the deliberately abusive 10 and harassing tactic that they took. 11 And in that again, I'll come back to, 12 but I want you to think about that, Judge. 13 They went far enough out of their way to 14 attempt to affect invalid service of process 15 to make sure that interrupted her at dinner. 16 Keep that in mind. 17 The next thing to which I would direct 18 the court's attention is another 19 pronunciation. Farrey's Wholesale, 20 F-A-R-R-E-Y-'-S versus Hobbies Sound 21 Industrial Park. 22 THE COURT: Thank you so much. 23 MR. MERRETT: I'm looking at the -- 24 THE COURT: Just a minute. Let me catch 25 up. 62 1 MR. MERRETT: Yes, sir. 2 THE COURT: Okay, sir. 3 MR. MERRETT: In the Farrey's Wholesale 4 case, I read here from the second paragraph 5 of the first page, says Farrey's sued Hobbies 6 Sound in Dade County Circuit Court and we 7 turn to the next page of the opinion, one, 8 two, three, like four paragraphs up from the 9 bottom, it says here the action was filed in 10 Dade County Circuit Court. The process 11 server was certified in Palm Beach in Dade 12 County and Mr. Townsen and Hobbie Sound were 13 served in Palm Beach, County. Thus the 14 service was legally defective. Again, 15 because why? Because the process server was 16 not certified and serving both in the county 17 in which the action originated. That's what 18 the statute says and that's what is laid out 19 most clearly in the Adbate case. 20 THE COURT: Now, the Farrey's case. 21 MR. MERRETT: Yes, sir. 22 THE COURT: A suit was filed in Dade 23 County. 24 MR. MERRETT: Yes, sir. 25 THE COURT: Okay, and then served in 63 1 Palm Beach County, again. 2 MR. MERRETT: Yes sir. 3 THE COURT: With a Palm Beach County 4 certified process server. 5 MR. MERRETT: Yes, sir. 6 THE COURT: All right. 7 MR. MERRETT: Your Honor, I think the 8 court reporter might be obliged if I gave her 9 the cite. 10 THE COURT: Oh, yeah, please sir. 11 MR. MERRETT: It's 719 So.2d. 374, Third 12 District 1998. 13 THE COURT: Thank you. Did you give her 14 the cite on that other case? 15 MR. MERRETT: I think I did. 16 THE COURT: The Adbate case. 17 MR. MERRETT: Yes, I believe I did. 18 THE COURT: Okay, good. Thank you. 19 MR. MERRETT: And, Your Honor, I don't 20 know what it is you do down here, but back in 21 Jacksonville we sometimes make fun of Fifth 22 District Court of Appeal, because they kind 23 of do seem to be the district that's most 24 inclined to make bold strokes in the 25 advancement of the law, shall we say. 64 1 They often times felt alone, but that's 2 not the case here. We just got a case from 3 the Third District and handing you one ow 4 from the First District which states as 5 succinctly as possible the principle in 6 operation here. Dickinson versus Dickinson, 7 706 So. 2d. 114 First District 1998 and the 8 last paragraph of the single page case says 9 quite succinctly, as for the second issue 10 appellant correctly states that under 11 section 48.272 Florida Statute, for service 12 by a private process server to be valid, the 13 server must be certified in the county which 14 action originated. 15 Mr. Geiger told you out of his mouth, he 16 told you in an affidavit, he told you 17 through Mr. Hertzberg who for some reason 18 has access to him but doesn't want to 19 represent him, through his identification 20 card where he's certified in Hillsborough 21 County which is not part of the circuit in 22 which the case indicates originated. 23 So that gets us is this, Your Honor. 24 The only way that someone who's hired by 25 Scientology's lawyers to walk up and stick 65 1 this in someone's face during dinner is not 2 violating your injunction is according to 3 the terms of the December 1 order if that 4 person is legally serving process. 5 Judge, whatever papers you decide were 6 in his hand it is irrefutable that the 7 process that he was seeking to effect that 8 didn't amount to legal service. He had no 9 right to serve those papers. That's what 10 the law says. 11 Now, the issue is not whether or not the 12 court has jurisdiction over Ms. Brooks. If 13 the question were did that convert 14 jurisdiction over Ms. Brooks, then this 15 would have been raised on a motion to quash. 16 That would be the issue to deal with. 17 The issue is simply whether he was 18 engaged in legal, lawful service of process 19 sufficient to take him outside of the ten 20 foot rule and the harassment rule that the 21 court imposed in the injunction on 22 November 30. 23 Point number one, that was no exception 24 for people who Scientology hired to fly 25 their false flag over service of process on 66 1 no the face of your November 30 order. That 2 didn't happen until December 1. 3 More to the point, Judge, I'll tell you 4 for the last time that the law has been 5 commended for your study that clearly 6 Mr. Geiger could not legally serve process 7 in this case in Hillsborough County, period. 8 That's what the cases say and what the 9 statute says. 10 So, we're past that exception and that's 11 really the question that has been raised by 12 the argument of counsel and the question 13 that cries out just from the case of the 14 pleading and from the evidence here is is 15 there an exception. 16 Ms. Brooks testified without reputation 17 that Mr. Geiger came and put his hand in 18 front of her. You saw him, Judge. His arms 19 are less than ten feet long. 20 We know that he violated that and we 21 also know from the evidence adduced from the 22 statements that Ms. Brooks recounted that he 23 had been specifically instructed by about 24 Scientology to go there during dinner and 25 serve them. 67 1 Now, a couple points that I want make in 2 that respect. The one that just jumps out 3 at you and I have to wonder if you're going 4 to get a newspaper article of the benevolent 5 effects of surveillance on the ground since 6 you got one about nobody should be worrying 7 about Scientology having cameras all over 8 the planet, but maybe you'll get one that 9 will justify this. 10 How did Judy Ross know they where they 11 were eating dinner? How did he know -- 12 MR. POPE: Your Honor, objection. Your 13 Honor, objection. He's arguing matters that 14 are not in evidence. 15 THE COURT: Overruled. 16 MR. MERRETT: Since the statements that 17 Mr. Geiger made to Ms. Brooks were that that 18 Judy Ross had told him where to go since his 19 affidavit said he went there to find them. 20 Judy Ross was the person who related the 21 information to him, etcetera, etcetera 22 etcetera. 23 That's the question. How does this 24 outfit over here find out where people are 25 eating dinner without violating the 68 1 prohibition against harassment? How do they 2 do that, Judge? I don't think it's doable. 3 I think it tells you that indisputably 4 Scientology was engaged in surveillance of 5 these people. 6 MR. POPE: Your Honor, objection. He's 7 arguing matters -- there's not the first bit 8 of evidence that he has presented about 9 surveillance or harassment except for a 10 process server coming in and handing 11 Ms. Brooks papers at dinner. That's what the 12 evidence shows. 13 For him to be arguing harassment and 14 surveillance on this record is highly 15 improper, Your Honor. 16 THE COURT: Mr. Merrett? 17 MR. MERRETT: Your Honor, the statements 18 made by Mr. Geiger were clearly to the effect 19 that there were OSA handlers, employees of 20 the Church of Scientology in the restaurant 21 with these people, that he had received 22 specific instructions to interrupt their 23 dinner from Scientology. 24 THE COURT: Proceed with your argument. 25 MR. MERRETT: Thank you. There is no 69 1 other way for him to turn up there. I mean 2 we have not heard testimony that he, himself, 3 is a Scientologist with OT powers so we know 4 that he didn't just figure this out by going 5 exterior. We know he got this information 6 from somebody in the real, three dimensional, 7 solid world who conveyed it to him and we 8 know that that person has to have been acting 9 at the direction of Scientology. 10 We also know from the statement of 11 Mr. Geiger that Scientology had OSA people 12 and it's interesting to know that 13 Mr. Hertzberg use the term of art which 14 Ms. Brooks did not. She referred them as 15 people. He referred to them as operatives. 16 Operative is probably a better word given 17 what they do. Those people were in the 18 restaurant. 19 Even if Mr. Geiger wasn't telling the 20 truth or didn't say that, you're left with 21 the inescapable question, how did they know? 22 And the fact is that the only way to find 23 out is through harassment. 24 Now, I will if, the court deems it 25 appropriate, what I'd to do since 70 1 Mr. Hertzberg brought to your attention the 2 return of service executed by Mr. Geiger or 3 read to you the name of what he referred to 4 as an attorney, I want to give Scientology 5 an opportunity to number one, show the court 6 where that attorney is of record in this 7 action and number two, maybe they can give 8 you his bar number if he's an attorney. 9 He's not an attorney, not in the State 10 of Florida. He's not a member of the 11 Florida Bar and he has not in connection 12 with this case. 13 MR. POPE: Your Honor, he's arguing -- 14 MR. MERRETT: He isn't -- 15 MR. POPE: Objection. He's arguing 16 stuff that is not in the record. 17 THE COURT: Okay, now, there other than 18 what you say in the record, he did present -- 19 now, just wait a minute. Let me get 20 something. 21 (Whereupon, a pause in the proceedings took 22 place.) 23 Mr. Merrett? 24 MR. MERRETT: Yes, sir. 25 THE COURT: Where is the reference to 71 1 that attorney? 2 MR. MERRETT: It's the first line of 3 the -- 4 THE COURT: I see it. You're talking 5 about this document that Mr. Hertzberg called 6 my attention called return of service 7 affidavit Stacy Brooks and then up here when 8 he showed me summons and complaint and 9 Injunction Number Two and then right below if 10 you drop down under the first line that goes 11 across the page under the style it says 12 pursuant to the request of Kendrick L. Moxon, 13 M-O-X-O-N, Esquire, 1100 Cleveland Street, 14 Clearwater, Florida. Now that's the attorney 15 you're making reference to? 16 MR. MERRETT: Yes, sir and I would 17 suggest to you that I would be appalled, but 18 maybe not surprised, if opposing counsel 19 wants to represent to you that Mr. Moxon is a 20 lawyer in the State of Florida or is 21 affiliated with this case, but if that's 22 their next step -- 23 THE COURT: Let's wait and see -- 24 MR. POPE: Your Honor -- 25 THE COURT: You've raised the point at 72 1 this time and I'll give Mr. Pope a chance or 2 Mr. Hertzberg when they argue to comment. 3 MR. MERRETT: The point would be that 4 that's a matter for judicial notice who is 5 and isn't a member of Florida Bar. I'm sure 6 you've got directory in your office. It's 7 not subject to reputation or dispute. 8 The question is why is he involved? Why 9 is he the one who is directing -- he's the 10 named contact for the instructions to Ferman 11 Geiger to pursue these people to the supper 12 table and wave papers in their faces. 13 He ain't a lawyer. Wherever he's a 14 lawyer, he ain't a lawyer in this case. He 15 has no connection to this action other than 16 having been present at some of the events 17 the court has heard evidence about, he has 18 no connection to it. 19 What does that tell you, Judge? 20 Customarily when lawyers are serving 21 process, it's something that lawyers, 22 members of the Bar do. 23 We say, you know what? It's time to 24 serve Bob Minton and we prepare the papers, 25 we pick a process served or have an 73 1 assistant pick a process server and we sent 2 it out. We ordinarily don't refer it to 3 someone that's not associated with the case 4 and not an attorney in the State of Florida. 5 That tells you something about the lack 6 of good faith in the activities that took 7 place on the night of November 30. 8 Now, the argument so far as been based 9 on this. Number one, it is absolutely 10 impossible that what Mr. Geiger was up to 11 was effecting legal service of process 12 because of the rules that are laid out in 13 the statutes and case law that I gave you 14 requiring that the person be certified in 15 the county in which the action originated. 16 Second, that they necessarily, 17 regardless of what you choose to believe 18 about the details, necessarily Scientology 19 has to have been engaged in harassing 20 behavior in order to know where the woman 21 was eating. 22 I mean, that's not something that people 23 just intuitively know. We don't know what 24 that was, but there is no other way for them 25 to know that other than by following them, 74 1 or otherwise engaging in surveillance. 2 That's where we gotten so far. 3 The notion that this was part of a 4 campaign of harassment is bourne out to an 5 extraordinary degree by the fact that with 6 was all directed by a non-lawyer who os not 7 associated with this case. Not by any of 8 these lawyers. None of these guys did it. 9 It was farmed out to somebody with special 10 skills. 11 The last point that I want to bring the 12 court to is this. If you disregard all of 13 that, if you disregard the law that says 14 Ferman Geiger cannot lawfully service 15 process which originates in Pinellas County, 16 if you disregard the fact that somebody had 17 to be doing something spooky to figure out 18 where these people were eating, if you 19 disregard the fact that they associated an 20 outside person to oversee this operation 21 you're left with this point, Judge. What 22 these people are telling you is that you 23 know what? As long as we're serving 24 process, we can have Mr. Geiger serve it on 25 Ms. Brooks when she's in gynecologists 75 1 office on the table. As long as we're 2 serving process we can send a process server 3 into church on Wednesday night to serve 4 process and that's not going to violate the 5 injunction. We can send a process server 6 into the intensive care unit where someone 7 is standing next to his dying mother's bed 8 and serve process and that's not harassment. 9 That's what they're trying to tell you, 10 Judge. 11 The fact of the matter is, the conduct 12 in question, prima facie, violates the 13 injunction as it was entered on November 30 14 and the exception which has been suggested 15 to you which is the purported right to serve 16 process has not been proven because of the 17 lack of legal authority for the actions 18 undertaken and the limitation in your order 19 of December 1 to legal action in pursuit of 20 service of process. 21 That means that exemption doesn't apply 22 to Mr. Geiger and it doesn't apply to them 23 and lastly the exemption cannot no apply 24 unless the court is inviting perpetual 25 subterfuge the exception cannot apply to 76 1 behavior which while otherwise lawful is 2 specifically conducted in a way to make it 3 harassing. 4 Now, I want to make it real clear. If 5 he's telling the truth, if they're right, 6 it's going to -- 7 THE COURT: I'm sorry, who is he? 8 MR. MERRETT: He, Scientology, L. Ron 9 Hubbard, them. 10 THE COURT: Okay. 11 MR. MERRETT: If they are right it's 12 going to be a hot time at the Ft. Harrison 13 because you know what, Judge, all 14 Scientologists are subject to your injunction 15 and I just believe I may get me a few process 16 servers to go in and serve everybody who's 17 eating dinner in the Ft. Harrison since 18 serving people while they're eating dinner is 19 okay according to Mr. Hertzberg since this is 20 not harassing behavior according to 21 Mr. Hertzberg. 22 The fact is, Judge, I didn't do that. 23 I'm not going to do that. You know why? 24 Number one, it's not decent. It's not 25 civilized. 77 1 Number two, it violates your injunction 2 because it's harassing people. 3 Judge, you've been on the bench a while. 4 It's my understanding you practiced law 5 before that, which is something I really 6 admire in a judge. There's awfully little 7 of it. 8 You know what's going on. This is no 9 mystery. This is just another episode of 10 perversion of the process by Scientology. 11 Now, I can quote you any time you want 12 to, I can quote a dozen appellate opinion 13 explaining that this is Scientology's deal. 14 This is what they do. 15 If there is a way to harass people, they 16 will use it. That's judicially established 17 fact over and over and over and over again. 18 You know what's going on, Judge. It's 19 clear that this was undertaken deliberately 20 to harass Ms. Brooks and their attempted 21 cloak of service of process vanishes when 22 you read the law. 23 It's clear that while Mr. Geiger is not 24 before you at present, the Church and anyone 25 acting in collusion with the Church in 78 1 setting this up is guilty. Thank you. 2 THE COURT: All right. Thank you, sir. 3 Rebuttal? 4 MR. POPE: May it Please the Court. 5 THE COURT: Yes, sir. 6 MR. POPE: Your Honor, an injunction 7 that's contained within it a prohibition 8 against the service of process would be a 9 nullity. I mean that is on its face patently 10 ridiculous that an injunction would prevent 11 the service of process. 12 What your order of December 1 did was 13 simply state what the law has always been 14 and that is that process servers are agents 15 of the court. 16 Now, if they these cases that 17 Mr. Merrett has cited to you are correct, 18 the remedy for that is to file a motion to 19 quash the process. 20 In this case they did no such thing. 21 They have waived that. If that is a defect, 22 they have waived it. 23 What they're trying to go now is 24 bootstrap a contempt charge based upon the 25 claim that the process server of 79 1 Hillsborough County, certified though he may 2 be, can't serve a Pinellas County summons 3 and complaint. Bear in mind, however, Your 4 Honor, that there were three items served on 5 Ms. Brooks. There was the temporary 6 injunction served and why was that served? 7 Because your order says that if you have 8 knowledge of the injunction and you're 9 acting in concert or participation, you're 10 bound by it. Anybody can served one of 11 those orders. You don't have to be a 12 process server. Anybody can hand somebody a 13 paper and give them notice. 14 Now, let's go back, Your Honor, and 15 recreate the situation beginning on 16 November 29, the day before you entered your 17 order of injunction. 18 You signed an order that says the clerk 19 shall upon plaintiff's request issue 20 additional summonses with respect of each of 21 the foregoing defendants and plaintiff shall 22 serve upon each of said defendants, a 23 summons, a copy of the verified, amended and 24 supplemental complaint and a copy of this 25 order. 80 1 We had every right under that order to 2 do that. That was the 29th. No injunction 3 had been issued as of that time. You 4 brought us down especially to your chambers 5 here on the afternoon of the 30th at about 6 three, two or three o'clock, and you said 7 I'm doing that now because I understand the 8 urgency the big weekend of picketing is 9 coming up. That was the time pressure. 10 That was what created time -- made time of 11 the essence with respect to this matter. 12 At the conclusion and you announced your 13 injunction in an effort to preserve peace 14 and order. 15 I had, pursuant to your order joining 16 Stacy Brooks, Jeff Jacobson, Patricia 17 Greenway, Peter Alexander and Tory Bezazian, 18 I was under an instruction here to serve 19 them. And I wanted them served right away 20 because of the urgency of the matter. 21 I wanted them served, not only with the 22 complaint, but also with a copy of the 23 injunction, so there would be no doubt that 24 they knew about it. It was an effort to 25 make sure they had fair notice. 81 1 That's what service of process is all 2 about. I will represent to the court that I 3 asked the client to do everything in its 4 power to effect service of process as soon 5 as possible. 6 Now, the record shows that the client 7 contacted a certified process company called 8 Geitzon and company in Tampa and they 9 selected Mr. Geiger to serve the process. 10 Mr. Geiger goes in and his own return 11 indicates that the way he located Ms. Brooks 12 was through the manager. He had a picture 13 of her and he located her through the 14 manager. He states that on his return and 15 he goes and serves her. 16 Now, Your Honor, let's go back to 17 basics. The case of Schrimshaw versus State 18 focuses on a contempt, a criminal contempt 19 issue and here's the standard. 20 In you present case, quoted from 21 Schrimshaw. 22 THE COURT: Did you give the cite on 23 that? 24 MR. POPE: The cite is 592 So. 2d. 753. 25 THE COURT: Where's it from? 82 1 MR. POPE: It is from the Fourth 2 District Court of Appeals, I believe. I'm 3 sorry, it's the Third District Court of 4 Appeal, but the point of the case -- there's 5 lots of cases out there that lay out what the 6 standard is a contempt matter. 7 THE COURT: What's that, about 1987? 8 MR. POPE: That would have been 1992. 9 THE COURT: '92, okay. Thank you. 10 MR. POPE: The record is devoid of any 11 evidence indicating that the Detective 12 Schrimshaw's conduct was intended or 13 reasonably calculated to degrade, embarrass 14 or hinder the judicial function. 15 Your Honor, what Mr. Geiger was trying 16 to do was assist the judicial function by 17 serving the papers on a party who had been 18 joined as a brand new defendant and who was 19 planning to engage in activities that very 20 next day touching upon the injunction. 21 That's we have here. 22 Now, as to the Church of Scientology and 23 Judy Ross, the only evidence in the record 24 is that they asked a private process company 25 in Tampa, Florida to serve process. That's 83 1 the only evidence in the record. You don't 2 convict a person on a beyond a reasonable 3 doubt standard on things like how did they 4 know, the how did they know argument that 5 Mr. Merrett made. Or they had to be engaged 6 is harassing conduct. 7 It is incumbent upon him to prove beyond 8 a reasonable doubt that they were engaged in 9 harassing conduct. The evidence just 10 doesn't support it. Thank you, Your Honor. 11 (Whereupon, a pause in the proceedings took 12 place.) 13 THE COURT: Okay. I've got this under 14 advisement. We've been going about an hour. 15 Let's take a break. We'll take ten minutes. 16 (A short recess took place after which the 17 proceedings continued.) 18 THE COURT: Let's do this. At this time 19 we'll move over into the show causes on the 20 other side and I want to do a couple things. 21 Is Tory Bezazian present today? 22 MR. MERRETT: She is, Your Honor. I 23 think she's in the ladies room. She's been 24 here all morning. 25 THE COURT: Okay. Keith Henson. 84 1 MR. MERRETT: He is not present, Your 2 Honor. Your Honor, Ms. Bezazian is now 3 physically present before the court. 4 THE COURT: Okay. Very good. Frank 5 Oliver. 6 MR. OLIVER: Right here, Your Honor. 7 THE COURT: Okay. I see you. Thank 8 you. Okay, Heather Bennett? 9 MS. BENNETT: Here, Your Honor. 10 THE COURT: Thank you. Rod Keller. 11 MR. KELLER: Here, Your Honor. 12 THE COURT: Thank you. John Merrett. 13 MR. MERRETT: Present, Your Honor. 14 THE COURT: Thank you, sir. Jesse 15 Prince. Where is he? He was here. 16 MR. MERRETT: I think he's in the men's 17 room. 18 THE COURT: I'll come back to that in 19 just a second. Grady Ward. 20 MR. WARD: Here, Your Honor. 21 THE COURT: Thank you. The Lisa 22 McPherson Trust, Inc. 23 MS. BROOKS: Here, Your Honor. 24 THE COURT: Yes, thank you. Robert 25 Minton. 85 1 MR. MINTON: Here, Your Honor. 2 THE COURT: Thank you. All right. Do 3 this. Mr. Bailiff, would you sound the halls 4 for a Frank Oliver? 5 MR. OLIVER: I'm right here, Your Honor. 6 THE COURT: I'm sorry, Keith Henson. 7 I'm sorry, Mr. Oliver, thank you. Keith 8 Henson. 9 MR. MERRETT: Your Honor, I can save the 10 bailiff -- 11 THE COURT: Let him -- just a minute. 12 My record. Hold on. 13 MR. MERRETT: Yes, sir. 14 THE BAILIFF: Your Honor, the halls were 15 sounded for Keith Henson. No response to the 16 call of the court, Your Honor. 17 THE COURT: Okay. Let the record 18 reflect that it is now 1136 hours on this, 19 the 10th day of February, the year 2001 which 20 is a Saturday morning and that Keith Henson 21 did not answer the call of the court. The 22 bailiff sounded the halls in the courthouse. 23 Now, hold on, Mr. Merrett. Just a 24 second. We'll get to that. Jesse Prince, 25 are you present? 86 1 MR. PRINCE: Yes, sir. 2 THE COURT: Okay. Thank you. All 3 right. Now, Mr. Merrett, you were going to 4 say? 5 MR. MERRETT: Your Honor, Mr. Henson is 6 not present and will not be present for the 7 reasons previously stated in the motion which 8 was denied and the affidavit previously filed 9 with the court regarding his inability to 10 obtain transportation transcontinentally to 11 attend the proceeding. 12 I believe we had moved, but the court 13 had not ruled on a -- moved to require the 14 Church of Scientology to advance the costs 15 of transportation since in the event an 16 acquittal would be taxable against 17 Scientology in any event. 18 THE COURT: Was there a formal written 19 motion on that? 20 MR. POPE: Your Honor -- 21 MR. MERRETT: No, Your Honor. If I 22 recall correctly it was a -- it may have been 23 included in one, but I distinctly recall 24 making it as an oral motion at the conclusion 25 of the hearing in which -- 87 1 THE COURT: To excuse him because he 2 couldn't afford to come? 3 MR. MERRETT: Yes, sir, and as I said, I 4 don't recall whether it was included in the 5 motion, the written motion, but I know that I 6 did raise it orally at the conclusion of that 7 hearing. 8 MR. POPE: Your Honor, may I refresh the 9 court's recollection? 10 THE COURT: Yeah, please. 11 MR. POPE: Your order of February 1. 12 THE COURT: Yes, sir. 13 MR. POPE: Mr, Henson made a motion to 14 excuse personal appearance which you denied 15 without prejudice to Mr. Henson's right to 16 timely arrange for a video conference hearing 17 in which he shall appear and testify subject 18 to cross-examination with regard to his 19 desire to excuse himself from further 20 personal appearance in this matter. And you 21 arranged -- you allowed that. 22 A video conference hearing shall be 23 limited to the issue of whether Mr. Henson 24 wishes to his excuse himself from further 25 personal participation in this matter, he 88 1 was given the opportunity to do that in the 2 intervening days. He didn't do it. 3 THE COURT: Is that an order I signed? 4 MR. POPE: That is an order you signed 5 on February 1. You remember we had a -- 6 THE COURT: Oh, yeah, I remember all of 7 that. I just, in that order -- okay. Let me 8 just look at it a minute. Hand me a copy. 9 MR. MERRETT: That's what it says, 10 Judge. 11 THE COURT: Okay. Let me just look. I 12 don't doubt either one of you. I'm just 13 looking for something for myself. Hold on. 14 (Whereupon, a pause in the proceedings took 15 place.) 16 MR. HERTZBERG: Paragraph eight, the 17 last page. 18 THE COURT: Okay. Thank you, sir. 19 (Whereupon, a pause in the proceedings took 20 place.) 21 All right. Mr. Merrett. 22 MR. MERRETT: Yes, sir. 23 THE COURT: Did you or were you 24 representing Keith Henson? 25 MR. MERRETT: Yes, I was. 89 1 THE COURT: Did you forward a copy of 2 this to him? 3 MR. MERRETT: Yes, sir. 4 THE COURT: Okay. 5 MR. MERRETT: However, for the same 6 reasons relating to his impecunious status 7 he's not able to set up a video conference. 8 I mean, that's, you not, if he had the money 9 it wouldn't be an issue. 10 MR. POPE: Your Honor, I would point out 11 that he didn't have any trouble coming here 12 to picket -- 13 THE COURT: So noted. So noted. That 14 argument was made earlier and that's -- 15 MR. HERTZBERG: Your Honor. 16 THE COURT: Just a minute. 17 (Whereupon, a pause in the proceedings took 18 place.) 19 THE COURT: All right. Well, just for 20 the record, based upon the bailiff sounding 21 the halls and Keith Henson not being present 22 nor do I find at this time do I have any 23 evidence or anything in front of me to 24 explain away his failure to comply with 25 paragraph eight of the court's order of the 90 1 first day of February in the year 2001 and 2 based upon the Sandstrom v. State case, which 3 is found at 390 So. 2d. 448, it's a Fourth 4 DCA case from the year 1980, that clearly and 5 unequivocally says that a defendant's failure 6 to appear in court on the day and time 7 ordered can be a basis for direct criminal 8 contempt. 9 At this time I will put on the record 10 later, but I'm treating this as a direct 11 criminal contempt and we'll deal with it 12 accordingly and I'll probably issue a 13 capias. 14 All right. Now, let me go -- I want 15 Mr. Merrett and then I will come to you, 16 Mr. Howie, but I want to double check. To 17 my knowledge Ms. Bezazian did enter a plea 18 in this matter and entered a not guilty 19 plea. 20 If I'm wrong in any of these, 21 Mr. Merrett, correct me, but I believe 22 Ms. Bezazian, Mr. Oliver, Ms. Bennett, 23 Mr. Keller, yourself, Mr. Prince, Grady 24 Ward, and the Trust all entered not guilty 25 pleas and were arraigned, am I not correct? 91 1 MR. MERRETT: I know that they were all 2 arraigned. I'm not sure who entered pleas 3 and who stood mute. 4 THE COURT: You want me to call them all 5 up or are you going to enter a not guilty for 6 all of them with the exception of Henson? 7 MR. MERRETT: What I would ask, Your 8 Honor, is that the respondents stand mute and 9 that the court deem pleas of not guilty 10 entered on their behalf which is the 11 provision under criminal rules. 12 THE COURT: Yeah, I'll treat it that 13 way. You have any objections, Mr. Pope? 14 MR. POPE: No, Your Honor. 15 THE COURT: We'll go that way. Now, 16 Mr. Howie, as to Mr. Minton. 17 MR. HOWIE: Your Honor, Mr. Minton was 18 already arraigned and a plea of not guilty 19 was entered at that time. 20 THE COURT: Okay. All right. Then 21 we're ready to proceed. And, Mr. Pope, I'll 22 come over to you and, sir, how would you like 23 to proceed? 24 MR. POPE: I'd kind of like to do it in 25 a way that would make it easy on the nonparty 92 1 witnesses. 2 THE COURT: Okay. Let's do that. I'm 3 willing to do that. Just let's -- 4 MR. POPE: I'd like to start with -- 5 we've got an amended and consolidated order 6 to show cause that deals with Bezazian and 7 Henson you've already resolved, and a group 8 of people including Mr. Merrett and 9 Mr. Minton. 10 I'd like to with Bezazian because there 11 are three police officer who have testimony 12 to offer on that issue and I'd like to just 13 call them and get them and have them 14 testify. 15 THE COURT: All right. 16 MR. POPE: One of the police officers 17 has testimony with respect to both of the two 18 orders to show cause and just to save 19 everybody time, when I have him on the stand 20 I'd like to cover both areas. 21 THE COURT: All right. You know where 22 we're going -- 23 MR. POPE: I'll do that. 24 THE COURT: The main thing is I want 25 this record clear so that it can be followed 93 1 on each and intervested. 2 MR. POPE: All right. 3 THE COURT: All right, now, Mr. Merrett. 4 MR. MERRETT: Yes, Your Honor. We have 5 served yesterday and are filing today as soon 6 as I can dig it out, a motion to dismiss or 7 compel ori tenus, a statement of particulars 8 which complies with the court's order. 9 If you recall, we filed a motion for a 10 statement of particulars asking among other 11 things a specific portion in the injunction 12 which were alleged to be violated that they 13 be enumerated and that the conduct in 14 question which violated them be enumerated. 15 The response of Scientology was simply to 16 refer to paragraph of the injunction. 17 For example, when it says, you know, 18 what portion of the injunction if violated 19 by the conduct described in paragraph three 20 the response was paragraph one, two and 21 three of the injection was all the 22 prohibited paragraphs in the injunction and 23 essentially this response to the court's 24 order for a statement of particulars that 25 was responsive to the request was entirely 94 1 nonresponsive and was deliberately evasive 2 and left -- it made no change or narrowing 3 or increased specificity in the order to 4 show cause, so we move, Your Honor, to 5 dismiss for lack of specificity in the order 6 to show cause or to dismiss it and sanction 7 for failure to comply with the court's order 8 or alternatively to compel him to announce 9 now specifically what portions of the 10 injunction are said to have been violated by 11 each of the acts described in the order to 12 show cause. 13 THE COURT: Mr. Howie. 14 MR. HOWIE: May it Please the Court, I 15 received Mr. Merrett's written motion fairly 16 late. I think it was just yesterday and I 17 did not have an opportunity to respond or 18 join in. At this time I would join in with 19 his motion concerning the motion to compel 20 statement of particulars. 21 THE COURT: Okay. Mr. Pope. 22 MR. POPE: I haven't even seen this 23 motion yet, so it's a surprise to me. Your 24 Honor, we did not specify in the order to 25 show cause even a paragraph and when we did 95 1 this and the statement of particulars, I 2 filed what I thought was a good faith 3 response and pointed to each paragraph that 4 we contended was violated. 5 I mean the language is in the paragraph 6 and some cases it's paragraph one and two 7 and in some cases it's paragraph one, two 8 and another one. 9 You know, I'm pointing their nose right 10 at the paragraph that's involved in this 11 thing and I haven't even see this motion now 12 that he's purporting to call up for hearing. 13 I mean the notice is a little short. 14 MR. MERRETT: Judge, I'm wondering if 15 Mr. Pope would read to us for example, 16 paragraph one, and maybe explain to the court 17 how that specifies what violation is alleged 18 to have been caused by any of the behavior 19 since there are three specific prohibitions 20 in paragraph one. 21 That's my point. He didn't tell us 22 anything. 23 THE COURT: Mr. Pope, you want to 24 respond to this? 25 MR. POPE: Your Honor, the order to show 96 1 cause sets forth the facts that we contend 2 constitute a violation. 3 THE COURT: And you are standing on all 4 of them, paragraphs one, two, three, four, 5 five, six, etcetera. 6 MR. POPE: Absolutely. 7 THE COURT: Let's proceed. 8 MR. POPE: All right. 9 MR. MERRETT: Judge, if I may, I need to 10 make this clear for the court if not for the 11 record, what Mr. Pope is apparently 12 representing to you is that Ms. Bezazian 13 sitting in the Santa Claus chair was putting 14 her within ten feet of a member of the 15 Church, blocked a path of a member or motor 16 vehicle of a member of the Church and 17 physically inhibited a church member from 18 enter or leaving property owned and operated 19 by the Church. 20 That's what he's telling us and that is 21 insufficient and obvious that he knew that. 22 That's what he's saying in each of these 23 allegation that every act that he 24 alleges -- he's alleging for example that 25 climbing up the ladder and looking at the 97 1 camera, did it put us within ten feet, did 2 it block a path of a member of Scientology, 3 did it physically inhibit them, did it 4 harass a member of the Church. That's what 5 he's saying and that patent nonsense. That 6 is not a statement of particulars in 7 compliance with the court's order. 8 Essentially, the statement of 9 particulars says read the injunction, 10 however, the injunction is multifarious 11 paragraph by paragraph in its prohibition 12 and consequently that does not apprise the 13 defendant of the conduct which is charged. 14 MR. POPE: We allege facts instead of 15 legal conclusions. The facts either fit 16 within the terms of the injunction or they 17 don't. If sitting in the Santa Claus chair 18 is not a violation of the injunction, he's 19 certainly free to argue that and compare it 20 to the injunction. 21 I cited him to each paragraph. His 22 motion says what provision of Temporary 23 Injunction Two said that it had been 24 violated. I said in paragraph one, two and 25 eleven. That tells those are the 98 1 provisions. I didn't do it on a 2 word-by-word basis. You broke it out into 3 paragraphs and I responded thusly. 4 MR. MERRETT: Again, Your Honor, if 5 Mr. Pope is proceeding in good faith, he can 6 stand back up and he can tell you without a 7 moments hesitation exactly what prohibition 8 was violated by Ms. Bezazian committing 9 grievous acts by sitting in Scientology's 10 Santa chair. I mean it's not a complex 11 procedure. He drafted the charge. 12 (Whereupon, a pause in the proceedings took 13 place.) 14 THE COURT: All right. After looking at 15 the order to show cause injunction and the 16 statement of particulars, there is enough to 17 go on there. We'll see where it goes. Let's 18 proceed. 19 MR. POPE: Call the first witness, Your 20 Honor? 21 THE COURT: You may, sir. 22 MR. POPE: Officer Butterfield. Your 23 Honor, this relates to the amended and 24 consolidated order to show cause specifically 25 relating to Tory Bezazian. 99 1 Thereupon: 2 JAMES BUTTERFIELD 3 was called as a witness and having been duly sworn, was 4 examined and testified as follows: 5 DIRECT EXAMINATION 6 BY MR. POPE: 7 Q Would you tell us your full name, Officer 8 Butterfield? 9 A James Robert Butterfield. 10 Q And your occupations? 11 A Police officer for the City of Clearwater. 12 Q How long have you had that position? 13 A About a year-and-a-half, sir. 14 Q All right. I want to bring your 15 attention -- before I bring your attention to that, 16 are you familiar with what is known as Injunction 17 Number Two in this proceeding? 18 A Yes, I am. 19 Q How is that you're familiar with that? 20 A I have briefly reviewed the document itself. 21 Q Was a copy provided to you by the police 22 department? 23 A No, a copy was provided to me by the Church 24 of Scientology on the days that I worked there. 25 Q Okay. And on, specifically on December 1, 100 1 2000, did you have an opportunity to have discussions 2 about this injunction and its terms with Ms. Bezazian? 3 A Yes. 4 Q Would you tell us how often you spoke to her 5 about it on that day? 6 A Approximately five times. 7 Q All right. Would you just walk us through 8 if you can remember what the nature of your discussion 9 and her response was as to each of those episodes? 10 A When I showed up for work that day -- 11 MR. MERRETT: Judge, I'd ask at this 12 point for permission to examine the document 13 to which the witness refers to while 14 testifying. 15 THE COURT: Come forward. 16 (Whereupon, documents were reviewed.) 17 (Discussion was had off the record.) 18 MR. MERRETT: I would just, Your Honor, 19 that in accordance with accepted practice and 20 the evidence code, the witness be instructed 21 to refrain from reviewing the document unless 22 predicate is laid regarding lack of 23 recollection or there is an attempt to move 24 it into evidence. Witnesses are to testify 25 from their own recollection. 101 1 THE COURT: All right. Mr. Pope. 2 MR. POPE: Your Honor, may I return this 3 to the witness? 4 THE COURT: You may, please, sir. 5 MR. MERRETT: Judge, I ask that it be 6 placed on the clerk's table unless and until 7 there is some legitimate reason for the 8 witness to be -- 9 THE COURT: Mr. Pope, lay a predicate. 10 MR. POPE: Your Honor, I wasn't going to 11 ask him any question about it. He brought 12 it. I didn't ask him -- 13 THE COURT: All right. 14 MR. POPE: Put it face down and we'll go 15 from there. 16 THE COURT: Thank you. 17 BY MR. POPE: 18 Q Now, we were on the subject of your five 19 different encounters with Ms. Bezazian, would you 20 start and tell us about the first one? 21 A If I can give you a little history before 22 that? 23 MR. MERRETT: Objection. Nonresponsive. 24 BY MR. POPE: 25 Q Please give us some history then in leading 102 1 up to the question just asked you. 2 MR. MERRETT: Objection. Calls for a 3 narrative, relevance. 4 THE COURT: You may proceed. Thank you 5 very much. 6 THE WITNESS: I showed up for work at 7 the Church of Scientology for detail that day 8 about one minute before the start of my 9 shift. 10 I was given that document. I quickly 11 reviewed the document with some of the other 12 members of the Church of Scientology who 13 showed me what the high points were and 14 which maps we would refer to the given area 15 that I was working at. 16 At that exact moment in time, so I'm 17 told., at the -- 18 MR. MERRETT: Objection. Hearsay, 19 competence. 20 THE COURT: As to hearsay, sustained. 21 BY MR. POPE: 22 Q Don't tell us what anyone told you. Just 23 tell us what happened at that exact moment in time. 24 A They were having a meeting at the -- 25 MR. MERRETT: Objection. Competence. 103 1 The witness has no personal knowledge of 2 this. 3 BY MR. POPE: 4 Q All right. Just move on. 5 A I quickly read the document and reviewed the 6 map and went to my assigned post. 7 Q Which was where; you're assigned post? 8 A If I could look at the map I could tell you 9 which building it is. It's the Church of Scientology 10 building on Cleveland Street on the south side, 11 whatever that building number is. 12 Q All right. 13 A There were several protesters walking around 14 at that time. One of them was Tory. Since I had not 15 had much time to review the map or the document, every 16 time I interacted with them or thought they were doing 17 something inappropriate, I would walk over to them and 18 say, hey, I don't understand this document any better 19 than you because I just received it a minute ago. 20 Let's review it together, so every single time we 21 looked at the map together and we looked at the 22 narrative together to figure out what was being done, 23 if it was right or wrong and exactly what the map said 24 or showed that it should or should not be. So, in the 25 several instances where Tory was where she should not 104 1 have been, we would look -- 2 MR. MERRETT: I'm going to object. 3 Legal conclusion. 4 THE COURT: Overruled. Proceed. 5 THE WITNESS: We would look at the map, 6 decide if she should or should not be 7 protesting in that area. Every single time 8 we came to a mutual agreement whether she 9 should or should not be there and I 10 instructed her to adhere to the agreement, 11 which she did in every case except for one 12 time. 13 BY MR. POPE: 14 Q Tell us about that one time? 15 A If I -- on this building on Cleveland Street 16 on the south side, on the south side of that building 17 there is a parking lot. To the east of that parking 18 lot is the area in question. 19 There is a side street there. I don't 20 believe the side street has an actual name to it. 21 She was standing in front of the entrance 22 way to the parking lot. According to go the map the 23 property line seems to go through or into the next 24 building that's not owned I believe by the Church of 25 Scientology. So she was standing extremely close or 105 1 on the border. 2 She had her sign up at one time. She was 3 yelling chants of some sort as the cars or buses or 4 people walking by. I approached her, showed her the 5 map. We agreed that she could not be legally 6 protesting there. 7 I instructed her she had to turn her sign 8 upside down and yet she could be there, she just 9 couldn't protest there, so she would stand there with 10 her sign upside down. 11 She stayed for several minutes, maybe 15 to 12 20 minutes and there was one time another member of 13 the Church of Scientology walked over to me a said 14 she's got her sign up and she did have her sign up. 15 MR. MERRETT: I object. Move to strike 16 and ask counsel take charge of the witness 17 rather that inducing a narrative. Move to 18 strike statements of this other Scientologist 19 and again ask that counsel take charge of the 20 witness. 21 MR. POPE: I'll agree -- 22 THE WITNESS: I did see -- 23 THE COURT: Hold on just a minute. Give 24 Mr. Pope a chance. 25 MR. POPE: I agree that his statement 106 1 about what the Scientologist said is 2 inadmissible. 3 THE COURT: Okay. Rephrase your 4 question. 5 BY MR. POPE: 6 Q Just go ahead and explain what you did and 7 what she did without reference to with the 8 Scientologist said. 9 A I visually witnessed her with the sign or 10 saw her with the sign up and chanting or yelling at 11 the buses. I walked over to her and said you can't do 12 that. We, I believe, we reviewed the map again and 13 the narrative and she stopped. 14 MR. POPE: All right. I have no further 15 questions for this witness. 16 THE COURT: You may inquire, 17 Mr. Merrett. 18 CROSS-EXAMINATION 19 BY MR. MERRETT: 20 Q Was that the first time you worked a detail 21 for the Church of Scientology? 22 A No, sir. 23 Q Was is the last time? 24 A No, I think I've done it once since then. 25 Q Can you tell the court how much money 107 1 Scientology has paid you since you've been working 2 with them? 3 A I believe it's around $21 an hour. 4 Q Okay. How much total? 5 A I did receive the W-2 the other day, but I 6 did not look at it. If I had to take a guess I would 7 saw between on and two thousand. 8 Q Okay. 9 A I would guess 1400 for the year. 10 Q And at what rate are you being compensated 11 for your presence here today? 12 A The standard overtime rate which I believe 13 is $21 an hour. 14 Q So you're here testifying to the facts that 15 you observed for the fee of $21 an hour; is that 16 correct? 17 A As is true with all times that I have 18 testified, yes. 19 Q And that is being paid by whom? 20 A At this moment in the time, the City of 21 Clearwater. 22 Q Now, on the date of the event that you just 23 discussed, your compensation was being paid by the 24 Church of Scientology, correct? 25 A Correct. 108 1 Q Now, the building that you referred to, is 2 that the what is sometimes known as the Coachman 3 Building? 4 A It could be, sir. 5 Q Okay. 6 A I don't usually work that area of the city. 7 Q Is this the one at the -- let's see, what 8 would that be, the southeast corner of Cleveland and 9 Ft. Harrison? 10 A Yes, sir. 11 Q And where you're talking about Ms. Bezazian 12 being is on the street or the sidewalk on the street 13 which is south of the parking lot behind that 14 building, right? 15 A Yep. 16 Q Okay. Where? 17 A It would be the alleyway. I don't believe 18 it has a name and it doesn't have a sidewalk, to the 19 east of that building. 20 Q So this is the alleyway that cuts through to 21 that, what is that, Garden? 22 A It could be. Can I refer to the map? 23 MR. MERRETT: Actually, I'm looking for 24 a copy of it, but you're welcome to. 25 THE COURT: Here it is right here. 109 1 That's is. 2 THE WITNESS: Yes. It's the alleyway 3 between Cleveland Street and Park Street. 4 BY MR. MERRETT: 5 Q Hang on a second. The alleyway between 6 Cleveland and where? 7 A Park Street, sir. 8 Q Okay. So this is running down the east side 9 of the building, right? 10 A Correct. 11 Q Now, if I understood your testimony 12 correctly, you didn't know any more about the 13 injunction than the protesters, did you? 14 A I'm sorry, what? 15 Q You didn't know any more about the 16 injunction than the protesters did, right? I mean, it 17 was news to you? 18 A I don't know what they knew. I only knew 19 what I had strictly reviewed in the document. 20 Q Well, didn't you just tell us that you told 21 them you didn't know any more about it than they did? 22 A That was a friendly statement on my part to 23 enhance our chance of communication. I don't know 24 what their personal knowledge of this document is. 25 Q But you were telling the truth, weren't you? 110 1 A I don't know. I believe I was. 2 Q Okay. So your knowledge of the injunction 3 was limited at best at that point, correct? 4 A It was limited did. 5 Q Okay. Now, who were these Scientologists 6 that delivered a copy of the injunction to you and who 7 explained to you where you were suppose to be watching 8 for? 9 A There were three of them. I only knew one 10 by name which was Tony. The other two I'd never met 11 before. 12 Q Tony what? 13 A I don't know Tony's last name. 14 Q Okay. Are any of those people in court 15 today? 16 A Tony is, yes. 17 Q Can you point him out by where he's sitting 18 and what he's wearing? 19 A I believe he's outside in the hallway. 20 Q Okay. You don't know his last name? 21 A No, sir. 22 Q Okay. Now, when you asked her to turn her 23 sign upside down she complied, right? 24 A Yes, sir. 25 Q Okay. And then after that I guess what I'd 111 1 like for you to do is -- may I approach the witness, 2 Your Honor? 3 A You may, sir. 4 Q You can compare this to the one that you 5 have there. I think that's the same map? 6 A Yes, it is. 7 Q That shows the Coachman Building? 8 A Yes, sir. 9 Q Can you mark on there in fact where she was 10 when you went to her the second time? 11 A Yes. 12 Q If you would please? 13 A If I could have a pencil, please? 14 MR. MERRETT: If I could approach again? 15 THE COURT: Come on. Yes, sir. 16 THE WITNESS: Thank you. 17 BY MR. MERRETT: 18 Q If you could just put an X wherever that 19 was? 20 A Yes, sir. 21 Q And when you went to her the second time and 22 she complied with your request? 23 A Yes. 24 Q What is it that you saw her doing at that 25 time? 112 1 A She had her sign in the upright position and 2 she was saying things to the passing by buses. 3 Q Where were the buses passing by? 4 A One of two places. They were either coming 5 out of the parking lot or they were actually driving 6 down the alley. 7 Q Okay. What was she saying to them? 8 A I don't recall at this time. I can tell you 9 that tit was nothing vulgar or gross. She was kind of 10 saying it in something louder than a talking voice, 11 she wasn't screaming, but it certainly audible from 12 probably 50 feet away. 13 Q If you would please, can tell us that just 14 what time of day this was? 15 A Daytime, maybe between noon and oneish. 16 MR. MERRETT: Okay. I have nothing 17 further of this witness. 18 MR. POPE: Your Honor, may I examine the 19 X mark that was put on the -- 20 THE COURT: Come forward. 21 (Whereupon, documents were reviewed.) 22 MR. MERRETT: I would tender it into 23 evidence but I don't want to lose it until 24 the end of the trial. 25 MR. POPE: I just want the court to see 113 1 it, Your Honor. 2 MR. MERRETT: I don't have any objection 3 to that. 4 (Whereupon, documents were reviewed.) 5 THE COURT: You want to tender it now? 6 It's your call. 7 MR. MERRETT: No, sir. I will hang on 8 to it and if somebody wants it. 9 THE COURT: We'll mark for ID purposed, 10 though. 11 MR. MERRETT: Okay. 12 THE COURT: So we know what we're 13 talking about. This is called -- I'm going 14 to call you Defendant Number One. 15 MR. MERRETT: That's by no means the 16 worst thing I've been called even recently. 17 THE COURT: Let's see, number one for 18 ID. 19 MR. MERRETT: May I approach counsel? 20 THE COURT: Come forward. 21 REDIRECT EXAMINATION 22 BY MR. POPE: 23 Q Officer, where you put the X here is where 24 she was standing on which event of the five encounters 25 that you had with her? 114 1 A It was probably three and four. 2 Q You said that the last one was the one that 3 you had difficulty getting her to comply with? 4 A The fourth one was one or the third and 5 fourth one was the one that was difficult to get her 6 to comply with. 7 Q And the X is where that occurred? 8 A Yes, sir. 9 MR. POPE: Thank you. 10 MR. MERRETT: Judge, I ask the court to 11 notice there is one thing I forget to ask. 12 THE COURT: You may. Go ahead. 13 RECROSS-EXAMINATION 14 BY MR. MERRETT: 15 Q Who made the annotations and marks on your 16 copy of the injunction where it says like Lisa 17 McPherson Trust and has parts underlined and things 18 like that? 19 A I did to refresh my memory for today's 20 activities. 21 MR. MERRETT: All right. Thank you, 22 officer. 23 MR. POPE: Nothing further. 24 MR. HOWIE: May it Please the Court if I 25 could -- 115 1 THE COURT: Mr. Howie, I'm sorry, I 2 didn't mean to cut you out of this. You may. 3 CROSS-EXAMINATION 4 BY MR. HOWIE: 5 Q Officer Butterfield, the picket sign that 6 you described held by Tory Bezazian, was this a 7 standard picket sign on a small picket or a stick? 8 A Yes. 9 Q All right. And when you instructed her to 10 turn the sign upside down, she complied with that? 11 A Yes. 12 Q And your purpose in having her turn the sign 13 upside down was so that by doing so she was not 14 protesting in the location where she was standing; is 15 that correct? 16 A My understanding of what they considered a 17 protest to be, if you hold the sign upside down she's 18 not protesting, so, yes. 19 Q And this was your understanding of the 20 purpose of the injunction after you had discussions 21 with members of the Church of Scientology? 22 A And after reading the documents, yes. 23 Q Okay. And as a result of both those things, 24 that was your own interpretation of this injunction? 25 A Correct. 116 1 MR. HOWIE: Thank you. No further 2 questions. 3 THE COURT: Mr. Pope? 4 MR. POPE: No further questions, Your 5 Honor. 6 THE COURT: Mr. Merrett? 7 MR. MERRETT: None, Your Honor. 8 THE COURT: May we excuse the officer? 9 MR. POPE: He may be as far as I'm 10 concerned. 11 MR. MERRETT: Yes, for our part. 12 MR. HOWIE: Yes, sir. 13 THE COURT: Sir. thank you. You're free 14 to go. Thank you very much. Mr. Pope, call 15 your next witness. 16 MR. POPE: Officer Linda Stverak. 17 Thereupon: 18 LINDA STVERAK 19 was called as a witness and having been duly sworn, was 20 examined and testified as follows: 21 DIRECT EXAMINATION 22 BY MR. POPE: 23 Q Ma'am, please state your name? 24 A Linda Joyce Stverak. 25 Q What is your occupation? 117 1 A Police officer with the City of Clearwater. 2 Q How long have you been a police officer? 3 A Almost 12 years. 4 Q I note you brought what appears to be a copy 5 of the injunction. I'd like to ask you, just don't 6 refer to it for the time being unless you need to for 7 your testimony? 8 A Yes, sir. 9 Q I want to call your attention to the date of 10 December 7, 2000? 11 A Yes, sir. 12 Q And ask you if you, while you were 13 performing your duties as a police officer had 14 exchanges with Tory Bezazian? 15 A I did. 16 Q And would you tell us about the first of 17 those? 18 A During the shift Officer Butterfield had 19 spoken to Tory. 20 MR. MERRETT: Objection. Competence. 21 BY MR. POPE: 22 Q Don't tell us what Officer Butterfield did, 23 just tell what you did. 24 A I stood by and listened. 25 Q Oh, you were present? 118 1 A Yes. 2 Q When Officer Butterfield spoke to her? 3 A I was. 4 Q Okay. And what did you do thereafter? Was 5 this on the December 7? 6 A I believe so. 7 Q All right. What did you do? 8 A I just hung out and listened to the 9 conversation. 10 Q I'm sorry. Did you discuss any of these 11 matters with Tory Bezazian on December 7, yourself? 12 A Yes, I did. 13 Q Tell us your discussion with her. 14 A Okay. Later on during my shift, Tory had 15 walked in front of the Clearwater Building with a 16 couple of picket signs in her hand. They were in the 17 upright position. She was walking from the building 18 which was an area which was covered under the 19 injunction as a place that she could not walk. 20 Q What did you do when you saw that? 21 A I made contact with her, spoke to for a few 22 minutes, asked her to not do that anymore and if she 23 was going to walk through the sidewalk area she needed 24 to put the signs in a downward motion and not upright, 25 because as an upright motion it appeared to me that 119 1 she was picketing. 2 Q All right. And what was her response to 3 that? 4 A She said okay. 5 Q All right. Did she comply with your 6 request? 7 A She did. 8 Q And did you have any additional encounters 9 with her on December 7? 10 A No, sir. 11 MR. POPE: All right. No further 12 questions. 13 THE COURT: You may inquire, 14 Mr. Merrett. 15 CROSS-EXAMINATION 16 BY MR. MERRETT: 17 Q The events that you've testified to occur on 18 December 7; is that right? 19 A I believe that was the date. 20 Q What is your regular assignment? 21 A I'm a patrol officer. I was working 22 midnight shift. 23 Q I'm sorry, you work midnights? 24 A Yes, sir. 25 Q Okay. And I assume then that these events 120 1 in seventh occurred during the day? 2 A Yes, it did. 3 Q You would have been working an off-duty job? 4 A That's correct. 5 Q And that was, your compensation was provided 6 by the Church of Scientology; is that correct? 7 A My compensation is given to us by the City 8 of Clearwater, but the Church pays the City of 9 Clearwater. 10 Q $21 an hour or thereabouts? 11 A I believe it's $23.50. 12 Q Okay. And was December 7 the first time 13 that you worked for the Church? 14 A No. I worked the Church several times last 15 year and I've already worked several times this year. 16 Q What's the total amount that has been paid 17 to you for working for the Church? 18 A This year I couldn't tell you yet, but last 19 year it was 1600-some odd dollars. 20 Q And you are not presently assigned to the 21 detective division; is that correct? 22 A I am not. 23 Q And why is it that you're not in uniform 24 today? 25 A I'm off duty. I'm not required to wear a 121 1 uniform to court. 2 Q Okay. And how are you being compensated for 3 your appearance here today? 4 A City of Clearwater. 5 Q Any reimbursement from the Church of 6 Scientology? 7 A A mileage fee of $20. 8 Q Now, you said at one point in your direct 9 testimony that you saw Ms. Bezazian passing I guess on 10 the Cleveland Avenue side of the Clearwater Bank 11 Building; is that right? 12 A The Ft. Harrison side. 13 Q Okay. What direction was she headed? 14 A In a south direction on the east side of the 15 roadway. 16 Q So she was between the Trust and the 17 Ft. Harrison Hotel? 18 A Yes. 19 Q On the Trust side of Ft. Harrison, right? 20 A Yes. 21 Q Okay. And was she in transit; was she 22 moving up until the time that you asked to speak to 23 her? 24 A Absolutely. 25 Q At any time she could have turned around and 122 1 headed back or walked a loop on the sidewalk, right? 2 A Absolutely. 3 Q Okay. But she didn't to that, right? 4 A Nope. 5 Q She was in continuous transit from the 6 direction of the Trust. Could I approach, Your Honor? 7 THE COURT: I'll just look at that 8 exhibit that you had. 9 MR. MERRETT: I can give it back to you. 10 THE COURT: I'm just trying to follow 11 her testimony, that's all. 12 MR. MERRETT: I don't think that's on 13 the map, but maybe it is. 14 THE WITNESS: I have a copy of the map, 15 Judge. 16 THE COURT: Well, we've got one we're 17 using. Just a minute and let me see if I can 18 get that one and sort of make it because the 19 Bank of Clearwater is on there and the 20 Ft. Harrison on there, I think. Let's see 21 what she IDs. 22 MR. MERRETT: If you can pass it over 23 her? 24 THE COURT: Yeah, here. There is an X 25 on there, but you called it the Clearwater 123 1 Building. Whare are you referring to? 2 THE WITNESS: It's this one right here, 3 sir. 4 THE COURT: Show me? 5 THE WITNESS: Yes, sir. This is 6 Cleveland Street here. 7 THE COURT: Right. 8 THE WITNESS: And this is Ft. Harrison. 9 THE COURT: Right. 10 THE WITNESS: And she was walking in 11 that area. 12 THE COURT: Okay. Let the record 13 reflect that she showed me the building 14 that's called the Clearwater Building on this 15 map and she pointed to the general area on 16 the -- headed south. Well, actually it's on 17 the northeast corner of Cleveland and 18 Ft. Harrison intersection. And she pointed 19 the general area of headed south on the 20 south -- well, that northeast corner about 21 maybe 20 feet north of the corner of the 22 building. 23 MR. MERRETT: Yes, sir. 24 THE COURT: Do you mind if I ask her to 25 put an X there? 124 1 MR. MERRETT: No, that would be fine, 2 Your Honor. I gave her a pen, I think, or 3 somebody did. 4 THE COURT: Just put an X there and I'll 5 put a yellow arrow there where she indicated. 6 Can you put your initials there? 7 THE WITNESS: Yes, sir. 8 THE COURT: Thank you very much. 9 Mr. Pope, did you want to look at that? 10 MR. POPE: That's fine. I'm all right. 11 Thank you. 12 THE COURT: Okay. 13 BY MR. MERRETT: 14 Q Officer, we were talking about what you had 15 done and I believe your testimony was she was in 16 transit continuously moving south along Ft. Harrison 17 Avenue, correct? 18 A That's correct, sir. 19 Q And when she stopped, was it when you told 20 her you needed to speak to her or however you 21 approached her, right? 22 A That's correct, sir. 23 Q Okay. Now, in your direct testimony you 24 mentioned at one point there being an area or areas 25 indicated on the map where she could not walk. There 125 1 is not any areas on the map that people can't walk, 2 are there? 3 A Picket, I'm sorry. 4 Q So, the issue is not where she was walking 5 as far as you're concerned and as far as you were 6 concerned back on December 7. The issue is where she 7 was picketing, right? 8 A That's correct. 9 Q Okay. And you asked her to put her sign 10 down and she did? 11 A Yes, sir. 12 Q Okay. And did she then continue on south 13 along Ft. Harrison or where did she go? 14 A She did. 15 THE COURT: Okay. 16 MR. MERRETT: I don't believe I have 17 anything further. 18 THE COURT: Okay. Let's do this. 19 Mr. Howie, do you want to go next? 20 MR. HOWIE: Yes, and I just have a few 21 questions. 22 THE COURT: Go ahead. 23 CROSS-EXAMINATION 24 BY MR. HOWIE: 25 Q Officer, when you had this encounter with 126 1 Tory Bezazian, you were in uniform, correct? 2 A Yes, sir. 3 Q And you observed that Officer Butterfield 4 was also in uniform when we had his discussion with 5 her, correct? 6 A Correct. 7 Q And in your discussions with Tory Bezazian 8 you indicated to her that there was no problem with 9 her being where she was as long as she turned her 10 picket signs down; is that correct? 11 A What I told her was if she going to continue 12 down the street with the picket signs she would have 13 to turn them upside down. 14 MR. HOWIE: Thank you very much. 15 THE COURT: Yes, sir. Mr. Pope? 16 REDIRECT EXAMINATION 17 BY MR. POPE: 18 Q I don't have any further questions. Oh, I 19 do have one question. Did you prepare a report of 20 this incident? 21 A I did, sir. 22 MR. POPE: Thank you. 23 THE COURT: Anything else? Can we 24 excuse the officer? 25 MR. POPE: Sure. 127 1 THE COURT: Officer, thank you coming in 2 and testifying. You're free to leave. Thank 3 you. 4 MR. POPE: Officer Harbert will be our 5 next witness. 6 THE COURT: Okay. 7 MR. POPE: Your Honor, while they're 8 calling Officer Harbert I'd like to offer 9 into evidence a certified copy of her police 10 report. 11 THE COURT: Any objection? 12 MR. MERRETT: Yes, Your Honor. 13 THE COURT: Tell me. 14 MR. MERRETT: Hearsay. 15 MR. HOWIE: I would join in the 16 objection, Your Honor. 17 MR. MERRETT: In case we've missed the 18 point that the court's made the last time we 19 were here, this is a criminal proceeding. 20 THE COURT: Uh-huh. Mr. Pope. 21 MR. POPE: Your Honor, it is an official 22 record certified by the police. It's 23 admissible under the Florida Evidence Code. 24 It's an official record of a government 25 agency. 128 1 (Whereupon, a pause in the proceedings took 2 place.) 3 THE COURT: Mr. Merrett, do you have a 4 case to cite me? 5 MR. MERRETT: No, Your Honor. What I 6 would like to do is tell you what my copy of 7 the evidence code says. 8 THE COURT: Please proceed. 9 MR. MERRETT: That's section 90.303(8). 10 THE COURT: Hold on. Let me catch you. 11 All right. I'm with you, sir. 12 MR. MERRETT: Yes, sir. It says here 13 records, reports, statements reduced to 14 writing or data compilations in any form of 15 public offices or agencies setting forth the 16 activities, etcetera, or matters observed 17 pursuant to a duty imposed by law as to 18 matters which there was duties to report 19 excluding in criminal cases matters observed 20 by a police officer or other law enforcement 21 personnel are admissible under the public 22 records exception of the hearsay rule and I 23 mean there is another evidence code book 24 around out there but that's what mine says. 25 THE COURT: Mr. Pope, sir. 129 1 MR. POPE: I have nothing further to 2 add, Your Honor. 3 THE COURT: Okay. The objection is 4 sustained. Call your next witness. 5 MR. POPE: Officer Harbert. 6 Thereupon: 7 LARRY HARBERT 8 was called as a witness and having been duly sworn, was 9 examined and testified as follows: 10 DIRECT EXAMINATION 11 BY MR. POPE: 12 Q Tell us your name, please, sir? 13 A Larry Harbert. 14 Q And your address? 15 A 645 Pierce Street. 16 Q And your occupation? 17 A Police officer. 18 Q You've been a police officer for how long? 19 A Going on 11 years. 20 Q With what city? 21 A City of Clearwater. 22 Q I want to call your attention to the date of 23 December 8, 2000 and ask you if on that date you had 24 any contact with Tory Bezazian? 25 A Yes, I did. 130 1 Q And would you tell us about the first 2 contact you had with her? 3 A I was advised by the security for the Church 4 that Tory and believe it was Patricia Greenway were in 5 the area of the Santa chair taking turns sitting in 6 the chair, which was located in front of the 500 7 Building on Cleveland Street. 8 Q What action. if any. did you take? 9 A I spoke with them and told them based on my 10 interpretation of the injunction that they possibly 11 could be in violation and told them they needed to 12 discontinue the action and that I would be writing a 13 report on what had happened. 14 Q What response did you get from them? 15 A I was told basically that it's 16 Christmastime, it is a Christmas parade and that they 17 were just in the Christmas spirit of taking pictures 18 sitting in the chair. 19 Q Did they comply with your request? 20 A They left after I told them it would be best 21 based on circumstances of the violation of the 22 injunction possibly so they did leave. 23 Q Did you have any other encounters with 24 either one of them on that day? 25 A Earlier in the day Tory was by the -- there 131 1 was a camera that's adjacent to the properties at the 2 end of 500 at the north side of Waterson and she was 3 by the camera and had some kind of pole waving it in 4 front of the camera and we went up myself and I 5 believe it was Officer -- 6 MR. MERRETT: I'm going to object at 7 that point and move to strike for relevance. 8 I'm sure counsel can refer to the section of 9 the order to show cause that deals with this 10 incident if it's relevant. 11 MR. POPE: I haven't heard enough of the 12 testimony to know yet, Your Honor. I'm sure 13 the court can disregard it if it turns out 14 that it's not pertinent to the order to show 15 cause. 16 MR. MERRETT: Judge, I hate to be a 17 pill, but customarily when people practice 18 law, they kind of have an idea of what 19 evidence we're going to present and we don't 20 make others people -- 21 THE COURT: Attorneys, approach the 22 bench. 23 (Thereupon, the following proceedings were 24 had out of the presence of the audience:) 25 THE COURT: Gentlemen, I have the 132 1 injunction in front of me. He said that he's 2 relying on the injunction on the he, listed 3 paragraph, the part of the injunction. 4 Now, let me do something just a minute. 5 Okay, you said Ms. Bezazian violated 6 paragraph one, two and eleven. I note that 7 last sentence says that are enjoined from 8 any criminal acts of harassment, violence in 9 may fall under that. 10 MR. MERRETT: Your Honor, if I may, the 11 issue is not where it falls in the statement 12 of particulars or anything else. The issue 13 is what acts are charged according to the 14 order to show cause which occurred involving 15 camera on December 8. This is like charging 16 a breach of the peace that occurred on June 5 17 in Clearwater and then coming in and wanting 18 to put on all this evidence about somebody 19 drinking a beer in a park in St. Petersburg 20 on June 12. 21 There is nothing in the order to show 22 cause that deals with the incident this 23 officer is about to describe and counsel 24 knows that. 25 MR. POPE: Your Honor, the respondent's 133 1 state of mind and the attitude toward this 2 injunction and complying with it is if this 3 is a willful violation is at issue in this 4 matter and any incident that shows that that 5 state of mind is pertinent. 6 MR. HOWIE: Your Honor, if I may? 7 THE COURT: Yes, sir. 8 MR. HOWIE: It seems to be a violation 9 of another provision 90.404(2)(b) of the 10 Florida Statutes. 11 THE COURT: 90 what? 12 MR. HOWIE: 90.404(2)(b) of the Florida 13 Statutes. 14 THE COURT: 90.404(2)(b)? 15 MR. HOWIE: Yes, sir. No notice was 16 provided to us concerning the use of this 17 matter to show state of mind or any other 18 matter. We would object on both the grounds 19 of relevance and violation of notice. 20 MR. MERRETT: And I would joint in that. 21 I think that's the Williams Rule, Judge. 22 MR. HOWIE: I would add that there is no 23 notice in the motion for the order to show 24 cause or the order to show cause itself. 25 MR. POPE: Your Honor, this is not a 134 1 jury trial and you're certainly free to 2 disregard the matter if you think it 3 ultimately does not go to the intent issue. 4 MR. MERRETT: That's reference to a case 5 that I have been looking for for years that 6 the evidence code doesn't apply unless 7 there's a jury in the room, but I've never 8 seen -- 9 THE COURT: Proceed. Go on. Just a 10 minute. Hey, hey, come here. Inasmuch as we 11 are under the criminal rules, I will sustain 12 them. Move on. 13 (Thereupon, the sidebar conference was 14 concluded and the following proceedings were had 15 in the presence of the audience:) 16 BY MR. POPE: 17 Q Officer, let me go back to the initial 18 incident that you testified about the sitting in the 19 chair. Where was that chair located? 20 A The chair was located directly in front of 21 the what I would consider to be the front door of the 22 building. 23 Q The entranceway? 24 A On the north side, yes. 25 Q On Church property? 135 1 A I would say, yes it's a -- 2 MR. MERRETT: Objection. Competence. 3 Move to strike. 4 BY MR. POPE: 5 Q You were getting ready to say was it was 6 under the overhang? 7 A Under the overhang of the front door. 8 MR. MERRETT: Okay. 9 MR. POPE: Now, Your Honor, that's all I 10 have as to this particular episode. I want 11 to shift -- he has some facts relative to the 12 other motion. Perhaps counsel wants to -- 13 THE COURT: You talking about Greenway? 14 MR. POPE: No, there is a separate 15 motion dealing with the -- we got two 16 motions, orders to show cause. This 17 testimony so far has been only on the amended 18 consolidated order. 19 He also has information relative to the 20 order to show cause for an event on 21 January 7 on Waterson Avenue involving 22 Mr. Minton and three other people. 23 THE COURT: Okay. Proceed. 24 BY MR. POPE: 25 Q Fine. Let me direct your attention, please, 136 1 sir, to January 7. Where were you patrolling on that 2 day? 3 A I was working off duty at Waterson and 4 Cleveland and it was on Waterson at an area where we 5 stop traffic and assist the pedestrians as the exit 6 and enter buses to go to eat. 7 Q About what time of day was it? 8 A I don't recall the exact time. I would say 9 sometime around six o'clock. 10 Q Was it in the evening? 11 A Yes, sir. it was. 12 Q Had it started to get dark? 13 A Yes, sir. 14 Q Okay. Can you tell us what happened on this 15 date? First of all tell us who you had an encounter 16 with? 17 A Well, I had an encounter with Mr. Minton. 18 I'm not sure who else was there. I believe Tory was 19 there. 20 They had come down to protest in the 21 designated area in which they were allowed to protest. 22 They had their signs. 23 Myself and Officer Correa was standing in 24 that area because that's where we watch the vehicles 25 as the travel northbound on Waterson so we can stop 137 1 them in time to assist people as they're loading and 2 unloading the buses. And they began to protest there 3 and Mr. Minton was standing in the street. We asked 4 him to step out of the street. 5 Q What was his response? 6 A He became very agitated with us. He began 7 cursing at Officer Correa and myself and yelling 8 screaming that we were in violation of the injunction. 9 Q Did you he tell how it was that you were 10 violating this injunction? 11 A He said we were considered officers of the 12 Church. 13 Q Did he other elucidate as to how that 14 violated the injunction? 15 A He said the injunction states that all 16 officers of the Church are to stay away from him ten 17 feet and being that we were working for the Church as 18 a off-duty job that we were thus considered I guess on 19 his behalf he believed we were part of the Church. 20 Q How did this encounter between you and 21 Mr. Minton and the others resolve itself? 22 A We warned him several times that he needed 23 to step out of the street and that his carrying on 24 could possibly lead to disorderly conduct. He was 25 yelling and screaming and using profanities. 138 1 There was a number of people who were 2 unloading at the buses at the time and he was like 3 sitting in the street. Eventually we were able to 4 convince him to step back up off of the sidewalk. 5 MR. POPE: Okay. No further questions. 6 THE COURT: All right. I'm going to go 7 this way. Mr. Howie, you can go first. 8 MR. HOWIE: Your Honor -- 9 THE COURT: Mr. Minton is your client 10 and he's talking about Mr. Minton, so I will 11 give you first cross. 12 MR. HOWIE: Since the first part of his 13 testimony dealt with Tory Bezazian, which is 14 Mr. Merrett's client, I thought Mr. Merrett 15 might want to go. 16 THE COURT: Okay. I don't know. 17 Gentlemen, don't arm wrestle. Somebody get 18 up there. 19 CROSS-EXAMINATION 20 BY MR. MERRETT: 21 Q Yes, sir. All right. I'd kind of like to 22 refine and focus on your testimony about the events of 23 December 8 involving a Santa Claus chair. How long 24 you been about working out there for Scientology? 25 A I believe we've been out there about a year. 139 1 Q You have been out there off and on for a 2 period of approximately 12 months? 3 A Yes, sir. 4 Q Tell the court how many thousands of dollars 5 Scientology had paid you over that time? 6 A I believe I made $6700 this year. 7 Q $6,700? 8 A Yes, sir. 9 Q Okay. And you're paid that money in order 10 to inducing you to stand in particular places and 11 watch particular property, right? 12 A Whatever we're asked to do by the off-duty 13 contractor we do pursuant to our general orders and 14 state law. 15 Q Okay. Now, off-duty contractor, that means 16 in this instance Scientology, right? 17 A Correct. 18 Q Okay. So you were paid $6700 in the last 12 19 standing where Scientology wanted you to stand and 20 watch out for what they wanted you to watch out for, 21 right? 22 A Correct. 23 Q Okay. So, for example, based on what your 24 instructions have been during that 12 month period, 25 you wouldn't for example be down at the Walgreens 140 1 three blocks away watching for shoplifters, right? 2 A Right. 3 Q Okay. What you're doing is protecting 4 Scientology's interest at their request, correct? 5 A Correct. 6 Q Now, how long had the Santa Claus chair been 7 there as of December 8? 8 A I don't know. I didn't set up Santa's 9 chair. 10 Q Okay. Well, interestingly, I didn't ask you 11 if you set it up. I asked you how long it had been 12 there? 13 A I don't know. 14 Q Okay. Was that the first time that you saw 15 it there? 16 A First time that I paid attention to it, yes. 17 Q Is it correct that prior to December 8 when 18 you we're alerted by members of Scientology that you 19 had made no notice of Santa's chair? 20 A Like I said originally, no, I not notice it. 21 Q Okay. Now, you testified on direct 22 examination that you advised Ms. Bezazian and 23 Ms. Greenway that sitting in the chair might possibly 24 be a violation of the injunction? 25 A That's correct. 141 1 Q You didn't accuse them of any crimes, did 2 you? 3 A I didn't accuse them of anything, no. 4 Q Did you mention any criminal activity? 5 A I said that it could be a possibility of an 6 injunction violation. 7 Q Okay. Did you mention any crimes apart from 8 the injunction? 9 A No. 10 Q Now, so the record is clear, you have a 11 clear recollection of this, right? 12 A Sure. 13 Q And is it correct that all of your 14 references to Ms. Bezazian and Ms. Greenway regarding 15 violations of the injunction were couched in terms of 16 possibility and hypothesis and your opinion, right? 17 A Correct. 18 Q Okay. Now, you did tell them repeatedly 19 that they needed to read the injunction, didn't you? 20 A Rephrase that. I didn't understand. 21 Q You did tell them repeatedly they needed to 22 read the injunction? 23 A Make sure they understood it, correct. 24 Q Now, there was in fact a Christmas parade 25 that night, right? 142 1 A Yes, there was. 2 Q And I assume that given that you were 3 investigating this potentially serious breach of 4 public peace and order you took the time to examine 5 Santa Claus' chair after they left, right? 6 A No need for me to examine the chair. 7 Q Okay, them you can tell me if you think 8 about it, I'm sure, was the was chair blocked in any 9 way? Was there an obstruction in the chair? 10 A Was there an obstruction? 11 Q Uh-huh. 12 A The chair was just sitting under the 13 overhang of the porch area by the entrance. 14 Q And you saw other people sitting in the 15 chair? 16 A I didn't pay attention to anyone else 17 sitting in the chair, no. 18 Q Okay. Let's make sure that your answer came 19 out clearly. You did not pay attention to anyone else 20 sitting in the chair? 21 A I did not notice them, no. 22 Q And the signs that said Warning, this is 23 Scientology's chair, don't sit in it, where were they 24 situated? 25 A I saw no signs to that effect. 143 1 Q And the OSA security operative who was 2 instructing that this was Scientology's Santa Claus 3 chair, where was he stationed? 4 A I don't know who you're referring to. 5 Q Okay. Well, there wasn't any such person 6 that you know of, right? 7 A I don't know who you're referring to, so 8 obviously no. 9 Q Okay. Now, Ms. Bezazian and Ms. Greenway 10 were walking east across the of the Clearwater Bank 11 Building when you turned and walked back to them to 12 discuss this matter with them, right? 13 A I believe so, yes. 14 Q And they didn't at any time approach you, 15 right? 16 A No. 17 Q Okay. After you had this discussion in 18 front of the Clearwater Bank Building, they walked 19 around the corner onto Waterson, right? 20 A I believe they did, yes. 21 Q And you followed them? 22 A That's where I normally stand on Waterson, 23 so, yes, I returned back to where I normally work. 24 Q Okay. You normally stand on the east side 25 of Waterson, right? 144 1 A Yes. 2 Q But as it happened what you did, although 3 you just told us that were just going back to where 4 you stood, you followed behind Md. Bezazian and 5 Ms. Greenway on the west side of Waterson? 6 A I don't recall which side of the street I 7 was on. 8 Q But the only reason you would have had to 9 going around the corner on to Waterson would have been 10 to resume your post on the east side? 11 A I will stand on whatever side of the street 12 I choose to stand on. 13 Q Okay. That would be because you're an 14 American citizen, right? 15 A Because I'm a Clearwater police officer and 16 I'm doing my job and I will stand where I want, yes. 17 Q Okay. Now can you give us an idea of what 18 it is that you had in mind as far as the portion of 19 the injunction that was violated by Ms. Bezazian's 20 behind being in Scientology's Santa chair? 21 MR. POPE: Objection, Your Honor. 22 That's the very legal question that's before 23 the court. 24 THE COURT: What do you say, 25 Mr. Merrett? 145 1 MR. MERRETT: I say the question is that 2 he already testified that he felt like that 3 might be a violation of the injunction. I'm 4 trying to get him to tell us what he thinks 5 she violated. 6 THE COURT: Okay. He can answer, but 7 the ultimate decision is mine. 8 MR. MERRETT: I understand, Your Honor. 9 THE WITNESS: Base on what I've been 10 told by our supervisors and the way I 11 understand it is that there is designated 12 protesting zones and there is also protested 13 that are the named parties on both sides have 14 to remain away from the entrances of the 15 buildings and I took that as an entranceway 16 to a building. 17 BY MR. MERRETT: 18 Q Okay. We'll talk about that in just a 19 second, but I want to make sure I clearly understand 20 your understanding. You're out there supposedly 21 enforcing the law, right? 22 A Yes. 23 Q With the impression that this court order 24 prohibits people who are named in the injunction from 25 going around the entrances of Scientology property, 146 1 period? 2 A Correct. 3 Q Okay. Have you read the injunction? 4 A I've been through the injunction. I haven't 5 read it word-for-word. 6 Q Now, the entrance that you're talking about, 7 I want you to look at the judge and tell him the last 8 time you saw people going in and out of those doors? 9 A I normally don't view that doorway because 10 it's on the other side, so I couldn't tell you. 11 Q Okay. That doorway is normally closed, 12 right? 13 A Like I said, I normally do not stand in that 14 area to maintain who goes in and out. 15 Q Let's focus on something you may have seen 16 this night because of the chair caper. The chair was 17 blocking the door, wasn't it? 18 A The chair was in that vicinity, yes. 19 Q Well, was it six feet to the right of the 20 door? 21 A I didn't measure it. I didn't have a tape 22 measure. 23 Q Was it off to the right of the door? 24 A It was somewhat in front of the center of 25 the doorway. 147 1 Q Okay. So the chair was blocking the 2 doorway? 3 A I don't know if you could open the doors ot 4 not. Like I said, I didn't have a tape measure to 5 measure how wide the doors were. 6 Q Okay. Now, the next thing I'd like for you 7 to do is give us the names of just physical 8 descriptions of the people who were trying to come and 9 go through that door when Ms. Bezazian was sitting in 10 the chair? 11 A There was nobody at that time. 12 Q Okay. Did you have any further discussion 13 or confrontation with Ms. Bezazian or her companions 14 after they went around the corner onto Ft. Harrison 15 Street? 16 A No, not that I recall. 17 Q But you do have a clear memory of this, 18 right? 19 A Yes. I have a memory of what happened but I 20 don't recall if we had any more confrontations. I 21 don't remember it verbatim. 22 Q Well, I'm not asking you to tell me about it 23 verbatim. Let's be clear on the question. The 24 question is not what did you day. The question is did 25 you have further confrontation or discussion after 148 1 they turned the corner onto Waterson? 2 A Like I said, I don't recall having anymore 3 further conversation. 4 Q But according to you, you do have a clear 5 memory of that event? 6 A Yes. 7 Q Now, I assume that before you received a 8 certificate to engage in the profession which you 9 presently pursued, you had to go to the police 10 academy, right? 11 A Yes, I did. 12 Q Okay. And one of the things that they teach 13 in great length in the police academy is 14 constitutional law, right? 15 A They teach law, yes. 16 Q Okay. So, of course, you're familiar with 17 the constitutional issues surrounding whether or not 18 screaming and yelling are breaches of the peace and 19 disorderly conduct, right; you know that? 20 A Correct. 21 Q Okay. So, if you made any promises or 22 threats or suggestions inconsistent with that law, you 23 did it deliberately? 24 A I would not deliberately violate the law. 25 Q Okay. My question is this. You told us 149 1 that you're familiar with the law regarding screaming 2 and yelling and whether or not that's a breach of the 3 peace and disorderly conduct, right? 4 A I'm familiar with that. 5 Q Okay. If you make threats to Mr. Minton and 6 to people with him that's not supported by that law 7 that you know, you did it deliberately, right? 8 A Sir, I didn't threaten anybody. 9 Q Okay. Okay. Now, when Mr. Minton was 10 coming down the street headed south on Waterson, you 11 say he went out into the street, correct? 12 A Yes. 13 Q Okay. Describe the oncoming traffic on 14 Waterson Street? 15 A There was buses and vans and cars. 16 Q Let me try to refine it for you. Let me 17 point out I started out when he was walking down the 18 street. I'm not asking you globally what traffic may 19 be there at any begin moment since the dawn of 20 creation. I'm asking what the oncoming traffic was 21 when he was walking down the street? 22 A I could not describe the exact vehicle. 23 Like I said, that's a loading zone there with Church 24 buses and Church vans. 25 Q There were Church buses? 150 1 A In that area. I don't know when -- if they 2 were exactly there when he started out of his doorway 3 or when he got to that position. 4 Q No, the fact is nothing came down the street 5 moving while he was in the street, correct? 6 A I don't know if they did or not. I was 7 paying attention to him. 8 Q Okay. So you're not testifying that there 9 was any traffic block? 10 A There were vans in that area during that 11 time to the best of my knowledge, yes, there was a bus 12 there. 13 Q Parked beside the road? 14 A What came through at that time, I don't 15 know. 16 Q Okay. And the -- you ended up standing 17 pretty close to Mr. Minton, didn't you? 18 A Yeah, we stood close to each other, yes. 19 Q And the other officer who was with you, 20 what's his last name? 21 A Correa. 22 Q How is it spelled? 23 A I don't know. 24 Q What are his initials? 25 A I think it's Steve, S. 151 1 Q Now how did it come to pass that you and 2 Officer Correa and Mr. Minton were standing in 3 proximity to one another? 4 A We asked him to get out of the street. 5 Q Okay. And the sound waves of his voice 6 pulled you out toward him? 7 A It's where I stood to talk with him. He was 8 in the street and I stood there to ask him to step 9 back up on the sidewalk. 10 Q Okay. Let me back up and go through this 11 slowly. My question is what was the sequence of 12 events that caused you and Officer Correa to find 13 yourselves in the immediate proximity to Mr. Minton? 14 A Like I said, Mr. Minton was standing in the 15 street. 16 Q And what did you do? 17 A I told him to step up on the sidewalk 18 because he could not stand out there and yell and 19 scream. 20 Q Then what happened? 21 A Then he complied. 22 Q Okay. Did you change your position after 23 the first time that you or Officer Correa said 24 something to him about getting out of the street? 25 A Did I change my position? 152 1 Q Did you move after the first direction to 2 get out of the street was given? 3 A I believe Officer Correa spoke with him 4 first and then I walked into the street and asked him 5 to step on to the sidewalk. 6 Q At what point in all this did Mr. Minton 7 stop moving? 8 A He moved the entire time. 9 Q So he was in transit down the street 10 throughout this event? 11 A Well, he would stop on occasion. 12 Q Uh-huh. And at the time that you're 13 describing he was stopped because and Officer Correa 14 were talking to him, right? 15 A He was more or less yelling at us. 16 Q Uh-huh. And that means what? 17 A That's what he was doing. You asked what he 18 was doing. That's what I'm telling you. 19 Q Okay. In fact, first Officer Correa and 20 then you left the position where you had been standing 21 and walked out in the street so that you were 22 essentially in Mr. Minton's face, correct? 23 A No, I was telling Mr. Minton to get out of 24 the street. 25 Q Okay. Let's back up and I will ask you a 153 1 question and you listen to it and answer the one I'm 2 asking you, if you don't mind? 3 A I just answered your question. 4 Q The question is this. In fact, first 5 Officer Correa and then you left the position that you 6 occupied and traveled into the street to place 7 yourselves nose to nose with Mr. Minton, right? 8 A We don't occupy any position. I can walk 9 anywhere I like to on that street and so, yes, I 10 walked over to Mr. Minton and told Mr. Minton to step 11 out of the street and back on to the sidewalk. 12 Q Is that all that you said? 13 A That's all I recall saying, yes. 14 Q Was there any other subject matter that you 15 discussed with him? 16 A Not that I recall, no. 17 Q Was there any other subject matter that 18 Officer Correa discussed with you? 19 A I didn't talk to him. Officer Correa did. 20 You'll have to ask him. 21 Q Okay. Well, let's explore that. I'm going 22 to start walking toward you and you tell the judge 23 when I'm as far away from you as Officer Correa was 24 when he said these things that I'm going to have to 25 ask him about? 154 1 A I'd say in that vicinity. 2 Q Okay. And you have good hearing 3 bilaterally? 4 A My hearing is fine. 5 Q Okay. And you have a clear recollection of 6 these events? 7 A Roughly, yes. 8 Q Now, the fact of the matter is Mr. Minton 9 did not approach you and Officer Correa, right? 10 A He did approach us because we were standing 11 there and that's the area he worked so he did come to 12 us. 13 Q Okay, walking down the street? 14 A Sure. 15 Q Okay. You and while you may not think you 16 have a position and it is a free county. You have a 17 position, right now. You're sitting in the chair in 18 the witness stand. 19 A Very good. 20 Q You left from the place where you were 21 standing, first Officer Correa and then you and walked 22 out into the street to place yourself within inches of 23 Mr. Minton; isn't that correct? 24 A No, I would tell him -- yes, that is 25 correct. 155 1 Q Thank you. 2 A Tell him to get back on the sidewalk. 3 Q Okay. So the physical proximity was the 4 result of your and Officer Correa's decision to step 5 out into the street? 6 A No, for him standing in the street yelling 7 and screaming. If he wouldn't have done it I would 8 have never had to make contact with him. 9 Q Okay. And the basis for your interest in 10 what you were doing was what? 11 A Safety to the public. 12 Q Okay. And the public consisting of whom? 13 A Consisting of everybody; Mr. Minton and the 14 church members. 15 Q Okay. And which church members? 16 A Whoever might be coming and going at that 17 time. 18 Q Okay. But you've already told us that there 19 might not have been any? 20 A There was Church security there. I don't 21 recall who all was standing there. 22 Q Well, the Church security was there because 23 the Church security was videotaping all of this and 24 walked out to the scene of this confrontation, right? 25 A I believe they walked away from Mr. Minton 156 1 so they wouldn't be in violation of the injunction the 2 way I understand it. 3 Q Interesting. You don't remember the OSA 4 security guard coming out into the street with his 5 video camera to videotape you and Officer Correa 6 shaking your fingers at Mr. Minton? 7 A I didn't shake my finger at nobody. 8 Q Officer Correa did, right? 9 A Better watch the videotape. I didn't shake 10 my finger at anybody. If you're going to give me a 11 question, give me a true one. 12 Q Okay. So, I guess at this point based on 13 your last answer we can assume that you have watched 14 the videotape recently enough so that anything you say 15 that differs from it is a knowing difference, right? 16 A I didn't watch the videotape. 17 Q Okay. That just sprung to mind? 18 A What's that? 19 Q That just spring to mind? 20 A I know I didn't shake my finger at 21 Mr. Minton. 22 Q Okay. Officer Correa did, right? 23 A I don't know what Officer Correa did. 24 Q How close did you come to Mr. Minton? 25 A How close did he come to me? 157 1 Q How close did you come to Mr. Minton? 2 A We were within inches. 3 Q Any particular reason for that? 4 A No. 5 Q Just talking you need to be physically close 6 to him? 7 A No, I was actually asking him to get off the 8 street which is what normal citizens normally do when 9 they're asked to do so by the police and he continued 10 to stand there and yell. 11 Q Okay. But of course at that point Officer 12 Correa was standing immediately in front of them, four 13 square, right? 14 A At that point in time I don't know where 15 Officer Correa was. That's when I was talking with 16 Mr. Minton. 17 Q Okay. Let's make sure we're real clear on 18 what you're saying. You're saying at the time you 19 were standing within inches of Mr. Minton talking to 20 him, you don't know where Officer Correa was? 21 A I don't know directly, no. 22 Q Okay. So the answer is you don't know where 23 he was? 24 A He was in the vicinity. I don't know if he 25 was behind me, to the right, to the left. 158 1 Q Okay. But you do have a clear recollection 2 of all this? 3 A Like I said, I wasn't worried about what 4 Officer Correa was doing at that time. 5 Q You don't watch for you partner when their 6 in a confrontation with somebody who's raising hell? 7 A I didn't think I was in a confrontation. 8 Q You didn't? 9 A No. 10 Q Okay. Did you not tell me moments ago that 11 Mr. Minton was agitated, that he was screaming and 12 yelling? 13 A He was yelling at me, but I didn't see the 14 problem -- there was no confrontation on my part. He 15 was yelling and screaming. 16 Q Okay. And have you read that you're able to 17 recall the portion of the injunction that prohibits 18 walking in the street? 19 A Like I said, for public safety I was asking 20 him to step on to the sidewalk. 21 Q Okay. But his is hypothetical public 22 safety, right? 23 A Anything could happen. I don't want him 24 standing out in the street and get hit by a car. 25 Q Okay, and of course the other thing was that 159 1 like if a grain of sand were to fall like in a 2 cartoon -- 3 A Yes, anything is possible. 4 Q Okay. Now, who was the Scientology security 5 guard present that night? 6 A I believe that was Anthony; known to me as 7 Antonio. 8 Q Antonio who? 9 A I don't know his last name. 10 Q Now, ordinarily when people who are believed 11 associated with Lisa McPherson Trust come and go down 12 Waterson Avenue, whatever security guard that's on 13 duty makes a call on his radio or phone, right? 14 A I don't know what they do with their 15 policies. It's not my policy. 16 Q Okay. Let me back up again and tell you I 17 didn't ask anything about the policy. What I asked 18 you was it is correct, is it not, that the people who 19 are believed to be affiliated with the Lisa McPherson 20 Trust come and go down Waterson Avenue, whatever 21 Scientology guard is stationed down there near you, 22 pick up a telephone or radio and make a call, right? 23 A They normally talk on the radios quite 24 often, yes. 25 Q Okay, and they normally do that among other 160 1 times in specific conjunction with the appearance of 2 people who are believed to be affiliated with the 3 Trust, right? 4 A That has happened in the past. 5 Q Okay. Who is it they're calling? 6 A I have no idea. 7 Q Okay. If I correctly understand the sum of 8 your testimony, it is that Tory Bezazian sat in 9 Scientology's Santa chair, right? 10 A That is correct. 11 Q And Bob Minton walked in the street and 12 yelled at you? 13 A That is correct. 14 MR. MERRETT: The public thanks you. 15 THE COURT: Thank you. 16 MR. POPE: Your Honor -- 17 THE COURT: Time out. Mr. Howie. 18 MR. HOWIE: May it please the court, 19 I'll reserve cross until after Mr. Pope's 20 motion. 21 MR. POPE: Your Honor, Mr. Merrett just 22 made a totally gratuitous comment, the public 23 thanks you or something like that. I wonder 24 if we could just raise the level of the 25 examination in the room just a little bit. 161 1 That's uncalled for. 2 THE COURT: The answer to your question 3 is yes and I've noticed that might have a 4 bearing on the emptiness of one's stomach. 5 I'm well aware that we're into the lunch 6 hour, but I would like to finish up with this 7 officer we can and I'm going to ask everybody 8 until you can get something to eat, don't try 9 my patience. 10 Mr. Howie, you're next. 11 CROSS-EXAMINATION 12 BY MR. HOWIE: 13 Q Officer Harbert, have you had the 14 opportunity view the videotapes taken either during 15 the incident that you described with Tory Bezazian or 16 with Mr. Minton? 17 A I have not completely viewed the videotape, 18 no. 19 Q When you say you have not completely viewed 20 them, have you viewed portions of them? 21 A I seen a fragment just to know that they had 22 the videotape. That's it. I didn't pay any attention 23 to what was on the videotape and did not watch them. 24 Q Under what circumstances did you see the 25 fragment? 162 1 A I don't recall. I believe someone had it. 2 I know it was turned over to the department, the 3 police department. I don't remember if someone had it 4 on their camera. It might have been on security's 5 camera. I don't recall that. 6 Q What specific instant do you recall viewing 7 the fragment of? 8 A All I see is Mr. Minton in confrontation 9 with me, but it had no audio and like I said it was 10 maybe two seconds worth. I didn't watch anymore. 11 Q This would be the incident that you 12 described in Waterson Street the night of January 7? 13 A That would be correct. 14 Q And the small fragment that you did see 15 fairly and accurately depicted the incident as you 16 recall it? 17 A Yes, sir. 18 Q Did you also see any portion of the 19 videotape -- well, let me back up with a predicate. 20 Were you aware that during your discussion with Tory 21 Bezazian on December 8, 2000, that you and she were 22 being videotaped at that time? 23 A No, I was not. 24 Q You did not observe a video camera to you? 25 A No, I did not. 163 1 Q Did you ever have an opportunity to view 2 later on any segment of the videotape of that 3 incident? 4 A Yes, I did. I seen some video of, I believe 5 she was leaving the chair and I was walking up to her. 6 Like I dais, I don't believe I watch the whole video, 7 just a very short fragment of the video. 8 Q Okay. From what little you saw of the 9 fragment of the video do you have reason to believe 10 that that was taken from either a handheld or a fixed 11 camera? 12 A I could not tell. I couldn't be positive 13 how it was taken. 14 Q Okay. From what you observed of that 15 fragment, could you tell whether the incident was 16 filmed at a fairly close range, by which I mean say 17 within 20 feet as opposed from across the street? 18 A No, it was from a distance. 19 Q Okay. Again, under what circumstances did 20 you review that videotape? 21 A There was a copy that was placed in the 22 property, and like I said, I don't recall if I also 23 viewed through my department or it might have been 24 that security had a copy of the tape. I believe is 25 was through the Church security. 164 1 Q How exactly did you come to view this will 2 segment? 3 A I think we took that inside and watched it 4 inside the recorder just to see if it was what had 5 taken place. 6 Q When you say we, who is -- 7 A The security for the Church. 8 Q So you were shown this by security from the 9 Church? 10 A Yes, I was. 11 Q And this was during the course of your 12 employment as security for the Church? 13 A I'm employed by the City of Clearwater. We 14 subcontract with the church; that is correct. 15 Q Okay. During your subcontract work for te 16 church? 17 A Correct. 18 Q Likewise, both during these confrontations 19 on the December 8 with Tory Bezazian and again on 20 January 7 with Robert Minton, you were in fact 21 employed in your subcontract capacity? 22 A Yes, sir. 23 Q You indicated to Mr. Minton on the Waterson 24 Street incident on January 7 that he was subject to 25 arrest for disorderly conduct; is that your testimony? 165 1 A I don't recall ever saying that to this him, 2 no. 3 Q You did not indicate to him at anytime that 4 he was subject to arrest? 5 A No, I did not tell him he would be arrested. 6 Q And did you ever inform him that his actions 7 constituted disorderly conduct in violation of state 8 law? 9 A I don't recall if I ever told him that he 10 was violating at that time. If he was violating I 11 would have charged him accordingly and I didn't. 12 Q And you would have been able to charge him 13 accordingly in your capacity as a Clearwater police 14 officer? 15 A If he was violating the law, yes. 16 Q Okay. In fact you did not do that? 17 A Correct. 18 Q And Mr. Minton was not taken into custody. 19 He was free to leave at that time? 20 A Sure, he was. 21 Q Mr. Minton complied with your direction to, 22 eventually complied with your direction to go back and 23 stand on the east sidewalk of Waterson? 24 A Yes, he did. 25 Q At that time Mr. Minton did not have any 166 1 kind of picket sign or protest sign in his hand, did 2 he? 3 A They had signs. I don't recall if he was 4 holding one at the time or not. 5 Q From what you saw of the videotape, had 6 Mr. Minton held a picket sign, that videotape would 7 have depicted it? 8 A It should have. 9 Q Did Mr. Minton -- at any time when you 10 observed Mr. Minton that night, not just in the street 11 but on the sidewalk, did Mr. Minton appear to have a 12 picket sign in his hands to your recollection? 13 A I do not recall that. 14 Q Did you have any further contact with 15 Mr. Minton on January 7, that evening, other than this 16 incident that you've just described? 17 A Nope. 18 MR. HOWIE: Thank you. I don't have any 19 further question? 20 THE COURT: Mr. Pope. 21 REDIRECT EXAMINATION 22 BY MR. POPE: 23 Q Officer, you described the situation in 24 which you and Mr. Minton were in close proximity and 25 that he was yelling at you; is that correct? 167 1 A Yes, he was. 2 Q Tell us what it was he said to you? 3 A I was using profanities and told us we were 4 working for the Church and we were church officers and 5 he just screaming and the whole thing was just -- 6 Q I mean what specifically did he say? Do you 7 remember the words he uttered? 8 A He was using the F-word and saying basically 9 to F the police, that we worked for the Church. 10 Q Okay. Did you consider that be fairly 11 insulting commentary? 12 MR. HOWIE: Objection, Your Honor. 13 Calls for a conclusion. Speculation. 14 THE COURT: Overruled. 15 THE WITNESS: Yes, I did. 16 MR. POPE: Thank you. That's all I 17 have. 18 THE COURT: All right. Can we excuse 19 the officer? 20 MR. POPE: We can. 21 MR. MERRETT: I have some brief recross 22 based on the matter that have just been 23 opened up. 24 THE COURT: Within the scope. 25 MR. MERRETT: Yes, sir. 168 1 THE COURT: Please. 2 RECROSS-EXAMINATION 3 BY MR. MERRETT: 4 Q All these conversations involving Mr. Minton 5 began with him essentially making a circle out into 6 the street and pointing at you all telling you to stay 7 away from him, right? 8 A Correct. He kept saying that we were 9 violating the injunction. 10 Q Okay, but it started with him, if you heard 11 what Mr. Howie asked, it was more of him coming out in 12 the street pointing his finger at you saying you guys 13 stay away from me? 14 A Yeah. Like I said, he was yelling and 15 screaming. 16 Q And in the context of doing that I think you 17 just testified that he accused you of standing where 18 you were standing because Scientology was paying you 19 22 bucks an hour for working for Scientology, right? 20 A That's right. 21 MR. MERRETT: Nothing further. 22 THE COURT: Mr. Howie. 23 MR. HOWIE: Nothing further, Your Honor. 24 THE COURT: All right. Let me see if I 25 understand is this now. You observe 169 1 Mr. Minton walking down Waterson in a 2 southerly direction was he at the time 3 yelling or saying anything to anybody from 4 the church? 5 THE WITNESS: He was yelling profanities 6 that way. I believe there were people when 7 he first got there, Your Honor, there were 8 people getting off the of bus. 9 THE COURT: Okay. You told me -- okay, 10 there were people getting off the bus. Okay. 11 You said there were some vans and stuff 12 parked there also? 13 THE WITNESS: Yes, there was. 14 THE COURT: So you walked out in the 15 street to hey, could you get over here on the 16 sidewalk? 17 THE WITNESS: He was screaming, yelling 18 that we're f-ing in violation. 19 THE COURT: Okay. Thank you. 20 THE WITNESS: We told him to get back on 21 the sidewalk, that we weren't going to let 22 him to carry on in the street. 23 THE COURT: Got it. Thank you very 24 much. All right can we excuse the officer? 25 MR. MERRETT: Your Honor, I do have a 170 1 couple questions I need to ask based on the 2 court questions? 3 THE COURT: Okay. You may, sir, within 4 my scope. 5 RECROSS-EXAMINATION 6 BY MR. MERRETT: 7 Q Yes, sir. I just want to make it really 8 clear that you've raised you hand and swore to God 9 that you're telling is the truth and you're saying 10 there were people coming off that bus when you came 11 down the street? 12 A I said I believe initially there were people 13 coming off the bus, yes, sir. 14 Q Okay. Are you testified that there were 15 people from Scientology coming off the bus or in the 16 street at that time, yes or no? 17 A There were people coming off the bus when he 18 came down the street. 19 Q Okay. 20 A At some point in time. I don't know what 21 point in time you're being specific to. 22 Q Im talking about the night that you've been 23 testifying to? 24 A There had been people coming off the bus, 25 yes. 171 1 Q Okay. How long before Mr. Minton reached 2 your position? 3 A It was in the same proximity of time. I 4 can't give you an exact. 5 Q So what you're telling me is if we look at 6 the videotape and it shows Mr. Minton coming down the 7 street and there is a bus in the background, we're 8 going to see people coming of the bus? 9 A The to best of my recollection there were 10 people coming off the bus, yes. 11 Q And you do have a clear recollection of 12 that. 13 A I believe there were people in that vicinity 14 at some time that night yes. 15 Q Well, now wait a minute. 16 A During that incident there were people in 17 the area. 18 Q Okay. There were what people? 19 A There were Church members coming off the 20 bus. 21 Q Okay. 22 A Off a bus or a van. I don't recall exactly 23 what because I was watching traffic, I'm watching 24 Mr. Minton, I'm watching the protesters to make sure 25 everybody does what they're supposed to and nothing i 172 1 instigated. 2 THE COURT: Let me just try some here. 3 When you say coming off or get off or 4 something, you mean unloading? 5 THE WITNESS: Unloading, yes, sir. I'm 6 sorry. 7 THE COURT: Is that what we're taking 8 about? 9 MR. MERRETT: I believe so, Your honor. 10 THE COURT: All right. 11 BY MR. MERRETT: 12 Q But the fact is that you're not telling us 13 that you remember that at all, are you? 14 A I'm saying there were people there at that 15 time during that incident. 16 Q There being where? 17 A On Waterson. 18 Q Okay. Were they between bus and -- 19 A I believe they were unloading off the bus, 20 yes. 21 Q Okay. Well -- 22 A There was a bus there so obviously people 23 must have gotten off of it and believing that 24 timeframe there were people leaving the bus, yes. 25 Q It is your testimony that at the time of 173 1 these events when Mr. Minton was coming down the 2 street yelling there were people exiting through the 3 door of the bus? 4 A Somebody did, correct. 5 MR. MERRETT: Okay. Thank you very 6 much. 7 THE COURT: Mr. Howie? 8 MR. HOWIE: Your Honor, again within the 9 scope of your questions. 10 THE COURT: Please, sir. 11 RECROSS-EXAMINATION 12 BY MR. HOWIE: 13 Q Officer Harbert, do you recall verbatim what 14 it was Mr. Minton was saying before you confronted him 15 in the street? 16 A I don't recall verbatim, no. He was very 17 upset and yelling and screaming. 18 MR. HOWIE: Okay. Thank you. No 19 further questions. 20 THE COURT: Okay. Mr. Pope, anything? 21 MR. POPE: Nothing, Your Honor. 22 THE COURT: All right. Gentlemen, may 23 we please excuse the officer now? 24 MR. POPE: You may. 25 THE COURT: Mr. Merrett? 174 1 MR. MERRETT: Yes, sir. 2 THE COURT: Officer, thank you very 3 much. You are free to. All right, we're 4 going to go the lunch. 5 This is a good time to take a break. Be 6 back at 2:25 and the courtroom will be 7 locked during the lunch hour unless, only 8 attorneys, only attorneys during the lunch 9 hour will I allow in here and -- excuse me. 10 Mr. Feathers, do we have a problem out 11 there? 12 THE BAILIFF: They're speaking out loud, 13 sir. 14 THE COURT: Bring the two of them 15 forward. Everybody else sit down. Could I 16 have your names? 17 MR. WARD: My name is Grady Ward, Your 18 Honor. 19 THE COURT: Okay. And your name, sir? 20 MR. PETERSON: Robert Peterson. 21 THE COURT: Okay. All right. Let me 22 ask both of you, where are we today? 23 MR. PETERSON: We are in your courtroom, 24 Your Honor. 25 THE COURT: You have any questioned 175 1 about that? 2 MR. PETERSON: No, Your Honor. 3 THE COURT: How about you? 4 MR. WARD: We're in your courtroom, Your 5 Honor, and should observe the decorum in the 6 courtroom. 7 THE COURT: Can I trust you to continue 8 to do that or please and no more problem? 9 MR. WARD: Yes, Your Honor. 10 THE COURT: Now, let me make it clear to 11 everybody in this courtroom. Please, 12 remember where we're at. We're here today on 13 some serious business and everybody is 14 represented by attorneys. I know you're 15 probably paying top dollar because you've got 16 AV lawyers. Now, if you don't know what that 17 means ask the lawyers. And I'm sure they 18 won't be bragidocious when they tell you but 19 that's the top, that's the best rating you 20 can get and that only comes -- there are only 21 a few people authorized to make that 22 recommendation to the Martindale-Hubble who 23 does that. 24 Now, if have you any other questions 25 about what you need to do, please ask my 176 1 bailiffs. But so there is no doubt about 2 who works for whom around here, the bailiffs 3 work for me when they're in my courtroom. 4 So if they have any problems, I got a 5 problem. Have you good lunch everybody. 6 (A luncheon recess took place after which 7 the proceedings continued.) 8 End of Volume I 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 |