|
A COUNCIL member who successfully lobbied for city funding of a controversial Scientology medical treatment for 9/11 rescue workers has received nearly $100,000 from L. Ron Hubbard followers, The Post has learned.
City Councilwoman and Manhattan borough-president candidate Margarita Lopez steered $630,000 in taxpayer funds to the New York Rescue Workers Detoxification Project — a center co-founded by Scientologist Tom Cruise.
As taxpayer donations to the group swelled from $30,000 last June to a total of $630,000 a year later, Hubbard's minions stuffed Lopez's campaign coffers, donating 25 percent of her total take. The project — which employs a method proposed by Hubbard in his book "Clear Body, Clear Mind," whereby patients give up traditional medicines for large amounts of niacin, long sauna baths and exercise — opened in September 2002.
The Fulton Street project, dismissed as ineffective by the FDNY, firefighters unions and most in the medical community, treated numerous emergency workers suffering from the aftereffects of 9/11 free of charge and was entirely funded with private dollars — until last February.
Then, Lopez, serving as chair of the Council Committee on Mental Health, heard testimony from Scientologist doctors.
And she apparently believed them.
"This is a program that should be funded," Lopez said, adding, "Who are the stupid people who are criticizing it?"
In fact, Lopez herself seemed to predict the future cozy relationship, telling the doctors at the hearing, "This is not the last time that we're going to see each other. This is the beginning."
Four months later, on June 24, the first $30,000 in public funding was allocated to the project as a Lopez member item.
The very next day, the odd pairing of Lopez the local legislator and Cruise the Hollywood superstar joined together for a ribbon-cutting ceremony opening another "Detoxification" center in Williston Park, L.I. What followed those two events was a Scientologist outpouring of financial support never before seen in the Empire State.
Starting last September, Scientologist cash began arriving in Lopez's campaign bank account by the bucketful. And those donations exploded after December, when an additional $300,000 was allocated to the project after a Bloomberg administration budget modification.
Lopez raised a large chunk of money at a late January fund-raiser in Florida, where she collected $38,000 — all from donors affiliated with Scientology.
Seven employees from Marcus Group Enterprises, a company listed in the World Institute of Scientology Enterprises, gave nearly $20,000 at the event.
In April, Lopez gave $2,800 to a Scientology fund-raising group to sponsor a campaign event in California where additional campaign funds were raised. All told, 84 people with ties to the Church of Scientology dumped $95,850 into Lopez's campaign. And just last month, their efforts were seemingly rewarded as a second $300,000 allocation was made from the council to the Manhattan Detoxification center.
The project also has supporters in Congress.
Sen. Chuck Schumer and Rep. Charles Rangel have both come out in favor of it and Reps. Vito Fossella and Carolyn McCarthy have requested $1.5 million in federal dollars for the New York programs.
In addition, several 9/11 rescue workers swear by the treatment. In a written statement, Lopez said she came to support the project because "many of my constituents as well as officers of the New York City Fire Department came to me urging my support of the New York Rescue Workers Detoxification Project."
"They believed then, and continue to believe, that it has improved their quality of life."
B ut one good-government group expressed alarm over the appearance of a quid pro quo. "It is clear that the Church of Scientology has lobbied at the federal level and given campaign cash through its supporters," said Rachel Leon of Common Cause.
"Clearly, they know how to advocate for what they want through the political process. We only hope that this program is being supported on its merits and not based on connections between the candidate and the contributors."
friedman@nypost.com
www.nypost.com/news/regio.../51380.htm
MIKE BLASTS SCIENTOLOGY
By STEFAN C. FRIEDMAN
Mayor Bloomberg yesterday slammed the Church of Scientology following reports that it pumped big bucks into a councilwoman's campaign for Manhattan borough president.
"I don't think it's real science," Bloomberg said. "Everything I've read about it — and that's not a lot — it doesn't make a lot of sense to me."
The mayor made it clear that he parted ways on Scientology with Manhattan Councilwoman Margarita Lopez, who The Post reported this week pocketed nearly $100,000 in donations from Scientologists.
On the City Council, Lopez steered tax funding to a controversial church-run "detox" program for 9/11 workers.
"I don't agree with her at all on Scientology," Bloomberg said.
But the mayor offered Lopez a near-endorsement despite the Scientology flap, saying, "I do think she'd probably make a good borough president."
Lopez defended herself yesterday.
"Every penny donated to my campaign has been legal and ethical, and has been sanctioned by the Campaign Finance Board," she said in a statement.
"The religious beliefs of individuals who donate to my campaign are not my concern, and are protected by the Constitution of this country."
The controversial Scientology detoxification program on Fulton Street supported by Lopez rejects traditional remedies in favor of large doses of niacin, exercise, long sauna baths and the ingestion of certain oils.
The Post reported that she directed $630,000 to the detox center to treat 9/11 emergency workers and that church followers then poured hefty contributions into her campaign war chest.
A Post article yesterday revealed an e-mail to Scientologists urged them to contribute to Lopez, saying it would "pay dividends" in the future.
Meanwhile, an additional near-$19,000 that was given to Lopez's campaign kitty from Scientologists around the country came to light yesterday, bringing the total to nearly $115,000.
Among the newly discovered donors was Anne Archer, the raven-haired Scientologist beauty who starred in such blockbusters as "Fatal Attraction" and "Patriot Games." She gave $250.
Related Links:
Lerma's Sources of Scientology
Scientology, Satanism and the occult - FactNet
Bible.ca webpage on Scientology and Chistianity compared
Perry Scott's Comparative Theology Page
Ex-member John Atack's Hubbard and the Occult
|