Showing posts with label radio. Show all posts
Showing posts with label radio. Show all posts

Monday, June 18, 2012

Radio Paul's 'Radio Rants' Podcast Debuts 6/18 [update]

Fairfax County, VA ~ Tonight [June 18 2012] Radio Paul, of protesting Scientology in DC fame, debuts his podcast talk-show "Radio Rants" on WEBR radio (community access) on Channel 37, scheduled for every Monday night, 10-11pm (EST).
His first scheduled guest: David Love, known for exposing the exploitation, extortion, and coercive abuses within Scientology-Narconon drug rehab program.
More information available at radio-paul.com or on thier Facebook page.

Archived Podcast: June 18 2012 / Guest: David Love

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

The Edge: Scientology Human Trafficking/Narconon Dangers [radio]

Narconon Trois Riveres Shutdown

March 20, 2012 - (PART 1 of 2) - The Edge with Tom Smith interviews David Edgar Love and Rafael Gomez Delarosa. These interviews give amazing, first-hand information about human trafficking and IMO serious financial crime in Latin America by organized Scientology as well the horrors and dangers of the Narconon program in Canada.


March 20, 2012 - (PART 2 of 2) - The Edge with Tom Smith interviews David Edgar Love and Rafael Gomez Delarosa. These interviews give an amazing, first-hand information about human trafficking and serious financial crime in Latin America by organized Scientology, as well the horrors and dangers of the Narconon program in Canada and around the globe.


Tip of the lenscap to David Love.

Thursday, April 19, 2012

CBC: Former Narconon Client/Employee slams rehab centre


Narconon Trois Riveres Shutdown

Former Narconon Client/Employee David Love Slams Rehab Center

quebec am news
CBC  [Apr 18] A former client and employee of Narconon in Trois-Rivières is denouncing the rehab centre for its reportedly dangerous practices.
The Mauricie health agency shut down the Scientology-based centre on Friday, saying it was preying on a vulnerable and desperate client base.
The agency says the centre performed dangerous, unscientific treatments with no proper medical supervision
Susan speaks with David Love, a former client and employee of Narconon.
We also hear a statement from Réjean Fleury, the executive director of Narconon in Trois-Rivières.


 David Edgar Love interview on CBC Radio

[Apr 18] ~ Québec City. Health officials have ordered a private Scientology drug rehabilitation centre, Narconon Trois-Rivières to shut its doors. The Narconon Addiction Recovery Centre's methods are based on the theories of Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard. The local health agency says some of the centre's practices posed a danger to health and safety.



Health Officials Say "Scientology Rehab" Preys On Vulnerable And Desperate

CBC [Apr 18] Quebec Health officials have ordered a private Scientology drug rehabilitation centre, Narconon Trois-Rivières to shut its doors. The Narconon Addiction Recovery Centre's methods are based on the theories of Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard. The local health agency says some of the centre's practices posed a danger to health and safety. Health officials say Narconon preys on the vulnerable and desperate.



Narconon Trois-Rivières: Disturbing testimony of former employees

cyberpresse.ca (translated) [Apr 18] ~ (Trois-Rivières) Things weren't sailing very smoothly inside Narconon during the past few months. This, at least, is what emerges from the testimony of Narconon employees who, after their sudden dismissal, felt the need to speak out in public about the situation to Le Nouvelliste.

(L to R) Émilie Marin, Sylvain Bérard, Julie Ann Pagé, Odette Poulin,
and Sylvie Houde former employees of Narconon Trois-Rivières.
First and foremost, the employees wished to defend the program offered by Narconon as an effective program that has time and again produced excellent results, but they said that the center's administration left much to be desired and sometimes even endangered the safety of certain residents and employees.

Sylvain Bérard, the Ethics Officer, said that Narconon had already been experiencing financial problems for some time, to such an extent that, in recent months, the organization had even been admitting clients with more serious problems of a psychiatric nature.

"Some of these cases weren't admissible to the program because it requires cutting off their medication. But the administration chose to keep them anyway. There were several instances of attempted suicide during the past few months. By law, immediate medical assistance should have been provided, but management decided to keep these persons without calling for an ambulance," says the former employee.

His colleague, Julie Ann Pagé remembers a female resident who, less than ten days earlier, made at least two suicide attempts in one day, but she was not referred to a hospital. Ms. Pagé says that incidents like this were blamed on the employees for supposedly "not delivering enough."

"We believe in what we are doing, and we do it for the sake of our residents, for the families, because we believe that everyone can be rehabilitated. But we were treated like assholes, as less than nothing," says Julie Ann Pagé, who was responsible for the withdrawal phase at Narconon.

All of the employees gathered around the table said they had received no pay for at least six weeks, and neither had they received the 4% of salary due to them at the termination of employment. Yesterday morning, they went to the labour standards commission office to inquire about their possible recourse.

"There were several times we didn't get paid on time. But they promised us all sorts of things. It was lie after lie. We weren't supposed to talk about it with each other, otherwise we risked getting fired," remembers Sylvie Houde.

Narconon's finances were so badly managed that Julie Ann Pagé and another co-worker were forced to get rid of the center's trash because Narconon couldn't afford to have its garbage bins emptied. Sylvain Bérard also recalls that, in 2009, clients were compelled to eat ground beef for a whole month, even though the clients could spend between $20,000 and $30,000 for their stay.

"We had no right to have a personal opinion. The only thing that mattered was their teaching of Scientology. Don't do to others what you wouldn't want them to do to you. This was one of their internal rules, but they themselves don't apply it. They have no respect for us or for the residents," says Sylvie Houde.

"We're playing with people's lives"

While the Narconon employees were at Le Nouvelliste, one of their cell phones rang. On the line was a woman from the Maritimes who was worried because she hadn't heard from her brother who was in therapy in Trois-Rivières. The man she was referring to had been relocated to the Narconon center in Calgary. His family members had not been notified and no one at Narconon Trois-Rivières was answering the phone to reassure them.

Trois-Rivieres spokesperson Andre Ahern
Discouragement was perceptible around the table. "There's no better example to show the kind of management that goes on there. Right now, they're taking away all of the center's records, confidential files they don't want anyone to see because of the crooked way they manage," says Odette Poulin.

Odette Poulin points out that every employee had to sign a contract with Narconon that prohibits them from speaking to the media. "We weren't supposed to reveal anything to the press. We're speaking today anyway for the sake of the parents and the students, but also for the employees. We were treated as less than nothing," says Julie Ann Pagé. "We didn't even get a thank you or a letter of reference," laments Odette Poulin.

Émilie Marin, who resigned from Narconon last March 30, emphasizes however that their criticism of the administration only concerns Narconon Trois-Rivières and does not necessarily apply to the other centers around the world.

Sylvain Girard, for his part, suspects that the Narconon Trois-Rivières administration is now turning to Toronto to open a new center. "I think this is the biggest danger, because they'll open somewhere else in Canada. The whole country needs to be aware of what's happening. As far as the program is concerned, I firmly believe in it. I believe that a person should not be cured of an addiction by taking other drugs. The Narconon program is a logical program. But it was time for the government to close down Narconon Trois-Rivières because psychiatric cases are out of line with our capabilities. The situation had become dangerous," said Mr. Bérard. "We're playing with people's lives," adds Julie Ann Pagé.

Le Nouvelliste tried again to contact the administration of Narconon Trois-Rivières by telephone and by email to offer an opportunity to respond, but without success.


More from David Love:

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

New Yorker's Scientology Investigation [+video]

Paul Haggis vs. the Church of Scientology ~ The New Yorker’s massive, 26-page article-geddon on Scientology came out yesterday, and it discloses, among other things, that the FBI has been investigating the church on suspicion of human trafficking for more than a year.(see tampabay's truth rundown series) david miscavige - truth rundown

But AOLNews (yeah, I know),was told by a federal law enforcement source "the investigation has fallen short and no criminal charges are expected to be filed." Course, I take that with a gain of salt, because source is unnamed (and AOL is the new kid on the block, trying to make a name for themselves).

Over at newser.com, a nice synopsis of what the New Yorker article covers is listed:

• The FBI has been investigating allegations of abuse by David Miscavige—L. Ron Hubbard’s protégé, Tom Cruise’s best man, and the church’s current leader—since at least December 2009. Many former members of Scientology’s religious order, Sea Org, show signs that they may have been the victims of human trafficking or enslavement.

fbi investigates scientology• At Gold Base, the California desert center where leader David Miscavige has an office, church leaders are expected to “instill aggressive, even violent, discipline,” and physical force was sometimes used to “bring escapees back,” Wright writes. One ex-Scientologist gives an example of one punishment: getting sent to the “Hole,” two double-wide trailers where 80 to 100 people were confined and forced to “do group confessions all day and all night.” Another recalls being beaten by Miscavige five times, and says he didn’t report the incidents because Miscavige “holds the power of eternal life and death over you.”

• Sea Org members are sometimes recruited as young children, who sign billion-year contracts to serve the church; some have alleged being cut off from their families and forced to do manual labor—for $50 a week, which can be docked to as low as $13 for infractions. Members who fail can be sent to what Wright describes as “punitive re-education camps."

• The FBI is also investigating Miscavige’s swanky lifestyle. As the head of a tax-exempt organization, he is barred from enjoying “unusual perks or compensation,” but he has been given a $70,000 superbike, flies on chartered jets, wears custom-made shoes, has chefs and stewards, and basically lives like a celebrity.

NBC Today: Scientology Secrets Report
Matt Lauer of the Today Show interviews Lawrence Wright about human rights allegations by the Church of Scientology, including human trafficking and physical abuse by Church leader David Miscavige. Lawrence Wright and the New Yorker confirm that the FBI is investigating this controversial church.



WXYB/The Edge: victim of human trafficking interview
Tom Smith, producer of The Edge, interviews a recent victim of human trafficking, who is now living in hiding inside the state of Florida.[1 hour][source:WWP]



Archive: Scientology, Gaming The System (888)
Discovered by Anonymous in 2008, several high level managers within the Church of Scientology were working within the United Kingdom without the appropriate work permits. They were effectively working and living in the country as illegal immigrants. Information obtained by Anonymous strongly suggests that a scheme to attempt to circumvent the work permit requirements of the United Kingdom had been used on a regular basis. The source of this information was documentation that was carelessly discarded by a law firm retained by the Church of Scientology in the UK.

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Panorama: Secrets of Scientology (BBC radio interviews)

Panorama Special: Secrets of Scientology mirror.co.uk ~ Three years ago a clip of journalist John Sweeney losing his temper at a Scientologist (Tommy Davis) became a YouTube sensation. He'd set out to make a Panorama show about Scientology but instead it turned into a story about the extraordinary lengths the "church" would go to to stop him making the show. Then it turned into a global news story about Sweeney looking (in his words) "like an exploding tomato". Three years later, he's back to poke at the cult again... with the help of one of the men who stood in his way last time. [more >>>]

BBC Radio4 interview with John Sweeney 28/9/2010
Audio from BBC Radio4 interview with John Sweeney 28/9/2010 on the upcoming Panorama Special: Secrets of Scientology.


BBC Radio2 Interview with John Sweeney 28/9/2010
Audio from BBC Radio2 Interview with John Sweeney 28/9/2010 on the Jeremy Vine show. Subject:Panorama Special: Secrets of Scientology. Listener emails and phone-ins are near the end of the clip.



Sweeney Vs Scientology Round Two?

suite101 ~ In tonight's second documentary, entitled 'The Secrets of Scientology: A Panorama Special', Sweeney speaks to ex-members of the Church of Scientology (CoS), and interviews them about their experiences. During the first documentary, one of Sweeney's main gripes was the level of interference while he was trying to speak to people. On the BBC's Panorama website, he says he experienced a similar level of involvement this time around:

"During our time in America for the latest Panorama, we were once again followed by people filming us, this time more openly than before. When we approached the people with cameras to ask them who they were with and what they were doing, they refused to answer our questions"...[more >>>]
Hopefully, re-broadcast information will show up on this page for viewing later after the show airs live: bbc.co.uk/programmes

Thanks Sponge.

Monday, September 13, 2010

OZ: State Gov Accused of Sponsoring Scientology

o'shannassy lodge narconon theage ~ The state government has been accused of sponsoring a Scientology recruiting ground by granting the group's controversial drug treatment arm long-term control of a historic property in the Yarra Ranges.

Critics including former Scientologist Paul Schofield and independent South Australian senator Nick Xenophon have called on the government to review a Parks Victoria offer of a 21-year lease on O'Shannassy Lodge to Narconon, a group closely linked to Scientology.

"The point of Narconon is to get vulnerable people signed up to Scientology and to push money up to Scientology management," said Mr Schofield, a former Narconon executive and ordained minister of Scientology."Why is the Brumby government sponsoring a Scientology recruitment group aimed at vulnerable people?"

In 2008 The Age revealed that a drug treatment program based on the teachings of Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard had operated a secretive and secluded rehabilitation center at the publicly owned lodge east of Warburton. The lodge, which sits behind a locked gate at the end of a five-kilometre bush track, is one of hundreds of properties managed by Parks Victoria but leased to companies and community groups in a bid to offload maintenance costs.
independent senator Nick XenophonWith the lapse of the old lease, the property was put out to public tender. Narconon won that tender and is now finalizing negotiations over the 21-year lease.

Last week Senator Xenophon questioned the state's lease to Narconon. "It's very important that this not be used as a stalking horse to recruit people to the Church of Scientology. After all, this is a state asset we're talking about," he said.

Senator Xenophon called for Narconon's books to be opened to the government and an assessment made of its effectiveness as a drug rehabilitation program. [more >>>]

Jerry Armstrong / David Love on Narconon, Canada
Jerry Armstrong and David Love discuss his time in Narconon as a patent and a counselor.
[short version: 20 min]



The Edge: David Love On Scientology/Narconon, Canada
WXYB 1520 AM HawkRadio, Tampa Florida. David Love discusses the Narconon/Scientology connection in Canada in this college radio interview with Tom Smith.[long version: 60 min]



Thanks: Sponge, Anonymous,

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

Marc Headley on KSFO 560AM Interview [video]

scientology worse than you thinkAOLnews ~ New accusations from two Scientology defectors are the latest in a growing list of abuse allegations that have been leveled against the church in the past year -- possibly its most difficult in the 50-odd years since it was created by science-fiction writer L. Ron Hubbard.

On Saturday, The New York Times weighed in with a long article focusing on a couple in Sea Organization -- a group of the religion's elite staff members -- who said they worked long hours for a pittance. Once they decided to leave they were forced to "sign false confessions about their personal lives and their work, pay the church thousands of dollars it said they owed for courses and counseling, and accept the consequences as their parents, siblings and friends who are church members cut off all communication with them," according to the Times....


Also, while that story was breaking on Sunday, Barbara Simpson, of Hot Talk, KSFO 560 AM, in San Fransisco, interviews Marc Headley, author of Blown For Good. In the 100 minute phone conversation, Headley answers many questions brought up by the NY Times article.

Part1: KSFO 560 AM Conversation with Marc Headley



Part2: KSFO 560 AM Conversation with Marc Headley



ThanX for the tip, WWP.

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

Ex-Scientologist Larry Anderson on KSLG 94.1FM [video]

larry anderson scientology refundLarry Anderson is certainly making the rounds on radio talk-show circuit, dishing out all kinds of dirt to would-be future scientologists. And just think. If Scientology had just refunded the money owed to him, they could have avoided all of this negative publicity.

And so we have one more installation of "Why I Left Scientology", this time on KSLG 94.1 FM ~ Ferndale CA, with host John Matthews in a 40 minute radio interview with Larry Anderson.

If you're unfamilar with Anderson and his story, you can get up to speed at tampabay.com's Larry Anderson, star of Scientology's 'Orientation' film, wants his money back.

KSLG 94.1 FM ~ Ferndale CA John Matthews interviews Larry Anderson





Tip of the 'ol lollipop mike to XenuTV.

Monday, February 1, 2010

KQMT Interview: Why I Left Scientology [video]

larry anderson interview
TampaBay.com ~ If you watched TV in the past three decades, you probably saw Larry Anderson. He appeared on more than 30 shows, including Charlie's Angels, Mork and Mindy, Desperate Housewives and Mad Men. He hosted three game shows and had bit parts in eight movies.

He got lots of parts but isn't well known. Except to Scientologists. Anderson starred in the Church of Scientology's 1996 film Orientation, a 40-minute promotion central to church recruiting efforts.


Heavens to Murgatroyd! Exit, stage right!
Well, Scientology, Larry wants out. And in a big way. And he wants all that money he had on account, too.
Below, you can listen to his story, broadcast on KQMT Denver, about getting sucked into the Bernie Madoff of Religions, and what he's going through to get out.

Monday, January 25, 2010

FB&HW: Scientologists = Brainwashed Lunatics [audio]

Free Beer & Hot Wings ShowFree Beer & Hot Wings Show
It's not today's lunch menu (although it would make a nice one), but a syndicated talk radio show based out of WGRD-FM in Grand Rapids, Michigan.

The show is hosted by Greg "Free Beer" Daniels and Chris "Hot Wings" Michels with Eric "Zane", "Producer" Joseph Gasmann, Jr and Assistant Producer Steve McKiernan.

And an anon caught some of it while it broadcast over the air in Nashville. It seems they had just caught wind of the Scientology Super Heal (or should that be heel?) story at AFP:
"... One hour ago he had no sensation in his left leg, so I explained the method to him, I touched him and after a while he said 'now I feel everything'," said Sylvie, "Otherwise they might have had to amputate his other leg. Now his sister knows the method and she can do it."

"... Some doctors at the hospital are skeptical. One US doctor, who asked not to be named, snorted: "I didn't know touching could heal gangrene." When asked what the Scientologists are doing here, another doctor said: "I don't know." Do you care? "Not really," she said, wheeling an unconscious patient out of the operating room to join hundreds of others in the hospital's sunny courtyard
."

Free Beer & Hot Wings Show
on Scientologists 'heal' Haiti quake victims. Let's listen in on their commentary...


Tip of the 'ol radio antenna to Boxxy(lol) at WWP.

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Coast to Coast / Blown For Good [video soundtracks]


Marc Headley, author of Blown For Good, on Coast to Coast AM radio show talks about the new book that peeks behind the Iron Curtain that is Scientology.

The book reveals details inside Scientology headquarters at the organization's "Gold Base", located near Hemet, California. Headley joined the organization at age seven when his mother became a member, and worked at Scientology's International Management Headquarters for several years before leaving in 2005.
mark headley blown for goodThe inner flap of the book includes a map of the "International Headquarters of Scientology; Gilman Hot Springs, California". Headley writes that under the direction of Scientology leader David Miscavige, employees who signed billion-year contracts routinely put in 100-hour weeks of work for minimal pay.
According to Headley, possible discipline faced by the Scientology employees for perceived mistakes included being separated from family as part of the Scientology policy of "disconnection", being declared a "suppressive person", or being sent to the "Rehabilitation Project Force", a program where Scientologists were assigned harsh labor.

Coast to Coast Pt 1/2 Marc Headley: Blown For Good Interview



Coast to Coast Pt 2/2 Marc Headley: Blown For Good Interview

Sunday, November 22, 2009

Scientology's 'Mission: Global Implosion' Continues [videos]

scientology reckoningexaminer.com ~ Following accusations by Sydney's Nick Xenophon of "false imprisonment, coerced abortions, embezzlement of church funds, physical violence, blackmail and the widespread deliberate abuse of information obtained by the organization," Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd is the latest leader to express concern over allegations of "a worldwide pattern of abuse and criminality" by the Church of Scientology, and is contemplating a parliamentary inquiry.

The organization is under police investigation, and yesterday angry ex-Scientologists and Anonymous members, spurred on by the claims, converged on its Australian headquarters calling for its tax-exempt status to be revoked.

ACA9: Xenophon Calls For Investigation into Scientology



Coast To Coast: Behind the Iron Curtain of the Church of Scientology
youtube playlist linkListen to the 'Coast to Coast interview with author Marc Headley' playlist on YouTube [12 parts].

A new book called Blown for Good: Behind the Iron Curtain of the Church of Scientology by Marc Headley, an employee of the church's Los Angeles headquarters for 15 years, details allegations of systematic abuse and bizarre episodes, such as the three weeks Headley claims he spent under instruction from Tom Cruise in how to move bottles and other objects by concentrating on them.

Headley's book follows a year in which Scientology has been plagued by unwelcome revelations from high-profile defectors and fresh media investigation into its practices.

France24: French Court Convicts Church of Scientology of Fraud
The so-called "church" was recently convicted of widespread fraud in France, where it is considered a cult and is currently embroiled in a criminal investigation within the borders of Belgium.


Paul Haggis Renounces Scientology In Blistering Letter
HuffPo ~ The 56-year-old Haggis, who won an Oscar in 2005 for co-writing "Crash," said he was quitting the Church of Scientology after 35 years. "I could not, in good conscience, be a member of an organization where gay-bashing was tolerated," Haggis wrote.

Haggis wrote a letter addressed to Tommy Davis, the head of Scientology's Celebrity Centre. In it, Haggis said he was disappointed by the church's tacit denial of gay rights in the debate over California's gay marriage ban.


Jason Beghe Leaves The Cult of Scientology
American actor Jason Beghe (Filmography) was the first of Scientology's celebrity followers – for whom the church maintains a "Celebrity Centre" in L.A. – to break with it, after giving the church more than $1 million in donations over 12 years.

Beghe warns that the church is "destructive and a rip-off". He claims that since his renunciation of Scientology he has been pursued to seminars in Europe – held to speak of its dangers – by private investigators employed by Scientology and "disconnected" from former friends who remain within it.


In The Beginning, Let There Be 'Crazy'
The church faced global ridicule after an internal videotape by Cruise, the church's most high-profile member, was leaked and went viral on the Internet. It showed a rambling Cruise laughing inexplicably while saying that Scientologists were uniquely equipped with the knowledge necessary to cure most of the world's ills, including crime, drugs, mental health problems and violence.



The Thriving Cult of Greed and Power
Time: Scientology - Cult of GreedScientology has attempted, unsuccessfully, to sue the media, including U.S. mainstays the Washington Post and Time magazine. The repeated attempts to use the courts to silence critics have been criticized in the judgments that have been upheld against Scientology, including one in 1996 that described its "documented history of vexatious behavior" and abuse of "the [US] federal court system ... to destroy their opponents, rather than to resolve an actual dispute over trademark law or any other legal matter".

The decision of Beghe and Haggis to quit Scientology appears to have caused the movement its greatest recent PR difficulties, not least because of its dependence on Hollywood figures as both a source of revenue for its most expensive courses, and an advertisement for the religion. The involvement of such high-profile figures as Haggis, Cruise and John Travolta has acted as a reassurance for potential recruits against the allegations of its critics.

If Cruise's church was planning a mission to go out in a spectacular crash and burn implosion, then I'd say their project is right on schedule. That's a wrap! Lunch, everybody!

Friday, November 13, 2009

Saturday Night- BFG on 'Coast to Coast' [radio]


Marc Headley, author of Blown For Good, will be on the Coast to Coast AM radio show Saturday from 11PM-2AM (PST) to talk about the new book that peeks behind the Iron Curtain that is Scientology.
The book reveals details inside Scientology headquarters at the organization's "Gold Base", located near Hemet, California. Headley joined the organization at age seven when his mother became a member, and worked at Scientology's International Management Headquarters for several years before leaving in 2005.
The inner flap of the book includes a map of the "International Headquarters of Scientology; Gilman Hot Springs, California". Headley writes that under the direction of Scientology leader David Miscavige, employees who signed billion-year contracts routinely put in 100-hour weeks of work for minimal pay.
According to Headley, possible discipline faced by the Scientology employees for perceived mistakes included being separated from family as part of the Scientology policy of "disconnection", being declared a "suppressive person", or being sent to the "Rehabilitation Project Force", a program where Scientologists were assigned harsh labor.

You can listen live on the net or tune into one of the over 500 radio stations that will be airing the show across North America.
BFG's interview will start during the second hour. The fourth hour will be primarily for call-in questions. Broadcast times: Eastern 2 AM, Central 1 AM, Mountain 12 AM, Pacific 11 PM.
ThanX to WWP for the tip.

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Radio Interview: Marc Headley / Blown For Good

peoplemagazinedaily.com: A scandalous new book explains some of the strange rituals Tom Cruise has performed as an elite member of Scientology.

Blown for Good author Marc Headley was Tom Cruise’s apprentice in the alien-based church of Scientology and a longtime employee at Scientology’s southern CA headquarters.

“It couldn’t be someone who might run off the next day and tell the National Enquirer that Tom Cruise was telling me to talk to a bottle for the last three weeks,” he explained to none other than the National Enquirer.

KFI 640AM: Marc Headley Interview / Blown For Good
Marc Headley appeared on the wildly popular John and Ken show on L.A.’s KFI. He spilled the beans about what goes on inside Scientology while promoting his new book.



Thanks Mark for the MP3.