Thursday, March 27, 2014

The can of worms you opened now this is starting to remind me of the antics of david eric johnson and his cohorts


SHOULD BE THIS ONE but I see similarities to CROWELL and the theft of my father's life insuranc proceeds

Search Results

Detail by Entity Name

Florida Profit CorporationTWIN LAKES DEVELOPMENT CORP OF BRANDON
Filing Information
P9600004206059337960005/16/1996FLINACTIVECORPORATE MERGER12/28/200112/31/2001
Principal Address
3626 ERINDALE DR
VALRICO, FL 33594

Changed: 04/16/2001
Mailing Address
3626 ERINDALE DR
VALRICO, FL 33594

Changed: 04/16/2001
Registered Agent Name & AddressAMERILAWYER CHARTERED
343 ALMERIA AVENUE
CORAL GABLES, FL 33134
Officer/Director DetailName & Address

Title PD

HASBINI, ALI
3626 ERINDALE DR
VALRICO, FL 33594
Annual Reports
Report YearFiled Date
199905/07/1999
200009/13/2000
200104/16/2001

Detail by Entity Name

Florida Profit CorporationTWIN LAKES DEVELOPMENT CORP.
Filing Information
L1029265015783008/21/1989FLINACTIVEADMIN DISSOLUTION FOR ANNUAL REPORT08/23/1996NONE
Principal Address
% MANFRED E. SCHATZ-BUSINESS & MANAGEMENT
1140 LEE BLVD STE 103
LEHIGH ACRES, FL 33936

Changed: 06/08/1990
Mailing Address
% MANFRED E. SCHATZ-BUSINESS & MANAGEMENT
1140 LEE BLVD STE 103
LEHIGH ACRES, FL 33936

Changed: 06/08/1990
Registered Agent Name & AddressSCHATZ, MANFRED E
1140 LEE BLVD, STE 103
1140 LEE BLVD., STE 104
LEHIGH ACRES, FL

Name Changed: 04/20/1993

Address Changed: 04/20/1993
Officer/Director DetailName & Address

Title D

SCHATZ, MANFRED E.
1140 LEE BLVD #104
LEHIGH ACRES, FL
Annual Reports
Report YearFiled Date
199304/20/1993
199405/01/1994
199505/01/1995


twin lakes development merges with transcend

eturn to Search Results

Detail by Entity Name

Florida Profit CorporationTWIN LAKES DEVELOPMENT COMPANY
Filing Information
H6950900000000008/02/1985FLINACTIVEINVOLUNTARILY DISSOLVED11/16/1987NONE
Principal Address
505 NORTH ORLANDO AVENUE
COCOA BEACH, FL 32931
Mailing Address
505 NORTH ORLANDO AVENUE
COCOA BEACH, FL 32931
Registered Agent Name & AddressMOSELY, CURTIS R.
505 NO ORLANDO AVENUE
COCOA BCH, FL 32931
Officer/Director DetailName & Address

Title PD

MOSLEY, CURTIS R.
505 NO ORLANDO AVE
COCOA BEACH, FL
Annual Reports
Report YearFiled Date
198608/25/1986

Document Images
No images are available for this filing.


possible precursor to merger with transcend development

Detail by Entity Name

Florida Profit CorporationTWIN LAKES DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION
Filing Information
39956959139664804/17/1972FLINACTIVECANCEL FOR NON-PAYMENT12/01/1977NONE
Principal Address
PENTHOUSE,GREATER MIAMI FEDERAL BLDG.
200 SE FIRST STREET
MIAMI, FL 33131
Mailing Address
PENTHOUSE,GREATER MIAMI FEDERAL BLDG.
200 SE FIRST STREET
MIAMI, FL 33131
Registered Agent Name & AddressLANDY,BURTON A
PENTHOUSE,GREATER MIAMI FEDERAL BLDG.
**RESIGNED 12/9/77**
MIAMI, FL 33131
Officer/Director DetailName & Address

Title PD

LORIE JR,ANGEL
7401 SW 117TH AVENUE
MIAMI, FL

Title VD

MARTIN,CARLOS
2034 NW 24TH AVENUE
MIAMI, FL

Title SD

FERNANDEZ,OSCAR
2034 NW 24TH AVENUE
MIAMI, FL
Annual Reports
Report YearFiled Date
197411/21/1974
197502/10/1975
197606/01/1976

Document Images
No images are available for this filing.


all these paid off homes.

savvy investors, WOT?
Print Showing 1 - 10 of 10
Searched for the name 'popovich, gail' in ALL DOCUMENT TYPES type documents from '1/4/1965' to '3/27/2014' Apply Filter

U = Unverified
1
1 To POPOVICH GAIL M SILVER KING HOMES INC 6/30/1999 DEED 9706 1210 L 7 WILDER RESERVE 99200555
2 From POPOVICH GAIL M SUNTRUST BANK TPA BAY 6/30/1999 MODIFICATION 9706 1211 L 7 B 1 WILDER RESERVE 99200556
3 From POPOVICH GAIL M SUNTRUST BANK 9/5/2002 MORTGAGE 11910 865 L 7 WILDER RESERVE 2002302932
4 From POPOVICH GAIL M SUNTRUST BANK 9/5/2002 MORTGAGE 11910 885 L 7 WILDER RESERVE 2002302933
5 From POPOVICH GAIL M SUNTRUST BANK 10/17/2005 AGREEMENT 15642 1114 OR BK 11910 PG 865 2005478801
6 From POPOVICH GAIL M GOLD BANK 10/17/2005 MORTGAGE 15642 1115 L 7 WILDER RESERVE 2005478802
7 To POPOVICH GAIL M SUNTRUST BANK 11/4/2005 SATISFACTION 15714 81 OR BK 11910 PG 885 2005509200
8 To POPOVICH GAIL M SUNTRUST BANK 5/14/2010 RELEASE 19870 430 OR BK 11910 PG 865 2010162171
9 To POPOVICH GAIL M POPOVICH GAIL M 9/8/2010 DEED 20070 802 L 7 WILDER RESERVE 2010301408
10 From POPOVICH GAIL M POPOVICH GAIL M 9/8/2010 DEED 20070 802 L 7 WILDER RESERVE 2010301408
1

THE BIG as in "BIG" emerges SWIFTLY


Detail by Entity Name

Florida Profit CorporationTRANSCEND DEVELOPMENT CORP.
Filing Information
P0000002535759364673203/10/2000FLACTIVECORPORATE MERGER12/28/200112/31/2001
Principal Address
3658 ERINDALE DRIVE
VALRICO, FL 33596

Changed: 02/20/2008
Mailing Address
3658 ERINDALE DRIVE
VALRICO, FL 33596

Changed: 02/20/2008
Registered Agent Name & AddressPOPOVICH, GAIL
3658 ERINDALE DR.
VALRICO, FL 33596

Name Changed: 04/19/2004

Address Changed: 02/20/2008
Officer/Director DetailName & Address

Title PSD

MOHAMAD ALI HASBINI
3658 ERINDALE DRIVE
VALRICO, FL 33596

Title V

APPLEYARD, ROBERT
3658 ERINDALE DRIVE
VALRICO, FL 33596

Title T

POPOVICH, GAIL M
3658 ERINDALE DRIVE
VALRICO, FL 33596
Annual Reports
Report YearFiled Date
201201/19/2012
201302/18/2013
201401/07/2014

holy fuckin shit they disappear the property COMPLETELY just like all the ones my child is taken to !!!

5 Matches found for search results by Subdivision "843"
Parcel IDFolioProperty UseNHSUBDate of SaleSales PriceJust ValueTotal Heated Sq. Ft.V/IQ/UOwner NameAddress
1U-20-28-21-843-000000-00009.0081648-801801002210118433/5/2013$440,000$365,6714,193IQBORCHARD PATRICK D9438 SWIFT CREEK CIR
2U-20-28-21-843-000000-00012.0081648-802401002210118434/26/2013$432,800$318,4923,726IQECK GEORGE H9450 SWIFT CREEK CIR
3U-20-28-21-843-000000-00014.0081648-8028010022101184312/19/2013$568,400$416,3843,983IQDOUGHERTY THOMAS M9458 SWIFT CREEK CIR
4U-20-28-21-843-000000-00017.0081648-8034010022101184310/22/2012$380,300$321,0143,538IQWILLIAMS OSCAR9470 SWIFT CREEK CIR
5U-20-28-21-843-000000-00040.0081648-808001002210118439/25/2013$316,000$282,1533,116IQ** CONFIDENTIAL **XX *** CONFIDENTIAL SITE *** ***

John Kevin Roberts cousin of Dottie Roberts Mason Wetterer intimidated us IN OUR HOME after Pauline Smith Thacker Slay was left for dead in the driveway

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    The Title Co. used by TPD Detective Greg Stout also the President of StoneyCreek HOA hmmm

    Scientology founder's tenets drive Pinellas title company, under fire for rapid document processing
    The Palm Harbor Chamber of Commerce named Nationwide its 2006 large business of the year.
    JIM DAMASKE | Times
    The Palm Harbor Chamber of Commerce named Nationwide its 2006 large business of the year.

    In 2009, a low-profile Pinellas County company drew unwelcome attention in a growing national controversy over home foreclosures.
    Employees of Nationwide Title Clearing, a leading processor of mortgage-related documents for banks, loan servicers and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., were under fire for signing paperwork as "vice president'' of various banks although they actually worked for NTC.
    The assembly-line process in which workers scrawled their names or initials on hundreds of documents at a time — typically without reading them — helped prompt the term "robo-signing.'' Critics said robo-signing raised questions about the accuracy of documents and the legality of thousands of foreclosure cases.
    What few people knew was that the Palm Harbor company had extensive ties to the Church of Scientology. And that NTC's owners, who have donated heavily to church projects, ran the company on management principles of Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard.
    Norm Novitsky, a longtime Scientologist who founded NTC in 1992, once credited the company's success to Scientology.
    "There are many companies like ours,'' he wrote on a Scientology-related website, "but I'm proud to say, through hard work and L. Ron Hubbard's administrative technology, in just a short time we rose to being one of the leading servicers in our field."
    Hubbard's "tech," originally used to manage his church and later adapted to business, stresses the use of statistics to measure and spur employee output. Companies with flat-line statistics showing no change are in an "emergency'' condition, he said.
    The use of Hubbard's technology on Nationwide's busy campus — which can image up to 500,000 pages of mortgage documents a day — has sparked complaints that the company foists Scientology principles on workers and creates a high-pressure environment.
    "Employees are being told not to talk to each other and if they do, they are terminated,'' a manager of WorkNet Pinellas, a nonprofit job agency, wrote in an e-mail to colleagues in December. "Papers that are signed at the time of hire have L. Ron Hubbard info on it.''
    NTC's owners declined to be interviewed. In a statement responding to questions submitted by the St. Petersburg Times, the company acknowledged that it uses Hubbard's techniques, which it described as "nonreligous,'' and that it offers employees courses at work based on his management theories.
    "We use this system because we have found it to be workable,'' the statement said, adding emphasis. "Twenty years ago, NTC started with limited capital, today NTC provides nearly 200 jobs in Pinellas County. This is what we mean by workable.''
    The company denied pressuring or forcing employees to study Scientology or to become Scientologists. "This workplace is for work: no religious prejudice, hostility or intolerance has any role here.''
    Other companies are accused of robo-signing, but there is no indication Hubbard's "tech'' is part of their workplaces. But as one of the nation's leading service providers to the residential mortgage industry, NTC is an example of the Hubbard business principles put into practice. And a look at NTC offers insight into thousands of other companies that use Hubbard's techniques, many of them Tampa Bay businesses also owned by Scientologists.
    Production above all
    Now 64 and retired from NTC, Novitsky lives in California and has become an independent film producer.
    He didn't respond to requests for an interview for this story. But on a website where Scientologists tell how they've been helped by the religion, Novitsky said he joined Scientology during a turbulent period in his early 20s.
    "I couldn't hold onto success very long and ALL of life's mysteries and answers were occluded to me,'' he wrote.
    At a friend's suggestion, Novitsky visited a Scientology center in San Francisco and "the rest is history,'' as he put it. According to the website of his BluNile films, he studied "Organizational Executive Management and Marketing and his early career focused on those areas.''
    Those were areas that fascinated Hubbard.
    Along with writing his seminal work, Dianetics, Hubbard developed operational principles and techniques that could be applied to all organizations, including businesses. First used by staffers in Scientology churches, they eventually were issued as the Organization Executive Course and the Management Series set and were made available to Scientologists.
    Hubbard preached that managers keep a keen eye on statistics and not worry about coddling employees.
    "However one tries to coat the pill, there is no substitute, in an executive, for the ability to get the crew to produce," he wrote. "The fire-breathing product officer will be followed and supported when the wishy-washy old pal guy will be stepped all over in the rush to follow the real leader."
    The only way for an organization to survive is to grow, said Hubbard, who also devised a system of "ethics" in which unproductive employees could work their way out of conditions called "danger'' and "nonexistence.''
    Novitsky embraced Hubbard's theories. By 1988, he had served as president of a California mortgage company and started his own company, Public Home Loans.
    Then in May 1992, "after extensive R&D in the banking services industry,'' Novitsky founded Nationwide Title Clearing in Glendale. It was 5 miles from Scientology's world headquarters in Los Angeles.
    Companies like NTC are premised on a simple idea: Banks have something better to do with their time and staff than processing massive amounts of paperwork. Instead, the servicer handles the preparation and recording of lien releases, assignments of mortgage and other routine documents — work that requires rote efficiency by lower-level employees.
    Just a year later, Novitsky and his wife, Terri, declared bankruptcy. He reported making $5,700 a month at NTC, but had debts of $667,639, including $120,000 he owed his own loan company.
    Records show that Novitsky shared ownership of NTC with three other Scientologists — Alan Turbin, Edward E. Marsh and Ivan "Ike'' Kezsbom. The latter had worked as a loan counselor for Novitsky and had declared bankruptcy himself with nearly $500,000 in debts, most of it from a mortgage and credit cards.
    Within a few years, fortunes markedly improved.
    "By 1996 the company had become one of the leading service companies of its kind,'' Novitsky's BluNile bio says.
    NTC said Novitsky's financial affairs were personal and never affected the company.
    Though NTC remained in California through the '90s, it began looking east to the lower-cost Tampa Bay area. And Clearwater was home to the church's spiritual headquarters and thousands of Scientologists.
    "We wanted a community to settle into permanently and develop headquarters large enough to facilitate an expansion of services,'' Jim Stewart, NTC's former president, would later tell the Palm Harbor Chamber of Commerce. "We found that perfect match in Pinellas County.''
    He added that the bay area "provided a strong employee base.''
    By 2001, Novitksy, Marsh and Kezsbom, NTC's president, all had homes in Clearwater.
    A year later, Abundant Life Family Church, a Christian congregation that had closed its school and needed to reduce its space, sold its three buildings in Palm Harbor for $2.1 million to a new company called National U.S. Alliance. Its incorporation papers had the address of Kezsbom's Clearwater house, but didn't list any officers or directors.
    As the deal was going through, NTC already had applied to do business in Florida. It incorporated in early 2003 and by that summer completed its move to Pinellas County.
    Church before self
    In its early years in Florida, NTC felt the shock waves of a huge fraud that exploited close ties among Scientology's business community.
    Reed Slatkin, a California Scientologist, had promoted himself as a successful financial adviser. In fact, he was running the biggest pre-Madoff Ponzi scheme in history, paying early investors with money raised from newer ones. The trustee in Slatkin's 2001 bankruptcy case alleged that part of the money Slatkin took in was transferred to the Church of Scientology.
    NTC and three of its owners — Novitsky, Marsh and Kezsbom — invested $7.8 million with Slatkin and later submitted claims to the bankruptcy court.
    But in a notable display of loyalty to Scientology, Kezsbom didn't want to be made whole at the expense of his church.
    "I am a long-standing member of the Church of Scientology,'' he wrote the court after learning that the trustee intended to sue to recover money from the church. "I would be opposed to any plan that involves suing my Church.''
    In 2003, Slatkin was sentenced to 14 years in prison on fraud and money-laundering charges. In 2006, the trustee settled the lawsuit with the church and related entities, which agreed to pay $3.5 million.
    Kezsbom didn't live to see it. On Nov. 28, 2003, not long after his letter to the court, he died suddenly at age 56.
    Boom was a boon
    Within a few months of Kezsbom's death, his sons-in-law, John Hillman and Todd Kugler, both Scientolgists, became officers of Nationwide Title Clearing.
    In 2006, the Palm Harbor Chamber of Commerce named it "Large Business of the Year,'' citing its "outstanding presence'' in the community and its Hurricane Katrina relief efforts that collected more than 2,000 pounds of food and other essentials. The company also conducted food and clothing drives for local charities.
    During the real estate boom, NTC grew as millions of loans were sold and resold, creating an avalanche of documents to be processed. But it was not until the bubble burst that notoriety hit.
    With millions of Americans facing foreclosure, defense lawyers pored over mortgage-related documents for any hint of errors or fraud that could be used to defend a foreclosure case.
    In 2008, Chris Hoyer, a Tampa lawyer who runs the online Consumer Warning Network, noticed that the names "Bryan Bly'' and "Crystal Moore'' appeared on documents filed all over the country. Sometimes they signed as notaries, sometimes as vice president of various banks.
    Hoyer discovered that both worked for NTC. Neither had any background in real estate or banking. Bly's previous jobs included remodeling an Eckerd drugstore and working for a carnival operator.
    "These pieces of paper are very important,'' said Hoyer, "and the problem with signing as vice president is that they're not.''
    As criticism mounted, NTC said its procedures were legal and standard in the document-processing industry. It noted that it had corporate resolutions in which banks authorized Bly and other employees to sign on their behalf.
    But in November, Sarasota lawyer Christopher Forrest posted on YouTube videotaped depositions he had taken of Bly, Moore and a co-worker in a foreclosure suit he was defending. The trio stumbled over common terms like "assignment of mortgage'' and described a factory-like process in which they signed hundreds of documents at a time.
    Asked if she ever read any of the documents she signed, Moore replied: "No.''
    Asked how much time she spent with each document, she said: "A few seconds.''
    Unique work culture
    The depositions were embarrassing, and NTC quickly moved to stem the damage.
    With bloggers pouncing on the depositions as more evidence of alleged "robo-signing,'' NTC got a court order forcing Forrest to remove them from YouTube. It also sued St. Petersburg lawyer Matthew Weidner in a case that was settled after he deleted from his blog statements that the company called false and libelous.
    All 50 state attorneys general are investigating allegations of errors and fraud in documents that banks need to foreclose. NTC does not prepare foreclosure documents like lis pendens and affidavits of lost note, and is not among the companies under probe.
    But NTC is being sued in federal court by a Wisconsin couple facing foreclosure. They allege that NTC prepared thousands of assignments of mortgage, which transfer ownership of a loan from one party to another, as part of a scheme to make it appear that Deutsche Bank owned their loans and those of other homeowners.
    In none of the depositions made public so far have lawyers asked about NTC's ties to Scientology. But in a deposition last year in a Duval County foreclosure case, the company's senior vice president of administration — Erika Lance — referred to "the organizing board'' that shows the company's various divisions.
    "Org Boards'' — as they are usually called — are common in businesses that use Hubbard's organizational and management techniques.
    Lance joined NTC in 2004 and was making nearly $84,000 as of late 2009, unusual for someone with a GED. She previously worked for other Scientologist-owned companies and in a Web posting wrote about "My Success in Scientology.''
    "It has given me the opportunity to get an education by the use of the study technology,'' wrote Lance, now 37. "Scientology has enabled me to start a career early and advance up the corporate ladder and earn 4x the amount someone my age normally makes.''
    NTC said Lance posted her comments before joining the company. But it acknowledged it has a training center where employees can take courses based on what NTC called the "nonreligious principles'' of WISE — the World Institute of Scientology Enterprises. An arm of the church, WISE brings Hubbard's management "tech" to the business world and attracts new members to Scientology.
    NTC's employment applications carry an acknowledgement that the company uses Hubbard's management system. His ideas are everywhere at the company's campus:
    • The training center offers Hubbard management courses such as "How to Effectively Handle Work'' and "Formulas for Business Success.''
    • Some NTC staffers keep Hubbard's management books on their desks for ready reference. The company also displays WISE "training materials of all kinds and types,'' the NTC statement said. The materials cover topics such as managing by statistics and analyzing trends.
    • Workers are paid their regular hourly wages to attend the in-house training sessions, which are made available to Scientologists and non-Scientologists alike. The company said it kept no record of the "varying faiths of our personnel that took these courses.''
    None of this puts non-Scientologists at a disadvantage, the company said. "NTC practices equal opportunity employment and does not discriminate against employees on the basis of race, sex, creed, color, national origin or religion.''
    NTC estimated that about 85 percent of its 196 employees are non-Scientologists.
    Workers' complaints
    Over the years, the church's involvement in the business world has sometimes caused confusion and debate, leading to lawsuits in Pinellas and several states that allege the presence of Hubbard's teachings in the workplace violated labor laws. (NTC has not been sued on such grounds.)
    While Scientologist-owned companies say they use a secular version of Hubbard's management "tech," the distinction is not always clear to non-Scientology employees, some of whom have reported what they view as workplace discrimination and proselytizing.
    In December, WorkNet Pinellas received complaints about NTC and its Scientology ties.
    "Be careful about applying for any job at this company,'' one woman wrote. "The turnover is very high for a reason. This conduct must be condoned by Scientology since it has been going on for years.''
    A recruiter for WorkNet Pinellas called the company, according to e-mails obtained by the Times through a public records request.
    "Of course they swear the company is legit and welcomed me to interview any of their staff,'' the recruiter told WorkNet colleagues in an e-mail. "Still skeptical but not sure what rule I can go by to close the orders (job postings).''
    NTC is among hundreds of companies that post job openings on Employ Florida Marketplace, a state-run jobs site. WorkNet decided to leave up the only job NTC had posted at the time, the e-mails show.
    Ed Peachey, president of WorkNet Pinellas, wouldn't comment on the complaints. "You're not going to drag WorkNet into any lawsuit,'' he told a reporter.
    Since NTC moved to Florida in 2003, Eileen McQuown has sent hundreds of temporary workers there. "I know they are Scientologists,'' said McQuown, owner of Accord Staffing in Palm Harbor.
    Most of the temporaries had good experiences, and several took permanent jobs, she said.
    But she also heard gripes, especially about the workload: "It was a very high-pressure place, super busy at times.''
    Some temporary employees also complained about the presence of Scientology in the workplace, McQuown said, though she said she had no evidence NTC asked them to take Scientology-related courses. But some who became permanent told her they were encouraged to pursue study programs.
    "I heard from people that in order to move up in the company you had to take their classes," McQuown said. She also noted she has heard the opposite from other former temps who were hired on and haven't taken the courses.
    McQuown said she never took any of the complaints to NTC management.
    At Select Staffing, a competing temp service, area manager Tommy Tsaousis said he had only good experiences placing temporaries at Nationwide and would be eager to work with the company again.
    "If there is a newsworthy story relating to NTC,'' the company said in its statements to the Times, "it should focus on the quality services and ethical practices of NTC … not the religious beliefs of any of its leadership or employees.''
    Times researchers Shirl Kennedy and Carolyn Edds contributed to this report. Susan Taylor Martin can be contacted at susan@sptimes.com, Joe Childs can be contacted at childs@sptimes.com. Thomas C. Tobin can be contacted at tobin@sptimes.com
    Scientology founder's tenets drive Pinellas title company, under fire for rapid document processing 01/29/11 [Last modified: Saturday, January 29, 2011 10:29pm]
    © 2014 Tampa Bay Times


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    94 Comments

    DICKROTTFUNKSSLess than a minute ago
    This is the company used by Suntrust Bank and Detective Greg Stout who is trying to intimidate my cousin from speaking out about a murder covered up by TPD.
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    advocate101502 days ago
    I am a former employee and I couldn't agree more. This has to be one of the worst companies I have worked for. And an fyi NTC has been sued on several occasions from former employees. A coworker was forced to take the courses mentioned in order to become a supervisor. Where is justice to shut this company down once and for all for religious discrimination!­!!
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    CaptBuckSnort994 days ago
    Forget about the Church of Ron, and think about the fraud! Where is Pam Bondi? Where is justice? Fraudsters an Banksters have robbed this whole country, and are getting away with it!!
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    slkai1028 days ago
    The most important thing to remember is this: SCIENTOLOGY IS NOT A RELIGION...it is a BUSINESS. Why is it allowed tax-exempt status? Can I call myself the Church of the Nutjob and save myself a bunch of hard earned money to Uncle Sam? After reading all this, I will surely be trying to find lists of all COS affiliated business in Pinellas so I can avoid patronizing them. When I lived in L.A., I wanted to look around their beautiful building on Franklin Bl. but was told I would have to pay for their classes before I would be allowed inside the doors. I was dead-broke at the time but their rep. continued to push and push me to join, even going so far as trying to perform some kind of a test on me with 2 aluminum cans joined by string. Talk about HOKEY! I was young and naive, but even then WAY too smart to get involved with such an obvious cult. A relative was on the COS jury once and suffered from nightmares after hearing tales of COS practices. Evil fux.
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    edawn1149 days ago
    Oh-oh. This is my second posting criticizing the article. I'll be branded a "sock-puppet". You anti and pro-Scientologi­sts, have at it. But I didn't like the journalism. It uses innuendo and inference to suggest that fraud was committed by NTC whereas other data I'd seen suggested they hadn't done so, despite depositions that omitted relevant data. I came back as I hit this link, something factual on the fraud-point: http://www.docs­toc.com/docs/70­597629/Nationwi­de-Title-Cleari­ng%E2%80%99s-Pr­actices-Pass-Ex­tensive-Reviews­
    This supports NTC as being legit with real data. Now I'll back away and let the fight about Scientology recommence. I just wished we were better served by this newspaper.
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    cultofgreed1149 days ago
    Why the copy-paste? Just some uninterested party who "happened" to come across a link?
    You don't like the article. Duly noted. I did. Did you know Scientology was convicted of organized fraud in France? Fraud and Scientology go hand in hand. Don't blame the messenger for reporting it.
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    cultofgreed1149 days ago
    Why the copy-paste? Just some uninterested party who "happened" to come across a link?
    You don't like the article. Duly noted. I did. Did you know Scientology was convicted of organized fraud in France? Fraud and Scientology go hand in hand. Don't blame the messenger for reporting it.
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    Wendyeo1151 days ago
    ers, there were sometimes thousands of such documents to be notarized in a single day,” Bly’s statement said. “On those days, I would typically be notarizing documents for many hours.”

    Bly said he noticed that other NTC employees whose names appeared on documents as vice presidents or witnesses were signing “only with their initials and sometimes squiggles that barely approximated initials.”

    “Over time,” Bly continued, “the notarial signature I affixed to those documents became progressively shorter and shorter until at last I was merely signing B. I was not, at the time, aware that this could be characterized as a violation of state law.”

    Bly’s statement said that on May 5, 2009 — two days after the Times story ran — Nationwide Title was told by its legal counsel that Florida law prohibits notaries from signing with anything but their commissioned signature. Bly said he tried to change his signature to the shorter B. Bly, but couldn’t until his notary commission expires in 2011.

    A
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    Wendyeo1151 days ago
    http://marioken­ny.wordpress.co­m/2010/07/

    The 2009 Times story caught the attention of Samuel Smart, a Naples homeowner whose loan has changed hands twice.

    “The real concern I have, if I were to sell my house, who can legitimately sign off on my mortgage?” Smart said.

    Last year, when MoreEquity Inc. transferred his loan to another company, Smart noticed that the mortgage assignment was signed by Crystal Moore as vice president of MoreEquity and notarized by Bly. However, Bly signed with only a B and not as “Bryan J. Bly,” the signature approved by the state.

    Florida law says: “Once commissioned, the notary must sign precisely as commissioned by the state of Florida, in the exact name appearing on your notarial commission certificate.”

    Smart complained to Gov. Charlie Crist’s office, which regulates notaries. Asked to respond to the complaint, Bly submitted a sworn statement that gave a glimpse into the workings of Nationwide Title Clearing.

    “Depending on the needs of NTC’s custome
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    karma1151 days ago
    Robo-signers and CoS. Go figure...I would have never guessed.
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    ObjectiveReporting1151 days ago
    INTERESTING TO NOTICE that the vast majority of hate-speech comments that the Times encourages here are entirely irrelevant to the article. | That's because there is only a breath of a story in the events. Only the Times' knee-jerk attack reflex toward anything related to Scientology propels this to publication. Notice there's zeeero legal action against NTC. Notice only the Times covered it (unless some other rag copies this wannabe story.) | The real story should be Times staff's misuse of WWW electrons and print stock to further its own greedy ambitions at the expense of a church that helps millions.
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    anon81091151 days ago
    Only thing that is "INTERESTING TO NOTICE" is that the Scientology enterprise has completely failed in its attempt to draw attention away from the facts by attacking the newspaper.

    What I find most interesting is that Hubbard wrote that Xenu was the ruler of a Galactic Confederacy 75 million years ago and that "body thetans" and "clusters of body thetans" are responsible for everything bad that ever happens, such as disease and crime.

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    Wendyeo1151 days ago
    You're not going to talk about the Poynter Institute, ObjectiveReport­ing,proudwheel,­JamesP?
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    Chubby Davis1151 days ago
    These crackpots filling 200+ paychecks.....U­SA ranked 28 in the most crooked country....
    The rich pay a fine and the poor go to jail!

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    singldad1151 days ago
    Another example of why SCN does not qualify as a church. If anyone has questions about Scientology & what it stands for, I would recommend reading "A Piece of Blue Sky" by Jon Atack, a former member. It's available by free & legal download at:
    http://www.cs.c­mu.edu/~dst/Lib­rary/Shelf/atac­k/ . I had many questions, since their "spiritual" headquarters is located where I live. One of their many ways of attacking is to literally attack the person, not the issue. It was always about the money w/ LRH and the power. I appreciate SPT's fortitude in continuing to look into this cult. It's the original pyramid scheme at work. The scary part is that people believe in the writings of a science fiction writer that was a documented liar.
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    ObjectiveReporting1151 days ago
    THIS IS WAY TOO SIMPLE: Either the company has the permissions of the banks to act on their behalf--as they say they have--and they produce them...or they do not. Next case, O Great Pretender. ¶ Even then the question arises why the Times--from among all the hundreds of companies involved in foreclosures--j­ust had to pick one owned by Scientologists to "expose." ¶ The Times has a neat little money-machine working here. They enjoy pocketing the money from the ad hits from the anti- and pro-Scientologi­sts when they slop together yet another badly organized and discontinuous article with the words "Scientology" and "Scientologist" spattered throughout.
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    Wendyeo1151 days ago

    If it's so simple why the prepared copy-pasta and why have at least 4 sock-puppets accounts to trumpet the "simplicity"?
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    ObjectiveReporting1148 days ago
    Typical of anti-Scientolog­ists, your unexamined, knee-jerk accusations are inaccurate and based on faulty observation, lack of facts, and an IQ-lite compulsion to criticize anyone who speaks up for Scientology. You made my point by taking the ad hominem tack, rather than address the content of my post. ¶ The ¶ "paragraph symbol" is inserted with an ALT-sequence (you should learn them) to show the intent of a paragraph break, since this primitive forum strips out paragraph separations. Nor is this forum exactly WYSIWYG, hence the SPTimes goofy insertion of the decorated cap A. ¶ The only sock-puppets I know reside in the toolbox your lot uses to stuff these forums. ¶ Back to my point: this article above wastes more words and more staff dollars for a no-story than any other news media would bother to squander. ¶ Is one investigator at NTC's door? Where is one official letter of reproach? Where is even a ten-cent fine or penalty to NTC? ¶ Until you have substance, you have vacuum.
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    bobjohnson1151 days ago
    You mean "made up" words.
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    Roblinboy1151 days ago
    Well if you are picking one company to focus on during America's economic crisis and then make it an attack on entire religion, it says a lot more about the writer and the paper than it does about Scientology. I expect next week you will feature an article on some other mortgage company which failed which had a Christian owner and criticize Christianity or perhaps you will focus on a company owned by an athirst and give us your grand conclusions on their belief system? I hate to have to point this out, but taking into account all the valuable and successful literacy programs, drug rehab, the assistance in terms of disaster relief, which this church does on a regular basis, your rant on Scientology is not very informative or rational. Anyone who actually reads a few basic Scientology books, and who actually makes sure they don't go by any misunderstood words, will see some useful advice there that they can apply to their life to improve it.. I look forward to one

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    Wendyeo1151 days ago

    I think you Scientologists need to look up "misunderstood words", Tommy Davis said that you guys are not motivated by critics or bad press but yet the Scientology Office of Special Affairs agents and associated sock-puppets always swarm these "entheta" articles.
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    PinellasResident20111151 days ago
    @Roblinboy: You wrote "I expect next week you will feature an article on some other mortgage company which failed which had a Christian owner and criticize Christianity...­"

    Christianity is not a minority religion. Nobody asks anyone these days "what religion are you" in the workplace. However, having a company where 85% of the employees are from the same minority religion and where company policy is to use that minority religion's hallmark business techniques is a bit odd.

    You cannot separate the Scientology from a business run with Hubbard (allegedly-secu­lar) techniques and procedures. Those same procedures were written by Hubbard to run CHURCHES of Scientology, not non-Scientology businesses. Hubbard recommended to take Scientology and infiltrate one's own business with it, thus making Scientologists at the same time.

    The WISE membership agreement starts with this sentence: "WISE is a non-profit religious fellowship organization formed for the purpose of uniting all businesses and
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    PinellasResident20111151 days ago
    Post was cut-short... continued here...

    The WISE membership agreement starts with this sentence: "WISE is a non-profit religious fellowship organization formed for the purpose of uniting all businesses and professional individuals and organizations of whatever kind that use the technology of L. Ron Hubbard for administrative, business and improvement purposes, to promote and foster the religious teachings of LRH in society. This includes encouragement of adherence to the goals, tenets, doctrines, codes, Creed, policies and practices set forth in the Scientology Scriptures and other writings of LRH ..."
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    PinellasResident20111151 days ago
    Post was cut-short... continued here...

    The WISE membership agreement starts with this sentence: "WISE is a non-profit religious fellowship organization formed for the purpose of uniting all businesses and professional individuals and organizations of whatever kind that use the technology of L. Ron Hubbard for administrative, business and improvement purposes, to promote and foster the religious teachings of LRH in society. This includes encouragement of adherence to the goals, tenets, doctrines, codes, Creed, policies and practices set forth in the Scientology Scriptures and other writings of LRH ..."
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    FL 1151 days ago
    What are you talking about.

    "NTC does not prepare foreclosure documents like lis pendens and affidavits of lost note, and is not among the companies under probe."

    Yes, NTC has prepared (Jessica Fretwell), executed (Crystal Moore) and notarized (Bryan Bly) an Affidavit of Lost Note for Saxon Mortgage Services.

    I have it, the US Attorney General has it, the FL Attorney General has it, and the Federal Reserve has it too.

    So, do not say NTC has not in the past prepared and executed affidavits of lost note. Report the facts.
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    ___1151 days ago
    The focus on stats in these companies is the most important thing as it is thought that is leads to affluence and therefore money. But there are so many stats that they are useless. So time is wasted tracking said useless stats instead of on productive activities; this leads to practices such as robo-signing and crap quality, which leads to turnover and the inability to retain clients. I imagine this is why telemarketing is such a big thing for them. They even telemarket their own members.
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    american patriot1151 days ago
    L Ron Hubbard was a bad science fiction writer, who when interviewed about his thoughts on ways to get rich was quoted as saying "start a religion and sell it to the masses." He simply took his own advice. It's not a church, their god is false. Members are idol worshippers. Isn't it time to call this what it is? Isn't it time to pull this evil bunch out by the roots?
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    EdRingwald1151 days ago
    Scientology = nothing more than a cult whose followers are brainwashed.

    Nationwide Title Clearing = needs to be under investigation for mortgage document fraud. Nationwide Title Clearing is nothing more than a front for Scientology and a mortgage foreclosure robo-signing fraud factory.

    Any questions?
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    edawn1152 days ago
    The last paragraph of the article does make some sense to me:

    "If there is a newsworthy story relating to NTC,'' the company said in its statements to theTimes, "it should focus on the quality services and ethical practices of NTC … not the religious beliefs of any of its leadership or employees.''

    I̢۪d like to see an in-depth article taking apart the actual procedures and stacking them up against the law and accepted practices. Is it OK that Moore never read any of the documents and, herself, only spent seconds on each? Originally that seemed shocking, but later other facts surfaced giving more context.

    Matthew Weidner in his retraction said he had not been fully informed, that there was nothing wrong with a team researching, reviewing and verifying accuracy of these types of documents, culminating in one person who̢۪s only task was to sign to affirm that that work had been done.

    How about an article getting to the bottom of the furore outlining the type of work done at NTC, e
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    edawn1152 days ago
    The last paragraph of the article does make some sense to me:

    "If there is a newsworthy story relating to NTC,'' the company said in its statements to theTimes, "it should focus on the quality services and ethical practices of NTC … not the religious beliefs of any of its leadership or employees.''

    I̢۪d like to see an in-depth article taking apart the actual procedures and stacking them up against the law and accepted practices. Is it OK that Moore never read any of the documents and, herself, only spent seconds on each? Originally that seemed shocking, but later other facts surfaced giving more context.

    Matthew Weidner in his retraction said he had not been fully informed, that there was nothing wrong with a team researching, reviewing and verifying accuracy of these types of documents, culminating in one person who̢۪s only task was to sign to affirm that that work had been done.

    How about an article getting to the bottom of the furore outlining the type of work done at NTC, e
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    Zanne1152 days ago
    Is Rick Scott a closet scientologist?? LOL.
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    whatsgoinon1152 days ago
    Can the SP Times run an article that lists all Scientology owned companies so I can avoid applying for a job at them?
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    singldad1151 days ago
    I think that list would amaze you. It would also amaze you to know how many properties & support companies they own.
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    PinellasResident20111151 days ago
    @whatsgoinon: The information is all over the internet. There are many compiled lists of scio-employers. Try your favorite search engine.
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    vod1152 days ago
    FYI/fwiw: apparently all references to robo-signing or robo anything have been purged from the nwtc.com website. references seem to exist in bing, yahoo & some of the google listed search results/indexes of the caches specifically regarding FAQs 7 and 5b but other than that it's been wiped clean.

    IF they did nothing wrong, why erase everything from the site?
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    bobjohnson1152 days ago
    @ Ms B if that is true why have there been so many law suits where employees are suing their employer (who use Hubbard management Tech) for forcing them to take scientology courses? Diskkeeper being one of the biggest suits.
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    Ms B1152 days ago
    I am not disagreeing that there are some people who are unethical and hide under the technology cloth but this technology doesn't promote illegal activity nor do all people who use it. Simply a case where those who do tarnish the subject for those who use it honestly. I am not a church flag waver but I do like Hubbard's tech.
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    meccaanon1152 days ago
    That's because you don't know any better. Hubbard's "tech" is nothing more than Psychology! The names have been changed and the ethical underpinnings have been removed, but it's all there. Hubbard didn't do any research, he read a bunch of journals around the 1950s, then made up the rest. I feel sorry for people who fell for his trick and it angers me that he betrayed an implied trust as a fiction writer by writing fiction and calling it factual.
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    Scientology student MM1151 days ago
    You got that wrong-- It is Not psychology -- psychs feed patients answers. Sorry that they tricked you.
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    anon81091151 days ago
    You misunderstand psychology and are simply bigoted against it Scientology student MM. Until you try psychology you have no idea what you are talking about. Psychology does nothing but help people.
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    singldad1151 days ago
    Very true, meccaanon. One thing LRH was good at, was writing things down. His journals that were well preserved documented his true intent & his lies. Even though he dispised psychology, he read about it extensively and wrote out his parallel "beliefs" as if they were his own.
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    AnonOrange1152 days ago
    Please don't delete the Scientologist comments. I'm anti-Sci as they get, but I still want to allow them have their say. It's also quite entertaining to read them.
    If they used various sock accounts from the same IP address, then you may state that fact, but please let their comments be.
    In a way, deleting comments from your newspaper website is infringing on the freedom of the press form a first amendment viewpoint.
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    Zanne1152 days ago
    I agree. It's difficult to make sense of some of the responding posts if the original posts are taken down. I'd rather SPT 'outed' the Scientology propaganda mill so readers can see what they are up to!
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    vod1152 days ago
    Note this authoritarian system of controlling employees is, like the despots of the middle east who are falling now, a concept whose time has gone.

    And is in stark contrast to Fortune's 100 Best Companies to Work For http://j.mp/h4P­0GO which prove that treating employees VERY well results in great long term financial rewards, riches and success for not only the company and employees, but for investors.

    Dishonest manipulative authoritarian regimes — whether in government or business — are no longer tenable for the future and will continue to fall like dominos.
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    vod1152 days ago
    "Clearing" is a concept (a type of manipulated biofeedback/psy­chological control) used in scientology to control the flock. So obviously the guy used it as an inside joke / homage to their beliefs by the name: Nationwide Title Clearing
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    Stashu1152 days ago
    Jezze! Can't even say $ lut?
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    Stashu1152 days ago
    ""Tommy Tsaousis said he had only good experiences placing temporaries at Nationwide and would be eager to work with the company again.

    "If there is a newsworthy story relating to NTC,'' the company said in its statements to the Times, "it should focus on the quality services and ethical practices of NTC … not the religious beliefs of any of its leadership or employees.''"

    SLAVE SLUT!


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    jenesu1152 days ago
    WE DO NOT CARE ABOUT YOUR ON-GOING FUED WITH THE SCIENTOLOGISTS SPT. STOP USING YOUR LEFTIST CRAP MAG TO PUSH YOUR VIEWS DOWN OUR THROATS. WE DO NOT CARE, WE DO NOT CARE, WE DO NOT CARE, WE DO NOT CARE!!!!!!!! WHAT IS YOUR PROBLEM?
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    A_Watcher1152 days ago
    The problem is The SP Times is one of the VERY few papers who is willing to take on Scientology. The problem is that Scientology has ingrained itself into almost every facet of society and it needs to be expunged.
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    meccaanon1152 days ago
    You may not care jenesu. Many of us who live in this community Do care. Perhaps you should urge your California-base­d sect to go back to where they came from. Under a rock I expect, but at least they will be our of our hair.
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    ServingHim1152 days ago
    Speak for yourself A_Watcher, there of some of us who DO care! This organization is a cult to the core of it's being and L. Ron Hubbard has no credibility as a spiritual leader. Jesus claimed to be God in the flesh and rose from the dead after paying for the sins of mankind. Mr. Hubbards death and his continuation in that state, disqualifies him from having ANY credibility.
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    Super Bob1151 days ago
    LMAO... AWESOME. Yeah, ancient souls in volcanos with space nukes and aliens is too weird... But ancient Palastinian priests rising from the dead after sacrificing themselves TO themselves to make up for laws that THEY created... Totally believable!

    You religionists and your selective magic belief are just TOO much hahaha... Newsflash Pastor Pete: Many of us believe that simply being a fictional character in a single 1,700 year old book doesn't give you any credibility as a spiritual leader, either. At least "Mr. Hubbard" actually took the time to write down his OWN WORDS, unlike your Jesus character, who pretty much just relied on his secretaries to take down the "MOST IMPORTANT MESSAGE EVAH!!1!"

    Pretty lazy and irresonsible in my opinion.

    Hell, even Muhammad took the time to do some writing HIMSELF! Anyway, yeah. Christianity is just as much of a cult, except it's divided into 38,000 denominations because one of you can agree on what your god was really talking about lol.
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    Super Bob1151 days ago
    *one = NONE. And an extra LOL@U. LOL.
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    KatieM1151 days ago
    The great religions of the world, while filled with diverse and colorful myths, have one thing in common: they produce wise mystics. Take a Jesuit, Buddhist, Sufi (etc) monk or nun, and they will have a common bond of mystical wisdom and compassion they can discuss... having arrived at a similar place through different means. However, a scientologist is more likely to get good at lying, manipulating, cheating and trying to ruin other peoples lives. That's what the founder intended.
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    ServingHim1152 days ago
    My apologies "A_Watcher", those comments were directed to "jenesu"...
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    denise1001152 days ago
    Most of us DO care, so go away.
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    Katarina1152 days ago
    Jenedu... what time did you get your text? And remember copy and paste it back as directed ! Oh and ...don't drink the Koolaid
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    mousetti1152 days ago
    Under David Miscavige, the current worldwide membership of active Scientologists has dwindled to under 40,000.
    Either the membership is too blind or worse, complicit, in endorsing the corruption.
    Glossy PR, photoshopped crowds, ridiculous statistics like 'Square 
feet
 of
 book
 cover 
cloth' seem to be enough to convince the gullible that expansion is the order of the day. Yet the classrooms are ghost towns and the completions few.
    In the end, these members will have to face the fact that they allowed it to happen.
    Google is your friend.
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    SandyGina1152 days ago
    Those friggin clams are everywhere.....­
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    bobjohnson1152 days ago
    Please Ms B, scientology tenets has everything to do with how this company is run. This company is run under Hubbard management Tech.

    If Hubbards management Tech is wrong what else was he wrong about?
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    Ms B1152 days ago
    Sorry, I disagree with your viewpoint. Nowhere in manangement tech does it promote breaking laws such as is suggested in requiring employees to participate in ones religion. Nor would it include signing documents without a thorough study and full understanding. This company is criminal. It took shortcuts, as did other's in the same industry, which were unethical. If you were to compare this to the responsibility of an individual who signs legal contracts without reading them. When an individual does this any harm is considered self created. But, just like a lawyer, this company was expected to fully understand any contract they puts their name to, not doing so is legally reprehensible. Persons who break the laws should be held accountable. The technology is not the person using it. I've used this technology for over 30 years and have always been ethical and fair in my interactions with my employees and clients, both regard me very favorably. Just like all Christians aren't th
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    cultofgreed1152 days ago
    My ex-roommate was fired from a Scientology owned business because she told them she wasn't interested in taking Scientology courses they tried to force upon her. So you see, your statement that Scientology does not try to force one to participate in the "religion" is an outright lie.
    As for the criminality, it sure seems that a lot of high ranking Scientologists are caught in various criminal activities, like Rex Fowler, Reed Slatkin, the Scientologists convicted of organized fraud in France, etc. It seems to me that Scientology's only goal is to make money, ethics be damned.
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    PinellasResident20111151 days ago
    @Ms B: You wrote "Nowhere in manangement tech does ... it include signing documents without a thorough study and full understanding." All Scientologists and pre-Scientologi­sts are required to sign multiple documents before taking a course at a Church of Scientology... as well as any WISE course or course in Hubbard Management Technology even if taken at their employer's office. Routinely these documents are shoved under people's noses and the signer is not given ample time to read the documents. People are forbidden to take the documents home with them to read, or to seek legal counsel about them. They are pressured to sign without understanding or advice. In addition, signers are not given copies of these documents after signing.

    This is the normal practice of Scientology, whether or not it is written in the scriptures or in Hubbard Management Tech. With a Scientologist-m­ajority (85%) employer, you can bet the practice is the same at NTC.

    References: http://www.expo­sescientology.c­o
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    PinellasResident20111151 days ago
    continued...
    .com/scientolog­ycontracts.html­#membersenrolli­ng
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    Ms B1152 days ago
    What these people did was negligent and criminal, their actions affecting many, many people. It's too bad that the Hubbard's Management technology got thrown under the bus in this article. Nowhere in this methodology are these types of actions condoned.
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    Oscillatory Frequency1152 days ago
    I feel sorry for some of the unwitting job applicants who get hired by companies using "Hubbard business management" techniques, even though they are as nonreligious as the "Church" of Scientology itself. Whether "ecclesiastical­" and dressed with super secret sacred Xenu "scriptures," the bulk of what Scientology teaches is the "hard sell" with employees enduring unusual pressure for stats. And then there's the draconian rules, "like not talking to each other" about any of the issues in the office. Just follow, unquestioningly­, like a robot, and sign, because it makes money.
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    psychocuda1152 days ago
    As usual the overwhelming thumbs up voting for anti COS comments outweigh the thumbs down. Can't they take a hint that they're not liked or welcome & should leave? Haven't been to downtown Clearwater in 30+ years. Used to be a pretty cool place.
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    Tarpley1152 days ago
    Crooks.
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    reddogbluedog1152 days ago
    XENU!!!!!!!
    oops, did I spoil the end of your book for you?
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    hardraada1152 days ago
    Much as I despise Scientology and the slavish robots who let others tell them how to live, is there actually any law against having a religion-based workplace? I cannot even imagine working for these slimes (I won't break the law for an employer, for one thing) but I see entire phone books put out listing only "Christian" companies and the implication is that you should only deal with those because - well - because they're adherents to the 'good' religion.

    The real story here is that Nationwide Title Clearing is committing wholesale violations of the law, and doing what any ethical person would automatically know to be wrong. And those 200 people they employ? They are welcome to go elsewhere if they do not like the work conditions which, apparently, include lying and risking your own freedom while breaking the law.
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    Lily1152 days ago
    I think the difference is that Scientology has a strong arm and brain washing way of getting people to lie and risk their own freedom. Christianity seems to discourage lying and treating people like slaves. I am sure there are instances when Christianity took advantage of people, but it is not a part of the religion's tenants.
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    Katarina1152 days ago
    what caught my eye is the statement that employees are NOT allowed to communicate w/each other...if caught they are termimated.. how odd is that...is that the norm for the CoS ? Separate and conquer
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    ___1151 days ago
    All depends on the job; some like to pull out a bottle and drink while on the clock and encourage employees to do so as well. This seems like it has a telemarketing type set-up, so sounds entirely true. I knew of telemarketers fired for not smiling while talking on the phone.
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    dishy1151 days ago
    I think what might be "illegal" is the practice of only promoting those people who take the religion classes. That might qualify as religious discrimination.­
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    ___1150 days ago
    Yep, check the people at the executive level on the org chart.
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    willie_from_penniles­s_park1152 days ago
    this evil cult has its tentacles all over Pinellas
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    Had Enough1152 days ago
    Keep digging - this story is but the tip of the iceberg of criminality Scientology has brought to the community. Thank you SP Times - oh, and Davey, tick-tock, tick-tock.
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    eddieVroom1152 days ago
    Here is what I need you to do:

    1. I will contact you with data on where a negative article is - I
    will probably text you as that will be quickest.

    2. You log on to the site of the newspaper and go to the article.
    Please do this as soon as possible after getting the text from me.

    3. You do not necessarily have to read all the article.

    4. There will be an opinions section or forum close to the article.

    5. I need you to write a good roads, good weather comment here stating
    some tru data about SCN - using a personal experience is good! DO NOT
    take up any entheta - grant to no beingness. It is important not to
    engage the opposition and get into a debate or react to provocations.
    You can also if you wish deviate off the subject onto a new topic. The
    concentration of your post is to fill the vacuum per PR Series 18 and
    continue to talk about expansion!!!

    6. When you have done - copy and paste your post and email it back to me.
    If you have any questions, call me on . I know this is
    total
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    cultofgreed1152 days ago
    Nice eddie. A leaked e-mail from OSA ordering the internet "handlers" what to do whenever a negative piece is written.
    "And continue to talk about expansion" Too funny.
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    eddieVroom1152 days ago
    The following email was originally sent by Zabrina Collins, an ethics officer in the UK. It shows how Scientology handles criticism in online news articles.....

    ---- Quote ------

    ---------- Forwarded message ----------

    From: zabrina collins

    Date: Sat, 25 September 2010

    Subject: Please read this asap - important!

    To:

    Hi Guys,

    I am working with OSA to get some good PR onto online versions of the
    Irish newspapers. You may or may not know that Panorama is doing a 2nd
    take of their documentary on the Church a couple of years ago. This
    new documentary will be aired on Tuesday night on BBC.

    There will be media coverage both before and after the airing. The
    majority of the coverage is expected to be on line. So therefore OSA
    UK have organised a counter create on this whereby certain
    Scientologist are selected to post comments/reader­s opinions/rating­s
    etc where possible next to the articles on line.

    The purpose of
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    mousetti1152 days ago
    Per Scientology's own policy, all materials written or spoken by Hubbard are scripture. Religion is therefore being forced onto the workers when they are made to study WISE (Scientology) materials.

    "In Scientology, terminology the term "scriptures" means the writings and recorded spoken words of L. Ron Hubbard with respect to Scientology applied religious philosophy (including Dianetics spiritual healing technology) and Scientology organizations.
    ...
    Policy Letters are included as part of the Scriptures."
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    anon81091152 days ago
    You have it backwards Jbasoon, er I mean Scientology. If there is a factual error point it out and sue the paper. By the way, you don't have to suffer the threat of Scientology prison if you fail tonight, there is help for you to leave. You don't need to put up with being abused.
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    anon81091152 days ago
    One thing I know: any news article critical of Scientology is 100% accurate, with each fact verified, re-verified, checked and rechecked. C'mon Scientology, prove that this article has any inaccuracies, sue everyone involved. No lawsuit? So you admit to all the crimes described then.
    All the attempts at misdirection in these comments amount to nothing. The article stands.

    I feel sorry for the poor employees of the Scientology enterprise sent here to spam the comments under threat of going to Scientology jail if they don't. For you there is a way out. You don't have to let Scientology put you in their RPF labor camps call 1-800-ex-seaorg­. You don't have to live your life in slavery.
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    EyesOverPinellas1152 days ago
    To claim, "Any news article critical of Scientology is 100% accurate, with each fact verified, re-verified, checked and rechecked" is laughable. Perhaps you should check the facts before attempting to become a martyr for a biased newspaper. Just a few years ago the Times was sued, lost, and paid out $55,000 for a column written by Bill Maxwell where he got the facts wrong. Trust me, the Times is not the infallible publication you believe. Now go on and accuse me of being affiliated with the church so as to continue your record of accuracy.
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    PinellasResident20111151 days ago
    @EyesOverPinell­as: Tobin and Childs have been covering Scientology extensively for quite some time, and they haven't been sued. They know the litigious nature of your Church of Scientology and wouldn't dare publish something without first checking and double-checking their information.
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    bobjohnson1152 days ago
    Hmmm, fraud perpetrated by people from the CoS, sounds reasonable. They get taken by a fraudulent "religion" and they pass the misery on to others.
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    A_Watcher1152 days ago
    'In 2008, Chris Hoyer, a Tampa lawyer who runs the online Consumer Warning Network, noticed that the names "Bryan Bly'' and "Crystal Moore'' appeared on documents filed all over the country. Sometimes they signed as notaries, sometimes as vice president of various banks. Hoyer discovered that both worked for NTC. Neither had any background in real estate or banking. Bly's previous jobs included remodeling an Eckerd drugstore and working for a carnival operator.'

    See, this is the PROBLEM here, OSA. NEITHER person mentioned who had signed off on these documents had ANY of the qualifications needed to make the claims they did on said documents. This constitutes as Fraud and is a HIGHLY punishable crime. There is NO excusing it.
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    bobjohnson1152 days ago
    I love how the morons from the CoS come here and yell "Yellow Journalism" without once addressing any of the issues that are brought up in the article. You know why that is? It's because everything in the article is true.
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    Wu Kapauw1152 days ago
    Ah, I see the Scientology Internet Defense Squad is in full effect in the comments here. Let's just see what 'religious figure' Hubbard has to say on the subject . . . .

    "MAKE MONEY. MAKE MORE MONEY. MAKE OTHER PEOPLE PRODUCE SO AS TO MAKE MORE MONEY."

    - L. Ron Hubbard, Hubbard Communications Office Policy Letter, 9 March 1972, MS OEC 384

    There, now we've cleared the air of this filthy lucre-related topic with some nice 'spiritual teachings'. Never forget what the root motivation of Hubbard's groups are, even if the members themselves are too bamboozled to be aware that they are part of a scam.

    Thousands of Scientologists have woken up in the past 2 years and left the 'Church'. Which one of the apologists posting in this thread will be next? Go ahead, raise your hand, don't be shy if you have doubts.
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    QuentinHubbard1152 days ago
    Again, Tom Tobin and Joe Childs have done an excellent job in exposing the activities of the scientology criminal enterprise. Hubbard told his followers "Never fear to hurt another in a just cause." You could just mass murder and prison camps (like the RPF and Int Base) if you believe that. Does the scientology organization encourage its members to get into scam businesses or it that a result of brainwashing with Hubbard's destructive dogma?
    Scientology needs to be disbanded and shut down as an enterprise dedicated to fraud and racketeering.
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    Wendyeo1152 days ago
    "ran the company on management principles of Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard."

    Yeah, sounds like it. When the Scientology Office of Special Affairs agents and their sock-puppets show up the "robo-signing" it will be easily confirmed.
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    jdr1151 days ago
    I was going to say . . . did they use "principles" and "scientology" in the same sentence?
    winnievelvet1151 days ago
    The work environment is "high pressure" and super busy. Well, what work environment isn't? Any business owner would do what's best for their business. They say that Hubbard's principles are workable for them then good for them. What is the story here again? If a huge corporation applied Feng Shui to determine spatial qualities of its office design, would it be a story? Of course not. The employees are not forced to go Scientology Services or change their religion. The Hubbard techniques are merely applied cuz they work in this company. Nothing wrong with that.
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    PinellasResident20111151 days ago
    @winnievelvet: You wrote "The employees are not forced to go Scientology Services or change their religion. The Hubbard techniques are merely applied cuz they work in this company. Nothing wrong with that." I used to work at NTC. Scientologists don't separate their allegedly-secul­ar workplace Hubbard-lingo from the rest of their scientology-fil­led language. The workplace is filled with 85% Scientologists talking scio-lingo all the time. What non-scientologi­st employee wouldn't feel pressured to become a Scientologist in such an environment? And being paid for Hubbard-trainin­g in the workplace? That's because it's required, dude/dudette!