The Cult Awareness Network (or CAN) is a cult-related organization now owned by associates of the Church of Scientology. It previously provided information on groups considered to be cults. It also provided support and referrals to so-called deprogrammers.
It evolved out of the Citizens' Freedom Foundation which Ted Patrick was "the prime force in organizing". (New York Times, September 2, 1974).
In 1995, CAN, Rick Ross and two others were found guilty of conspiracy to violate the civil right to freedom of religion of Jason Scott of the Life Tabernacle Church. Ross was ordered to pay more than $3 million in damages; CAN was ordered to pay in excess of $1 million. Ross had been involved in hundreds of interventions with members of various religious groups over a 15-year period. Scott was allegedly violently and brutally kidnapped, and was forcibly confined for five days. The crippling damage award, plus a large number of additional civil cases brought against it by the Church of Scientology drove CAN into bankruptcy in 1996. Its assets, including records, name and phone number were sold at an auction for $20,000 to a Scientologist.
Supporters and detractors alike use the terms old CAN and new CAN to refer to the two periods of the organization's existence.
Opponents of the old CAN charge that it deliberately provided a distorted picture of the groups it tracked. They claimed it was "a Chicago-based national anticult organization claiming to be purely a tax-exempt informational clearinghouse on new religions". *
In 1991, Time magazine reported:
Around this time, the Church of Scientology struck back. In The American Lawyer, an article recounts:
After driving the Cult Awareness Network to bankruptcy, a Scientologist attorney appeared in bankruptcy court and managed to win the bidding for what remained of the organization.
On December 12, 1996, a usenet posting by "lah" (later revealed by TIME magazine to be the account of one Sister Francis Michael of the Heaven's Gate group) in the newsgroup alt.religion.scientology applauded Scientology for their "courageous action against the Cult Awareness Network" *, which she blamed of "promoting all sort of lies" including "cult activities". A few weeks later, the Heaven's Gate members committed mass suicide.
In the Scientology publication IMPACT, Nr. 72, Scientologist and CAN VP Jean Hornnes explained: "We have successfully prevented deprogrammings and we have taken broken families and helped to put them back together by using standard LRH technology on handling PTSness."
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Cult Awareness Network".
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