Conviction of Scientology Critic Raises Free Speec
Press release expressing concern that H. Keith Henson's constitutional right to free speech was violated, and that he was not allowed to defend himself properly. [Electronic Frontier Foundation]
Henson Trial Continued
Keith Henson, an electrical engineer successfully sued by the Church of Scientology for copyright infringement, will wait until next month to find out whether he will face prison on a contempt-of-court charge related to the case. [Wired]
Hour: Destroy Him Utterly
Coverage of the Church of Scientology vs. Keith Henson lawsuit.
Keith Henson News
Collection of news bulletins, translations of news articles, related documents, and links.
On the Run From L. Ron Hubbard
Damien Cave's article and interview with Henson. [Salon]
Online Scientology critic jailed in Canada
Report on SWAT team in body armor swooping in to arrest Keith Henson, allegedly for failing to disclose that a warrant was out for his arrest when he entered Canada. [The Register]
Online Scientology critic seeks political asylum
'Democracy' and 'liberty' in the sunny State of California never looked more like the empty incantations they really are. After conviction on one absurd count in a kangaroo court, Keith Henson seeks political asylum in Canada. [The Register]
Scientology Slips Through the Net
Depending on whom you ask, last week's verdict in Religious Technology Center v. Keith Henson is either a vote for intellectual property rights or a vote against freedom of information. [Wired]
The Church of Scientology vs. Keith Henson
On April 4, 1996, the Church of Scientology filed a federal lawsuit against Keith Henson.
U.S. Fugitive Arrested at Gunpoint
Elaine O'Connor's article on the case. [Toronto Star]
Unorthodox Arrest
Enzo Di Matteo's article on the Keith Henson case: "Church of scientology calls cops and has one of its harshest and most vocal critics jailed." [Now Magazine]
US Scientology Critic Free in Canada
Thomas C. Greene's article on the Canadian authorities' acceptance of Henson's application for refugee status. [The Register]