SCIENTOLOGY FICTION - 1994-12-25

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F43.png SCIENTOLOGY FICTION December 25, 1994, Richard Leiby, Washington Post

ONE DAY in November, Arnaldo P. Lerma, an audio-video technician from Arlington, opened his front door and encountered two unsmiling men in dark suits. He tensed up; he recognized them as the strangers who had been tailing him as he drove into town that morning.

"We represent the Church of Scientology," one of the men said. Lerma hurriedly shut the door.

The pair wedged a three-page, legal-looking document inside the screen door. It was titled "Declaration of Arnaldo Pagliarini Lerma," but Lerma hadn't written it and in fact had never seen it before. He left Scientology in 1978, after serving several years as a low-level staffer. The document amounted to a confession, with a line left blank for Lerma's signature.


{{cite news | first = Richard | last = Leiby | title = SCIENTOLOGY FICTION | url = https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/opinions/1994/12/25/scientology-fiction/809c906a-5145-4cce-a0fa-710d77adb5cd/?utm_term=.624e1a85b7dd | work = Washington Post | date = December 25, 1994 | accessdate = February 17, 2017 }}