Project Chanology (also called
Operation
Chanology) is a
protest movement
against the practices of the
Church of Scientology by members of
Anonymous, a leaderless
Internet-based group that defines itself as
ubiquitous. The project was started in response to the Church of
Scientology's attempts to remove material from a highly publicized
interview with
Scientologist Tom Cruise from the Internet in January
2008.
The project was publicly launched in the form of a video posted to
YouTube, "Message to Scientology", on
January 21, 2008. The video states that Anonymous views
Scientology's actions as
internet
censorship, and asserts the group's intent to "expel the church
from the internet". This was followed by distributed
denial-of-service attacks (DDoS),
and soon after,
black faxes,
prank calls, and other measures intended to
disrupt the Church of Scientology's operations. In February 2008,
the focus of the protest shifted to legal methods, including
nonviolent protests, and an attempt to
get the
Internal Revenue
Service to investigate the Church of Scientology's
tax exempt status in the United States.
Reactions from the Church of Scientology regarding the protesters'
actions have varied. Initially one spokesperson stated that members
of the group "have got some wrong information" about Scientology.
Another referred to the group as a group of "computer geeks".
Later, the Church of Scientology started referring to Anonymous as
"cyberterrorists" perpetrating "religious hate crimes" against the
church.
Detractors of Scientology have also criticized the actions of
Project Chanology, asserting that they merely provide the Church of
Scientology with the opportunity to "play the religious persecution
card". Other critics such as
Mark Bunker
and
Tory Christman initially
questioned the
legality of Project
Chanology's methods, but have since spoken out in support of the
project as it shifted towards nonviolent protests and other legal
methods.
Background
The Church of Scientology has a history of conflict with groups on
the Internet. In 1995, attorneys for the Church of Scientology
attempted to get the
newsgroup alt.religion.scientology (a.r.s.)
removed from
Usenet. This attempt backfired
and generated a significant amount of press for a.r.s. The conflict
with a.r.s led the
hacker
group
Cult of the Dead Cow to
declare war on the Church of Scientology. The Church of Scientology
mounted a 10-year legal campaign against Dutch writer
Karin Spaink and several
internet service providers after
Spaink and others posted documents alleged to be secretive
teachings of the organization. The Church of Scientology's efforts
ended in a legal defeat in a Dutch court in 2005. This series of
events is often referred to as "
Scientology versus the
Internet".
Tom Cruise video
On January 14, 2008, a video produced by the Church of Scientology
featuring an interview with
Tom Cruise
was leaked to the Internet and uploaded to YouTube. In the video,
music from Cruise's
Mission: Impossible films
plays in the background, and Cruise makes various statements,
including saying that Scientologists are the only people who can
help after a
car accident, and that
Scientologists are the authority on getting addicts off drugs.
According to
The Times, Cruise
can be seen in the video "extolling the virtues of Scientology".
The Daily Telegraph
characterized Cruise as "manic-looking" during the interview,
"gush[ing] about his love for Scientology".
The Church of Scientology asserted that the video material that had
been leaked to YouTube and other websites was "pirated and edited"
and taken from a three-hour video produced for members of
Scientology. YouTube removed the Cruise video from their site under
threat of litigation. The web site
Gawker.com did not take down their copy of the
Tom Cruise video, and other sites have posted the entire video.
Lawyers for the Church of Scientology sent a letter to Gawker.com
requesting the removal of the video, but Nick Denton of Gawker.com
stated: "It's newsworthy, and we will not be removing it."
Formation
Project Chanology was formulated by users of the English-speaking
imageboards 711chan.org and
4chan, the associated partyvan.info
wiki, and several
Internet Relay Chat channels, all part
of a group collectively known as Anonymous, on January 16, 2008
after the Church of Scientology issued a copyright violation claim
against YouTube for hosting material from the Cruise video. The
effort against Scientology has also been referred to by group
members as "Operation Chanology". A webpage called "Project
Chanology", part of a larger wiki, is maintained by Anonymous and
chronicles planned, ongoing and completed actions by project
participants. The website includes a list of suggested
guerrilla tactics to use against the
Church of Scientology. Members use other websites as well to
coordinate action, including
Encyclopedia Dramatica and the
social networking site
Facebook, where two groups associated with
the movement had 3,500 members as of February 4, 2008. A member of
Anonymous told the
Los Angeles
Times that, as of February 4, 2008, the group consisted of
"a loose confederation of about 9,000 people" who post anonymously
on the Internet. A security analyst told
The
Age that the number of people participating anonymously in
Project Chanology could number in the thousands: "You can't pin it
on a person or a group of people. You've thousands of people
engaged to do anything they can against Scientology."
Members of Project Chanology say their main goal is "to enlighten
the Church of Scientology (CoS) by any means necessary." Their
website states: "This will be a game of mental warfare. It will
require our talkers, not our hackers. It will require our dedicated
Anon across the world to do their part." Project Chanology's stated
goals include the complete removal of the Church of Scientology's
presence from the Internet and to "save people from Scientology by
reversing the brainwashing". Project Chanology participants plan to
join the Church of Scientology posing as interested members in
order to infiltrate the organization.
Andrea Seabrook of
National Public Radio's All Things Considered reported
Anonymous was previously known for "technologically sophisticated
pranks" such as spamming chat rooms online and "ordering dozens of
pizzas for people they don't like".
Ryan
Singel of
Wired
appeared on the program on January 27, 2008, and told Seabrook that
members of Anonymous were motivated by "the tactics the Church of
Scientology uses to control information about itself" rather than
the "controversial nature of Scientology itself".
Activities
Internet activities
Project Chanology began its campaign by organizing and delivering a
series of
denial-of-service
attacks against Scientology websites and flooding Scientology
centers with
prank calls and
black faxes. The group was successful in taking
down local and global Scientology websites intermittently from
January 18, 2008 until at least January 25, 2008. Anonymous had
early success rendering major Scientology websites inaccessible and
leaking documents allegedly stolen from Scientology computers. This
resulted in a large amount of coverage on
social bookmarking websites.
The denial-of-service attacks on Scientology.org flooded the site
with 220
megabits of traffic, a mid-range
attack. Speaking with SCMagazineUS.com, a security strategist for
Top Layer Networks, Ken Pappas said that he thought that
botnets were involved in the Anonymous operation:
"There are circles out there where you could take ownership of the
bot machines that are already owned and launch a simultaneous
attack against [something] like the church from 50,000 PCs, all at
the same time".
In response to the attacks, on January 21, 2008 the Scientology.org
site was moved to
Prolexic
Technologies, a company specializing in safeguarding web sites
from denial-of-service attacks. Attacks against the site increased,
and
CNET News reported that "a
major assault" took place at 6 p.m.
EST on January 24, 2008.
Anonymous escalated the attack on Scientology on January 25, 2008
and on January 25, 2008, the Church of Scientology's official
website remained inaccessible.

"Message to Scientology" video
(January 21, 2008)
On January 21, 2008, Anonymous announced its goals and intentions
via a video posted to YouTube entitled "Message to Scientology",
and a
press release declaring "War on
Scientology", against both the Church of Scientology and the
Religious Technology
Center. In the press release, the group stated that the attacks
against the Church of Scientology would continue in order to
protect
freedom of speech and to
end what they characterized as the financial exploitation of church
members.
The Tom Cruise video is referred to specifically at the start of
the Anonymous YouTube video posting, and is characterized as
"propaganda video". The video utilizes a synthesized voice and
shows floating cloud images using a time lapse method as the
speaker addresses the leaders of Scientology directly: "We
acknowledge you as a serious opponent, and we are prepared for a
long, long campaign. You will not prevail forever against the angry
masses of the body politic. Your methods, hypocrisy, and the
artlessness of your organization have sounded its death knell. You
cannot hide; we are everywhere." The video goes on to state: "We
shall proceed to expel you from the Internet and systematically
dismantle the Church of Scientology in its present form ... We are
anonymous. We are legion. We do not forgive. We do not forget.
Expect us." By January 25, 2008, only four days after its release,
the video had been viewed 800,000 times, and by February 8, 2008
had been viewed over 2 million times. Author
Warren Ellis called the video "creepy in and of
itself" and a "manifesto, declaration of war, sharp political
film".
In a different video posted to YouTube, Anonymous addresses news
organizations covering the conflict and criticizes media reporting
of the incident. In the video, Anonymous criticizes the media
specifically for not mentioning objections by the group to certain
controversial aspects of the history of the Church of Scientology,
and cited past incidents including the death of
Lisa McPherson: "We find it interesting that
you did not mention the other objections in your news reporting.
The stifling and punishment of dissent within the totalitarian
organization of Scientology. The numerous, alleged human rights
violations. Such as the treatment and events that led to the deaths
of victims of the cult such as Lisa McPherson." Lisa McPherson was
a Scientologist who died in 1995 under controversial circumstances.
Initially, The Church of Scientology was held responsible and faced
felony charges in her death. The charges were later dropped and a
civil suit brought by McPherson's family was settled in 2004. This
second video was removed on January 25, 2008, YouTube citing a
"terms of use violation". Organizers of the February 10, 2008,
Project Chanology protests against the Church of Scientology told
the
St. Petersburg Times the event was timed to coincide
with the birthday of Lisa McPherson.
In addition to DDoS attacks against Church of Scientology websites,
Anonymous also organized a campaign on one of their websites to
"begin bumping Digg," referring to an attempt to drive up
Scientology-related links on the website
Digg.com. On January 25, 2008, eight of the top ten
stories on Digg.com were about either Scientology-related
controversies or Anonymous and attempts to expose Scientology. Digg
CEO Jay Adelson told
PC World that Anonymous had not
manipulated the site's algorithm system to prevent artificial poll
results, stating: "They must have done a very good job of bringing
in a diverse set of interests ... It just happened to hit a nerve
that the Digg community was interested in."
Adelson said two other
instances which similarly have dominated the Digg main page in the
past were the Virginia Tech Massacre
in the aftermath of the incident and the "7/7" London bombings in
2005. Adelson commented on the popularity of Scientology
theme within the Digg community: "In the history of Digg, there's
no question that the topic of Scientology has been of great
interest to the community ... I can't explain why."
On January 29, 2008, Jason Lee Miller of
WebProNews
reported that a
Google bomb technique
had been used to make the Scientology.org main website the first
result in a Google search for "dangerous cult". Miller wrote that
Anonymous was behind the Google bomb, and that they had also tried
to bump Scientology up as the first result in Google searches for
"brainwashing cult," and to make the
Xenu.net website first result in searches
for "scientology". Rob Garner of
MediaPost Publications
wrote: "The Church of Scientology continues to be the target of a
group called Anonymous, which is using Google bombs and YouTube as
its tools of choice."
In a February 4, 2008, article, Scientology spokeswoman
Karin Pouw told the
Los Angeles Times
that Church of Scientology's websites "have been and are online."
Danny McPherson, chief research officer at Arbor Networks, claimed
500 denial-of-service attacks had been observed on the Scientology
site in the week prior to February 4, some of which were strong
enough to bring the website down.
Calling Anonymous a "motley crew of
internet troublemakers," Wired blogger Ryan Singel said that, while attempting to
bypass the Prolexic servers protecting the Church of Scientology
website, users of a misconfigured DDoS tool inadvertently and
briefly had targeted the Etty Hillesum Lyceum, a Dutch
secondary school in
Deventer
.
Another
hacking group associated with the project, calling themselves the
"g00ns," mistakenly targeted a 59-year-old man from Stockton,
California
. They posted his home telephone number,
address and his wife's
Social
Security number online for other people to target. They
believed that he was behind counter-attacks against Project
Chanology-related websites by the Regime, a counter-hack group who
crashed one of the Project Chanology planning websites. The group
allegedly attempted to gain personal information on people involved
in Project Chanology to turn that information over to the Church of
Scientology. After discovering they had wrongly targeted the
couple, one of the members of the g00ns group called and
apologized.
Protests planned
A new video entitled "Call to Action" appeared on YouTube on
January 28, 2008, calling for protests outside Church of
Scientology centers on February 10, 2008. As with the previous
videos, the two-minute video used a synthesized computer voice and
featured stock footage of clouds and sky. The video was accompanied
by a text transcript with
British
English spelling. The video denied that the group was composed
of "super hackers," stating: "Contrary to the assumptions of the
media, Anonymous is not 'a group of super hackers.' ... Anonymous
is everyone and everywhere. We have no leaders, no single entity
directing us." The video said that Project Chanology participants
include "individuals from all walks of life ... united by an
awareness that someone must do the right thing." Specific
controversies involving the CoS
were cited in the video as the explanation for actions by
Anonymous.
In an email to
CNET News,
Anonymous stated that coordinated activities were planned for
February 10, 2008, in many major cities around the world. Anonymous
hoped to use "real world" protests to rally public opinion to their
cause. According to the
Associated
Press, the protests were meant to draw attention to what the
group refers to as a "vast money-making scheme under the guise of
'religion'". By January 30, 2008, 170 protests had been planned
outside Church of Scientology centers worldwide. A video posted to
YouTube called "Code of Conduct" outlined twenty-two rules to
follow when protesting, and urged protestors to remain
peaceful.
February 2008
- February 2
On
February 2, 2008, one hundred and fifty people gathered outside of
a Church of Scientology center in Orlando, Florida
to protest the organization's practices.
Small
protests were also held in Santa Barbara, California
(during the Santa Barbara
International Film Festival
), and Manchester
, England. Protesters in Orlando carried
signs with messages "Knowledge is Free" and "Honk if you hate
Scientology".
According to WKMG-TV
, the
protesters called the Church of Scientology a "dangerous cult" and
said the organization is responsible for crimes and deaths.
The
Orlando Sentinel
reported that the protest was "part of a worldwide campaign by a
group that calls itself Anonymous," and an unnamed organizer who
spoke to the paper stated that the group was protesting "a gross
violation of the right to see free church material," referring to
the Tom Cruise video that was pulled from YouTube.
Protesters at the demonstration wore masks, and said they were
attempting to inform the public about what they believed to be
"restrictions of free speech and profiteering through pyramid
schemes" by the Church of Scientology. They asserted they were not
protesting the doctrine of Scientology, but rather alleged actions
of individual Scientologists. One protester stated that he had
created a Facebook group to organize the protest, explaining "It
started online with a group called Anonymous ... They got upset
with Scientology because the church hides important documents that
are supposed to be released to the public."
- February 10
On February 10, 2008, about 7,000 people protested in at least 100
cities worldwide.Within 24 hours of the first protest, a
search for "Scientology" and "protest" on
Google Blog Search returned more than
4,000 results and more than 2,000 pictures on the image-sharing
site
Flickr.
Cities with turnouts of one hundred or
more protesters included Adelaide
, Melbourne
, and Sydney, Australia; Toronto, Canada; London,;
Dublin
; Austin,
Texas
, Dallas,
Texas
, Boston, Massachusetts
, Clearwater, Florida
, and New York City, New York
, United States.

One hundred and fifty people protested at the Church of Scientology
building in Sydney, Australia, carrying signs and wearing costumes.
Participants were masked to maintain their anonymity and avoid
possible retaliation from the Church of Scientology. Protesters
chanted "Church on the left, cult on the right" (in reference to
the Church that was beside the Church of Scientology building),
"Religion is free" and "We want Xenu". Scientology staff locked
down the building and set up a camera to record the event. After
the protest in Sydney, a surge in online internet traffic due to
individuals attempting to view pictures from the protest crashed
hundreds of websites when a server was overloaded. The Sydney
protest was one of the first worldwide, and after the first images
of the protest went online a surge in traffic drove the hosting
company's bandwidth usage up by 900 per cent. The hosting company
Digitalis temporarily prevented access to hundreds of its clients'
sites, and customer support representative Denis Kukic said the
surge was unexpected: "We had no advance notice that there was
going to be a sudden surge of traffic or that there would be more
than 100 times the average traffic that this customer's website
normally consumes."
Masked
protesters in Seattle
, United
States congregated in front of the Church of Scientology of
Washington
State. Protesters were quoted as saying, "We
believe in total freedom of belief. We have nothing against the
people of Scientology, however the Church of Scientology has
committed crimes. They're vehemently anti-opposition. Anyone who
opposes them, must go down."
A Santa Barbara
protester emphasized that their opposition was
against the organization, not the belief system, and that they
supported the Scientology split-off group known as the Free Zone. Protesters turned out
in Pittsburgh
, Pennsylvania
despite unusually cold weather. The masked crowd
consisted mainly of college students, including some who had
travelled from as far as Penn State University
.
Protesters in Boston, Los
Angeles
, Pittsburgh, Toronto, Edinburgh
, London, and other cities worldwide, wore Guy Fawkes masks modeled after the 2005 film
V for
Vendetta. Guy Fawkes was an English Catholic executed
for a 1605 attempt to blow up the House of Lords
. In
V for
Vendetta, a rebel against a near-future fascist regime
uses the mask in his public appearances and distributes many of its
copies to the population to enable mass protests.
The Boston Globe characterized usage
of the Guy Fawkes masks as "an allusion to the British insurgent
and a film depicting an antigovernment movement". Aaron Tavena of
College Times wrote that the Guy Fawkes masks provided a
"dramatic effect" to the protests, and Nick Jamison of
The
Retriever Weekly wrote: "During the February 10 protests,
Anonymous was informative, Anonymous was peaceful, and Anonymous
was effective. After seeing all of the pictures from the 10th with
everyone in disguise, many sporting Guy Fawkes masks, I wanted to
be a part of that."
Scott Stewart of University
of Nebraska at Omaha
's The Gateway wrote: "Many participants
sported Guy Fawkes masks to draw attention both to their identity
as Anonymous and the Church of Scientology's abuse of litigation
and coercion to suppress anti-Scientology viewpoints."
The Internet
meme "
Rickroll", where a link is given to a seemingly
relevant website only to be directed to a music video of singer
Rick Astley's pop single "
Never Gonna Give You Up", has been
used as a theme in the protests against Scientology. At February 10
protests in New York, Washington, D.C., London and Seattle,
protesters played the song through boomboxes and shouted the phrase
"Never gonna let you down!", in what
The Guardian called "a live rick-rolling
of the Church of Scientology". In response to a website created by
Scientologists showing an anti-Anonymous video, Project Chanology
participants created a website with a similar domain name with a
video displaying the music video to "Never Gonna Give You Up". In a
March 2008 interview, Astley said that he found the rickrolling of
Scientology to be "hilarious"; he also said that he will not try to
capitalize on the rickroll phenomenon with a new recording or
remix of his own, but that he'd be happy to
have other artists remix it.
Following the protests, there were reports that
YouTube was freezing the view counts on videos
criticizing Scientology, including clips from the protests
themselves, potentially preventing them from being displayed on
YouTube's front page. Similarly, the original "Message to
Scientology" video had received nearly 2.5 million views and yet
failed to be featured as a "most-watched".The
net neutrality activist group
movieLOL strongly criticized YouTube for a "display of
the decay of internet freedom". YouTube's official response stated:
"There was an issue with video view counts not increasing that has
now been resolved. The correct number of views should be displayed
in the next 24 hours. Thanks for your patience."
Jonathan Holmes, the presenter of
the Australian
Media
Watch watchdog program,
reported on two cases of media
censorship
of the protests.
News.com.au pixelated a
poster carried by a protester which was revealed, through a
Today Tonight segment, to
have displayed the word "CULT".
The Advertiser erased Tom
Cruise's name from a protest placard, rendering the placard's
message meaningless, without informing its readers.
The
Advertiser's editor, Melvin Mansell, stated that the
alteration had "slipped by" and that he was opposed to the
publication of doctored photographs.
March-December 2008
- March 2008
According
to NBC11
, a
woman from Anonymous contacted them and stated that protests were
planned against Scientology each month through May 2008; and that a
large protest was planned for two days after Scientology founder
L. Ron Hubbard's birthday, on March 15, 2008.
Carlos Moncada of
The Tampa
Tribune reported that an "open letter to the press from
Anonymous" was sent out via e-mail, and states that a protest is
planned for March 15, 2008. The e-mail refers to the
Ides of March: "We, too, wish to celebrate
this event, albeit in our own special way ... Beware the Ides of
March, Church of Scientology!" The March protests were titled
"Operation Party Hard".
Protests
began in Australia on March 15, 2008, and were followed by protests
in major cities worldwide including Brussels
, London, Seattle
, Phoenix
, Manchester
, and Los Angeles. Approximately 7,000 to
8,000 people protested in about 100 cities worldwide. The protests
took place in locations in Australia, Europe, Canada, and the
United States.
Approximately 200 masked protesters gathered outside of the Church
of Scientology's headquarters in Adelaide, Australia, and an
anonymous spokesman told
News.com.au that Scientology should lose
its tax-exempt status. About 150 protesters came to the
Yonge Street headquarters of Scientology in
Toronto, Canada; sang "
Happy
Birthday" and chanted "we want cake". During the Los Angeles
protests, a plane flew overhead trailing a large sign that read
"Honk if you think Scientology is a cult." 150 protesters
demonstrated in Clearwater, Florida, and a local organizer for
Anonymous told
The Tampa Tribune: "We feel that we have an
obligation to educate the public about the things that have gone on
and hopefully make the Church of Scientology understand that they
have to change."
Two
people were arrested by DeKalb County
, Georgia
police for using megaphones while stepping onto the surrounding
street opposite of the church during a protest. The
Atlanta
Journal-Constitution reported that a total of five
protesters were cited for "causing 'hazardous' or 'offensive'
conditions", and that eight motorists were pulled over by police
and ticketed for excessive use of horns, after they honked while
driving past the protest. The
American Civil Liberties
Union and
Amnesty
International are investigating the reaction of the police at
the Atlanta protest.In contrast, an
LAPD officer at the Los
Angeles protest was widely praised after a video was uploaded to
YouTube showing him acknowledging the demonstrators' right to
protest and encouraging them to stay on the sidewalk for their own
safety.
- April 2008
Anonymous held its third international protest against Scientology
on April 12, 2008. Named "Operation Reconnect", the protest focused
on increasing awareness of the Church of Scientology's
disconnection policy. Protesters around the
world gathered in over 50 cities, including Toronto, London,
Sydney, and Berlin. A subsequent international protest was planned
for May 10, 2008, according to
The University Register it
was titled "Operation Battletoad Earth", and an additional protest
was planned for June 2008. According to John DeSio of
The Village Voice, the May 10, 2008
protests were referred to as "Operation : Fair Game : Stop", and
National Nine News has
reported that the full title of the May 10 protests is "Battletoad
Earth: Operation Fairgame Stop". The May 10 date was chosen as May
9 is the anniversary of Scientology founder
L. Ron
Hubbard's book
Dianetics: The
Modern Science of Mental Health. Over 400 people were
present at the May 10, 2008 protests in cities in Australia. Wen
Hsing, a member of Anonymous, commented to scopical.com.au about
the Church of Scientology's denial of its "Fair Game" policy: "Even
if the name 'fair game' is not in use, the Church of Scientology is
an organisation that continues to practice a vicious policy of
retribution against perceived enemies, and it teaches its members
that extreme measures are morally justified if they aid the
Church."
- May 2008
On May
10, a teenager who went to the protests in front of the Queen
Victoria Street
Church of Scientology in London was issued a
court summons after being asked to
take down a sign that read "Scientology is not a religion, it is a
dangerous cult". Posting anonymously on a forum, the
teenager stated "Within five minutes of arriving ... I was told by
a member of the police that I was not allowed to use 'that word'".
He said that the police told him he had 15 minutes to take down the
sign. The teenager did not, citing a 1984 high court ruling by
Justice Latey which he described the Church of Scientology as a
"cult" that was "corrupt, sinister and dangerous". The sign was
then confiscated.
Shami
Chakrabarti, the director of
Liberty, a human rights group, said
that, "They will be banning words like 'war' and 'tax' from
placards and demonstrations next. This is just barmy". On May 23,
2008, the legal action against the boy was dropped. A
Crown Prosecution Service (CPS)
spokesman said: "In consultation with the City of London Police, we
were asked whether the sign was abusive or insulting. Our advice is
that it is not abusive or insulting and there is no offensiveness
(as opposed to criticism), neither in the idea expressed nor in the
mode of expression."
Anonymous also held a protest in Budapest
, Hungary, in the same time and location with a
program of the local Scientology church.
- June-October 2008
A protest was held June 14, 2008 titled "Sea Arrrgh" (a satirical
reference to the Church of Scientology's
Sea
Org). Protesters dressed up as
pirates.
According to
Macquarie
National News, members of Anonymous highlighted the
controversial practices of the Sea Org, including what the
protesters believe to be forced contracts where Scientologists work
below a livable wage, that female Sea Org members who become
pregnant are pressured to have abortions, and that children of
families in the organization are made to perform difficult physical
labor. An international protest held on July 12, 2008 titled: "Spy
vs. Sci" highlighted the Church of Scientology's
Office of Special Affairs. A press
release by the group posed the question: "Why does something that
describes itself as a religion need an intelligence agency that
aggressively persecutes critics?" The group posted a video in early
August 2008 calling for renewed activity in their protest efforts,
and planned a subsequent international protest for August 16, 2008.
About 35 protesters gathered twice in September 2008 during the
first preview and premiere of
Arthur
Miller's play
All My Sons.
They encouraged Scientologist
Katie
Holmes, who is married to Tom Cruise, to leave the Church. The
most recent international organized protest was held October 18,
2008. Members of Anonymous dressed as
zombies, and highlighted what they described as
questionable deaths and
suicides of
Scientologists.
- December 2008
The film
Valkyrie, starring
and produced by Tom Cruise, had a premiere in New York on December
17.
Entertainment reporter Roger Friedman noted
that it was held "in the private screening room at the Time Warner
Center
. Not the Ziegfield or Loews
Lincoln Square, where most
premieres are held in public." The venue was chosen in part to
minimize the exposure to Scientology protestors gathered at the
Time Warner Center. For the same reason, Cruise arrived at the
December 18 Los Angeles screening through an underground tunnel.
There
were also Scientology protests at the European premiere in Berlin
, where one
protester got his V for Vendetta mask autographed by Tom
Cruise. Chanology participants shared the limelight with a
person in a bunny suit protesting against the hero worship of Claus
von Stauffenberg.
January-February 2009
On January 8, 2009, an 18 year-old male claiming to be a member of
Anonymous ran into the New York Scientology building shirtless and
covered with
Vaseline,
pubic hair, and
toenail
clippings. He then proceeded to toss books around and smear the
mixture on objects in the building. The man, identified by police
as Mahoud Samed Almahadin, was charged with burglary, criminal
mischief, and aggravated harassment as hate crimes. Two weeks
later, 21 year-old film student and Anonymous member Jacob Speregen
was charged with aggravated harassment and criminal mischief as
hate crimes after he filmed Almahadin carrying out his prank.
According to his mother and the video, Speregen was filming the
event from behind the barricade. Mark Bunker and Jason Beghe
disagreed with the individual's actions.

Anonymous protester demonstrating
during January 2009 raid outside the Founding Church of Scientology
in Washington, D.C.
Anonymous organized a 12th global protest against Scientology for
January 10, 2009, to coincide with the Chanology movement's first
anniversary. On February 10, 2009, Anonymous released a statement:
"Scientology operatives still continue to paint Anonymous in a
negative light as a means of distracting attention from Scientology
operations and attempting to discredit those who bring truth to the
issues at hand. It just isn’t working." The group claimed credit
for leaks of internal Scientology documents that appeared on the
website
Wikileaks, and announced further
global protests for subsequent weekends in February 2009.
Members
of Anonymous continued to celebrate the one-year anniversary of the
Chanology movement during February 2009, with protests held in
locations including Hemet, California
.
March-May 2009
On March
3, 2009, the Riverside County Board of Supervisors voted to approve
an ordinance which restricts residential picketing in Riverside
County, California
to 30 feet or further from an individual's
residence. The ordinance was originally introduced by
Supervisor Jeff Stone, board chairman, in November 2008, and went
through multiple changes. Critics of the ordinance stated that
Stone proposed the measure due to favor for Scientology, which has
its Hemet, California compound located in Riverside County. "The
whole ordinance is tainted. The reasons behind it are tainted,"
said county resident Lirra Bishop.
Stone stated the measure was intended for
all residents of the county, though he cited protests at
Scientology's Gold
Base
facility which houses residences and Scientology's
Golden Era Productions as an
example of why the ordinance is needed. Protesters at Gold
Base have included members of Anonymous, and Scientology officials
claimed they were "threatened with violence". Protesters told the
Board of Supervisors that due to the lack of sidewalk near Gold
Base, the anti-picketing ordinance would severely hamper the
ability to protest outside the Scientology compound.
After stating on October 17, 2008 that he would plead guilty to
involvement in the January 2008 DDoS attacks against Church of
Scientology websites, an 18-year-old self-described member of
Anonymous entered a guilty plea related to hacking charges in May
2009.
A
release from the United States Department of
Justice
said that the individual, a resident of New Jersey
, "participated in the attack because he considered
himself a member of an underground group called
'Anonymous'". Thom Mrozek, a spokesman for the Justice
Department, said that the Church of Scientology had cooperated in
the investigation. The individual faces a sentencing scheduled for
August 2009.
In May
2009, members of Anonymous told WSMV-TV
that they were bullied by off-duty security guards
while protesting at a Scientology event in April in Nashville,
Tennessee
. According to WSMV-TV, a protester stated he
was assaulted by three Scientology security guards while on public
property, 400 yards away from the Scientology building. The Church
of Scientology had previously informed the security guards that the
protesters were "dangerous people". A protester was issued three
citations by the Scientology security guards, but these were all
dismissed by the district attorney. On May 8, 2009, WSMV-TV
reported that "laws appear to have been broken" in the manner in
which the Scientology security guards handled the protesters. The
Scientology security guards were not clearly identified as off-duty
police officers, and permits for the Scientology event attended by
the Anonymous protesters were for the wrong day. "The armed people
from the other county are not identified police officers. You're
looking for a problem," said said John M. L. Brown, a Fraternal
Order of Police attorney.
November 2009
In November 2009, the
New York
Post interviewed former Scientologist Mandy Mullen, who
had joined the Manhattan org in 2008 after seeing information on
4chan about Chanology protests. Over the next
year, she recalled cases of members being coerced into donating
more and more money. When she told her "leader" that she had looked
at websites run by anti-scientology protesters (and disagreed with
them), he reportedly replied "That's like saying I don't burn
niggers, I just like to party with the KKK!" In Fall 2008 Mullen
left the church, joining a group of Chanology protesters across the
street. Church of Scientology Manhattan President John Carmichael
issued a response the following week, stating "Mandy Mullen’s story
about Scientology... is all lies in the service of Anonymous, a
hate group that targets our Church, or even anyone who just falls
onto their radar."
Campaign against Scientology's tax-exempt status
A woman
who stated she was a member of Anonymous told NBC11
that
the group has shifted strategy to activities which fight
Scientology but are not deemed illegal by the United States
government, including an attempt to get the Internal Revenue Service to
investigate the Church of Scientology's 501 tax-exempt
status. Another woman from Anonymous told
Newsweek that the group plans to accomplish
this through a
lobbying campaign. United
States tax authorities removed the Church of Scientology's
tax-exemption status in 1967, stating that the organization's
auditing techniques served as
a
for-profit operation for L. Ron
Hubbard. In 1984, the
United
States Tax Court ruled that the Church of Scientology was
guilty of "manufacturing and falsifying records to present to the
IRS, burglarizing IRS offices and stealing government documents,
and subverting government processes for unlawful purposes." The
Church of Scientology's tax-exempt status in the United States was
reinstated in 1993.
A member of Anonymous calling herself "Envie" told
Today Tonight that the group has longer
term plans against the Church of Scientology: "We are incredibly
determined ... There are those of us who have been talking about
plans for the next 12 to 18 months." A member of Anonymous
calling herself "Sarah" spoke with
Radar Magazine about a
letter-writing campaign: "We're sending letters to senators and
congresspeople requesting that their tax-exempt status be looked
at."
Church of Scientology response
In a January 25, 2008 statement made to
News.com.au, a spokesman for the Church of
Scientology said, "These types of people have got some wrong
information about us."
A Toronto, Canada
spokesperson for the Church of Scientology said she
didn't "give a damn" if the group Anonymous was responsible for
disrupting access to the Scientology site. Church
spokeswoman Yvette Shank told
Sun
Media that she thought the Anonymous members were a
"pathetic" group of "computer geeks". On January 26, 2008,
CNET
News reported that Karin Pouw, public affairs director for the
Church of Scientology, did not address their specific request for a
comment about the denial-of-service attacks but instead only
responded to the appearance of the Tom Cruise video on YouTube.
Pouw stated that the video consisted of "pirated and edited"
excerpts of Cruise from a 2004 Scientology event, and that after
the video appeared, there was increased traffic to Scientology
sites as shown by top lists compiled by search engines. Pouw went
on to state "Those wishing to find out the Church of Scientology's
views and to gain context of the video have the right to search
official Church Web sites if they so desire."
On January 28, 2008,
Radar
Online reported that the Church of Scientology asked the
U.S. Attorney General's office in
Los Angeles, the Federal Bureau of
Investigation
, and the Los Angeles Police Department
to start a criminal investigation of possible criminal activity
related to the DDoS attacks. An unnamed source told
Radar that the Church of Scientology argued to law
enforcement that the Internet attacks are a form of "illegal
interference with business."
Radar also reported that in
statements to law enforcement the Church of Scientology emphasized
its status as a religious organization in the United States in
order to assert that the DDoS attacks can be classed as
hate crimes. The day after the Church of
Scientology complained to law enforcement about the DDoS attacks,
one of the main Project Chanology sites was down, and a message on
the site said that their site crashed due to attacks from
Scientologists. In a statement issued to
Wikinews, a Church of Scientology employee
confirmed that actions of Anonymous had been reported to law
enforcement: "Activities of Anonymous have been reported to the
Authorities and actions are being taken. Their activities are
illegal and we do not approve of them. At the same time, our main
work is to improve the environment, make people more able and
spiritually aware. ... yes, we are taking action."
The Church of Scientology issued a statement explaining the website
move to Prolexic Technologies: "The attacks have defaced and
rendered inoperable a number of CoS web sites. But as a very
wealthy institution, the Church has fought back with technological
answers. On January 21, the Church of Scientology moved its domain
to Prolexic Technologies, a group that specializes in protecting
Web sites from [denial of service] attacks by creating a safe
tunnel by filtering all incoming mail and then allowing only clean
messages through."
Lee Sheldon of the Church of Scientology of Orlando and Lee
Holzinger of the Church of Scientology of Santa Barbara issued
similar statements regarding the February 2, 2008 protests in
Florida and California, respectively. Sheldon stated "we recognize
the right to legal protest," and Holzinger said "People have the
right to express themselves ... The Church of Scientology has
always defended the right of freedom of expression." Both
representatives also expressed concerns regarding the spread of
"hate speech".
The Church of Scientology released a statement regarding the
February 10, 2008 worldwide protests, which was published February
7, 2008 in the
St. Petersburg
Times. In the statement, the Church of Scientology called
the organizers of the protests "cyberterrorists", and stated: "We
take this seriously because of the nature of the threats this group
has made publicly. We will take every step necessary to protect our
parishioners and staff as well as members of the community, in
coordination with the local authorities." The statement also
referred to the actions of members of Project Chanology as "hate
crimes" and "religious bigotry", and in a media release said that
the group is guided by
Communist
Manifesto and
Mein
Kampf; one of the organizers of the protest responded to
the latter allegation by stating: "I don't know where they got that
from, but I don't think that's true considering that I am a
capitalist and a Jew". Pat Harney, spokeswoman for the Church of
Scientology in Clearwater, Florida told the
St. Petersburg
Times: "We are dealing with a worldwide threat ... This is not
a light matter." In preparation for the February 10, 2008 protests
outside Scientology's spiritual headquarters in Clearwater, the
Church of Scientology spent $4,500 to hire ten off-duty police
officers for security. Clearwater Police Department spokeswoman
Elizabeth Daly-Watts stated that the off-duty police officers will
make sure that protesters do not trespass on Scientology property
or violate the law, but will report to police supervisors and not
representatives of the Church of Scientology.

DVD "Anonymous Hate Crimes", created
by Scientology
The Church of Scientology posted a YouTube video claiming that
Anonymous are "terrorists" and alleging that Anonymous is
perpetrating "hate crimes" against the church. The video does not
provide any evidence supporting their claims, and the FBI has not
named any suspects for several of the threats mentioned. Anonymous
has denied involvement in the more severe accusations. The church
also released a DVD containing the YouTube video. The DVD called
Anonymous a "dangerous" group and accused them of making threats
against Scientology. Men claiming to be from the law firm
Latham and Watkins delivered the DVD to
family members of at least one person who protested.
YouTube user "AnonymousFacts", which
Radar Online
described as an associate of Scientology, displayed the names and
personal information of several supposed Anonymous members and
accused the group of violent threats and terrorism. YouTube quickly
took the video down and suspended the "AnonymousFacts"
account.

Gregg Housh, against whom the Church
filed criminal complaints, at a May 2008 protest
The Church of Scientology sought an injunction and a restraining
order to prevent Anonymous from protesting on March 15, 2008,
citing threats allegedly made by Anonymous. Both the injunction and
the restraining order were denied. On March 31, 2008,
Radar
Online reported that representatives of law firms delivered
legal letters to suspected Anons, often at their homes. The Church
filed complaints of trespassing and criminal harassment against
Boston organizer Gregg Housh, who was charged with disturbing an
assembly of worship, disturbing the peace, and harassment. The
District Attorney's office dropped the harassment charge, and Judge
Thomas Horgan issued a
continuance
without finding for the remaining charges.
In a May 8, 2008 appearance on
CNN, Church of
Scientology spokesman
Thomas W.
Davis said that Scientology was
"dealing with ninety-six death threats, bomb threats, acts of
violence, vandalism" from the group Anonymous.
CNN's John Roberts responded,
stating that the Federal Bureau of
Investigation
found nothing connecting Anonymous to the Church of
Scientology's accusations of violence: "You are leveling these
accusations at this group, the F.B.I., which is looking into it,
says it has found nothing to connect this group Anonymous with what
you're talking about, or death threats against members of the
church, the F.B.I. at this point says - it has no reason to believe
that charges would be leveled against this group."
Reaction
Andreas Heldal-Lund, founder of
the Scientology-critical website and
non-profit organization Operation Clambake, released a statement
criticizing the digital assault against Scientology. Heldal-Lund
commented, "People should be able to have easy access to both sides
and make up their own opinions. Freedom of speech means we need to
allow all to speak - including those we strongly disagree with. I
am of the opinion that the Church of Scientology is a criminal
organisation and a cult which is designed by its delusional founder
to abuse people. I am still committed to fight for their right to
speak their opinion." He also stated that "Attacking Scientology
like that will just make them play the religious persecution card
... They will use it to defend their own counter actions when they
try to shatter criticism and crush critics without mercy."
Mark Bunker, an
Emmy Award-winning
journalist and Scientology critic who runs the
website XenuTV.com, posted a video to YouTube and asked Anonymous
to tone down their campaign against the Church of Scientology.
According to
NPR's
Morning Edition, Bunker has
"become a revered voice to many members of Anonymous," and they
refer to him as "Wise Beard Man". Bunker told
Newsweek
that he was pleased to see a large group of young individuals
acting against Scientology, but stated he was also concerned for
their safety: "I know the way Scientology works: they're going to
get these people in trouble ... I'm very concerned about their
safety, and I'm concerned about the Scientologists' safety, too."
Bunker stated that he has received 6,000 emails from individuals
who say they are part of Anonymous. Bunker attended the February
10, 2008 protest against Scientology in Los Angeles.
Tory Christman, a critic of
Scientology and former Scientologist from 1969 to 2000, stated she
disapproved of illegal tactics but felt encouraged by the new
influx of critics of Scientology. Christman told
Morning
Edition: "It feels like we've been out in this desert,
fighting this group one-on-one by ourselves, and all of a sudden
this huge army came up with not only tons of people, thousands of
people, but better tools..." Scientology critic
Arnaldo Lerma told the
St. Petersburg
Times he was impressed by a video of a protest against
Scientology which took place in Orlando, Florida: "I've never seen
anything like that before. This is incredible. I wouldn't have
believed it if I didn't see it on a Web cam."
In a February 4, 2008 appearance on the
G4 television program
Attack of the Show!,
Mark Ebner, journalist and author of the book
Hollywood,
Interrupted, and Nick Douglas of Gawker.com commented on
Project Chanology. Ebner stated that "Hacking their site is not
really the best way to go about taking them (the Church of
Scientology) down. Most critics you talk to want the Scientology
site to be up there so that people who are interested can see the
stupidity they have on the web and at the same time they can go -
they are a few keystrokes from getting a thousand other opinions."
Nick Douglas explained that the group decided to shift their
strategy away from the attacks to Scientology websites: "Anonymous
even decided that they were going to stop that attack, that it was
a bad idea. It's the usual thing they used to do when they really
hadn't had a thought out plan, and here they're realizing they
actually have to figure out some real plan against a real
enemy."
University
of Alberta
professor Stephen
A. Kent weighed in on the
issue, and said "I think these disruptions probably are illegal. At
the very least, they’re forms of harassment ... We now have three
parties involved. Anonymous, Scientology and law enforcement." Kent
stated that "The hacker community has been angry at Scientology for
(their) attempts to block free speech on the Internet." Reaction to
the denial of service attack on the Church of Scientology websites
was mixed in message board forums for
PC World. Some readers praised the
actions of Anonymous, while others commented that the DDoS attacks
bring more attention to Scientology.
The Economist likened the DDoS attacks
used by Project Chanology to "cyberwarfare techniques normally
associated with extortionists, spies and terrorists," and referred
to Anonymous as "internet activists".
Dan Schultz of
PBS's MediaShift Idea Lab
commented that the movement "...is a really fascinating case study
of how current technologies and information dissemination via
digital media can snowball into something that actually results in
real world action". In a follow-up piece, Schultz discussed the
tools used by digital media to achieve community impact, including
lower barriers to entry and greater efficiencies through the use of
information systems. Schultz wrote "For members of Anonymous I'm
betting most of these things are already unspoken understandings,"
and pointed to their use of
meme and
cited the forums of the website enturbulation.org as an example of
the group's ability to collaborate effectively to accomplish
goals.
In a May 8, 2008 report on the recent actions of Anonymous against
Scientology,
CNN reporter
Kareen Wynter commented: "Legal experts say
the church may be facing its biggest challenge yet – trying to
protect its image, in a loosely-policed medium seen by millions of
people. In a July 2008 interview with
Entertainment Weekly,
Alan Moore had this to say about the use of the
Guy Fawkes motif, adopted from his comic
V for Vendetta: "I was also
quite heartened the other day when watching the news to see that
there were demonstrations outside the Scientology headquarters over
here, and that they suddenly flashed to a clip showing all these
demonstrators wearing V for Vendetta [Guy Fawkes] masks. That
pleased me. That gave me a warm little glow."
See also
References
- Karni, Annie (November 15, 2009) "Weird 'Science': Why I Left
the Church of Scientology - The 100-pound Parasite off my Back".
The
New York Post. Postscript 29.
- Carmichael, John (November 22, 2009) Scientology Rebuts The New York
Post. Accessed 2009-11-22.
External links
- Project Chanology
- "Message to Scientology", "Anonymous", YouTube, January 21, 2008.
- "Call to Action", "Anonymous", YouTube, January 27, 2008.
- "Code of Conduct", "Anonymous", YouTube, February 1, 2008.
- "The Road to February 10, 2008", "Anonymous",
Dailymotion, February 14, 2008.
High quality compilation video of the Feb 10 protests and what led
up to them.
- "Onward -
the road to March 15, 2008, "Anonymous", Vimeo, March 26, 2008.
- Archive of 4chan thread discussing initial plans
for Project Chanology
- "Why
We Protest", Website set up by Anonymous about their
Scientology protests
- Audio/video media