TRANSCRIPT:
So, since we’re going to talk about [the Church of Scientology] enrollment forms, we bring in Jeffrey Augustine, okay. First of all, the guy walks in and I’m thinking, I mis-tuned the TV and I’ve tuned in to a reality show for, you know, a convention of botched facelift victims, alright. But more importantly, Jeffrey Augustine is not an expert in anything. He’s never stepped foot in a Scientology organization. He’s never taken a Scientology service.
And yet they’re bringing him in, right. So, the guy [Mike Rinder] who says and testified under oath that he was the one who actually created these forms—they can have this guy who looks like Winchell Mahoney doll, I mean, he literally, he can barely even move his mouth anymore, right, because he’s so worried about his appearance—they’re going to have him put on an act, and literally an act, because he and Leah [Remini] start play acting together. So that [Mike] Rinder can do the bobbing head doll, confirming it all as fact, right.
You know, and she goes into the subjunctive, Leah does, about, “They would threaten you with ‘SP [Suppressive Person] declare’ if you questioned the enrollment form to take it out and have it looked at.” She’s just full of shit. There’s never any prohibition. In fact, there is every encouragement to read the entire thing, okay, always has been.
So, they have Augustine, who’s never been in a Church of Scientology, act out the role of a registrar. Of course, they’ve had Mat Pesch who claims to be the head salesman. Well, he omits that it was for a several-month period only, like 40 or 30 years ago, right. And they pull in a guy to play the role, who’s never even been a Scientologist, right, and she [Leah] play acts with him as if he’s trying to get money from her.
And she says, as they’re talking about the enrollment form, and she says again, “But we don’t know what it says because we are not allowed to read it.” Twice she’s now stated as a fact that you’re not allowed to read the routing form. It’s a complete and utter invented lie. And Mike Rinder knows it.
Augustine says, “You agree—you must agree that you are opposed to psychiatry.” And yet the subliminal, if you hit the pause button and see the actual enrollment form that they’re talking about, the subliminal, if you flip it and stop it, it actually says—the person says, “I don’t believe in or subscribe to.” It doesn’t say, “I’m opposed to it.” “I don’t believe or subscribe.” But they just reinvent by redefinition at the drop of a hat, just constantly.
And he just goes on and bloviates and doesn’t really say much of anything except parrots their line. All the while, they’re not disclosing that he has no basis for knowing anything.
Then they bring in Luis Garcia and his ambulance chasing attorney [Ted] Babbitt, right, which is a complete sham. They start with a chyron [card]: “Luis Garcia’s lawsuit has been making national headlines.” Bullshit—never got any national headlines. It was in regional places that had an obsessive interest with Scientology, period. This is vanity land.
Finally, Luis says, “You finish OT VIII, and you realize it was a sham—a scam.” This is exactly like the JB [John Brousseau] thing, okay. Like I said, I spent beaucoup time with this guy when he got out before anybody else got to him and started programming him, okay. And he absolutely, utterly treasured all of his services up to and including OT VIII, alright. After he left the Church of Scientology.
So, Leah Remini says, “But they make claims all the way up the Bridge—the Scientology Bridge.” Ted Babbitt, the ambulance chaser, says, “That was the basis of our lawsuit.” It was not the basis of your lawsuit. Your client came to me with his complaint, which I advised he think long and hard about before he jumps off the cliff after Mike Rinder, who is making a lot of bread off of you. And it has nothing to do with the claims of the gains that you are going to get moving up the Bridge. Nothing. And this is a guy that’s an officer of the court, stating as a matter of fact, that that’s what his lawsuit is about. It isn’t.
This case—this suit has been going on for four or five years. It’s taken the exact course that I told Luis Garcia it would take. Mike Rinder’s been laughing all the way to the bank—because he’s the only guy that’s not out money for it. He’s the only guy that’s on the positive side of the ledger for it.
He instigated the lawsuit. He acted as a capper. He arranged a deal where he made beaucoup bucks off it. The lawyer is sticking his neck out and so desperate that he’s making unbelievably false statements on national TV about the damn thing, that that was the very basis of the lawsuit he’s lying about. And the fact that he’s “won every battle and every hurdle thus far in the case,” okay. And here we are four years down the line, and that guy is eating it. Luis Garcia is eating it.
But Rinder is getting paid. And, you know, this is a sorry thing, like poor Luis. I like Luis. But he’s just, you know—I tried to warn him, and here he is being used. Rinder is making more by using him as his talent on his show [Aftermath ]. Luis isn’t getting paid for it. Rinder is, big time. And she’s [Leah Remini’s] really getting paid for it.
And he’s being used for Rinder to make more money. And the fact of participating in it, is not forwarding his lawsuit whatsoever. Believe me. I know the litigation process. It’s not helping him in the slightest. It’s doing—and it quite possibly could do him great harm. But he’s just—but they draw people into this vanityland fantasy that you can have your 15 minutes of fame and be a hero on our show, while we laugh all the way to the bank. The three profiteers: Tony Ortega, Leah Remini and Mike Rinder.