Deep Dive Aaron's Attacker . . . Massive Breakthrough?

Me either. Hunted for one this morning.


I asked ChatGPT for any credible reports on the dog incident. . .

CHATGPT RESPONDED: I could not find any reliable mainstream news report specifically about a Black man named “Patrick Perry” being arrested in the last few days over a dog-stabbing incident in Los Angeles or Hollywood.
What I did find is:
  • A recent Reddit discussion referencing “3 arrested in deadly Hollywood stabbing after dog attack,” where commenters speculate about a Patrick Perry connection, but it is not verified reporting.
  • An older, confirmed LAPD incident from January 2024 involving a man named Patrick Perry arrested for battery near the Church of Scientology in Hollywood. LAPD publicly identified him in a statement.
The only current mentions tying “Patrick Perry” to a dog-related stabbing appear to come from social media chatter/X posts and Reddit discussion, not official police releases or established news outlets.
So at this moment:
  • There does not appear to be a confirmed public arrest record or mainstream article matching exactly what you described.
  • There may be an unfolding or partially reported incident circulating online, but I cannot verify it from authoritative sources yet.

Ergo (in Scientology terminology) so far it appears that Aaron's report is a "dog's breakfast".

.
 
.
For those of you looking to handle and reverse your downtrending student points graph, you can clear, write an essay on, star-rate and clay demo this definition.

dog's breakfast -noun: an informal British and Commonwealth idiom that means a complete mess, a disorganized shambles, or something very badly done. It evokes the image of a chaotic, haphazard pile of leftovers thrown into a dog's bowl.

I never knew that part about "haphazard pile of leftovers thrown into a dog's bowl".

This is likely the MU that caused me to blow from the church and sabotage my eternity.


.
 
Patrick Perry was arrested for murder. Aaron tells the story just after the 2-minute mark of this video:


Scientology Agent ARRESTED for Murder​




I'm not sure how Aaron found out that Patrick Perry was charged. He referenced this article, but it doesn't name Perry.



Later the same day, after this video above was posted, there was a live video on Aaron's channel when he was protesting in California. I have the video cued to around the 1 hour and 44 minute mark. Streets LA told Aaron that Patrick Perry is not in jail. And both Streets LA and Jessica Palmadessa spoke positively about Patrick Perry. Jessica said she likes him now because he's nice to her. Jenna said, "You know he's a murderer, right?" Aaron said, "He's in jail for murder". Streets LA answered, "He's not in jail".



 
Simply . . . fog of war. Will happen now and then. :whistle:


Fog of War is undoubtedly one of the greatest and densely compacted—yet profoundly meaningful expressions in the English language. Of all industries and enterprises in the world, the MILITARY has the greatest expressions, perhaps because they are borne out of unbearable life-and-death necessity & pressure, much the same way diamonds are created.

Another military gem that comes to mind is the concept of "mission creep". Two words that embrace an entire universe of meaningless and wasteful activity.

I was curious to see what other military expressions pop up on the radar with a quick Google search. Here are some more delicious treats!

SEARCH RESULTS
  • Embrace the Suck: The philosophy of accepting, and even leaning into, extreme hardship or misery without complaining. [1]
  • Got Your Six: Meaning "I have your back". Originating from WWI pilots using a clock-face to denote direction (12 is forward, 6 is directly behind). [1, 2]
  • SNAFU: An acronym for Situation Normal: All Fucked Up (or "All Fouled Up" for polite company). It describes a situation that is chaotic, but entirely expected as the "normal" state of affairs. [1]
  • Hurry Up and Wait: The universally loathed military tradition of rushing to a location and scrambling to get ready, only to sit around indefinitely. [1]
  • Force Multiplier: A tactical term for an attribute or tool that drastically increases the combat effectiveness of a force. Often used in business to describe an investment or hire that exponentially boosts output. [1]
  • Friendly Fire: The tragic phenomenon of an attack by military forces on their own or allied troops. Used in civilian terms to describe accidental damage caused by someone on your own team. [1]
  • Charlie Foxtrot: The military phonetic alphabet translation for "Cluster Fuck," brilliantly and concisely describing a spectacularly disorganized or botched operation. [1, 2, 3]
  • BOHICA: An darkly comic acronym standing for Bend Over, Here It Comes Again. Used when troops are about to receive more terrible news, a new set of frustrating orders, or endless administrative paperwork. [1, 2]
//
 
Fog of War is undoubtedly one of the greatest and densely compacted—yet profoundly meaningful expressions in the English language. Of all industries and enterprises in the world, the MILITARY has the greatest expressions, perhaps because they are borne out of unbearable life-and-death necessity & pressure, much the same way diamonds are created.



I believe that Hubbard was experiencing some Fog of War when he wrote his HCO PL on Completed Staff Work (known as CSW). I say that because he forgot to give credit to the military from which he borrowed it.

Here's what ChatGPT has to say about it:


Hubbard's Scientology policy on "Completed Staff Work" (CSW) appears to be heavily derived from an existing U.S. military management doctrine rather than being an original Scientology creation.
The concept of "Completed Staff Work" was already well established in the U.S. Army during World War II. The classic military doctrine was published in 1942 and is generally attributed to Colonel Archer J. Lerch of the Provost Marshal General's Office. It defined completed staff work as presenting a fully worked-out solution so that a commander only needs to approve or disapprove it.
If you compare the military doctrine to Hubbard's CSW policy, the similarities are striking:
Military Doctrine (1942)Hubbard's CSW Policy
Staff officer studies problem and presents a complete solutionStaff member studies situation and presents a complete solution
Commander should only need to approve or disapproveSenior executive should only need to approve or disapprove
Don't bring problems, bring solutionsDon't bring problems, bring solutions
Work out the details yourselfWork out the details yourself
Avoid burdening the chief with unfinished thinkingAvoid burdening seniors with incomplete proposals
The wording in Scientology's CSW policy is not identical, but the core principles are essentially the same. The military version predates Scientology by more than a decade.
This would not be unusual for Hubbard. Throughout his career he borrowed terminology and organizational ideas from many sources, including:
  • The military (command structures, ethics conditions, mission orders, fleet terminology)
  • Business management systems
  • Psychology and psychoanalysis
  • Hypnosis literature
  • Self-help and sales training methods
  • Eastern religious and philosophical concepts
Hubbard served in the U.S. Navy during World War II, so he would have been exposed to military administrative practices and staff procedures. Whether he encountered the specific 1942 doctrine directly cannot be proven from currently available evidence, but the doctrine was widely circulated throughout military organizations and became a standard management concept.
An interesting nuance is that many former Scientology executives have noted that CSW is one of the more practical Hubbard policies. Unlike many Scientology doctrines that depend on Scientology-specific beliefs, CSW is essentially a conventional management principle: do the analysis, formulate a recommendation, and make it easy for the decision-maker to act.
So the most accurate conclusion is:
Hubbard almost certainly did not originate the concept of Completed Staff Work. The doctrine existed in the U.S. military years before Scientology, and Hubbard's CSW policy appears to be an adaptation of that earlier military management practice.
 
The wording in Scientology's CSW policy is not identical, but the core principles are essentially the same. The military version predates Scientology by more than a decade.
That is enbtirely correct. He borrowed from a lot of places and the SO in particular has a LOT of concepts and command principles taken directly from the US Navy and the British Royal Navy manuals.

It is a mix of both, sprinkled with Hubbardese slang from his pre-SO dianetics era, so it is less apparent at first glance for people who served in just the USN or the RN. Yet even then the similarities become apparent with time. I spoke to ex-USN people who were in CoS and they spotted them.
 
Simply . . . fog of war. Will happen now and then. :whistle:
FYI: Scene of the murder, Hollywood and Las Palmas, is three
blocks from the infamous test center on Hollywood Blvd; six blocks
from the executive HGB building on Hollywood Blvd.

From LA Times: (subscription site)

Hollywood Walk of Fame killing: Family demands justice - Los Angeles Times​

The family of a Hollywood man is demanding justice after their loved one was attacked by a dog, beaten and then stabbed to death in a wild group attack on the Walk of Fame last week.

Berry Le’Mar Henderson, 37, was attacked by a dog while waiting for a bus near the intersection of Hollywood Boulevard and Las Palmas Avenue around 3:30 p.m. on May 20, according to several of his relatives and a Los Angeles Police Department spokeswoman.

Surveillance video captured at a nearby 7-Eleven and posted online by community activist Najee Ali shows Henderson running across Hollywood Boulevard, while the dog bites at his ankles. A group of men gives chase, according to the video, and one can be seen holding a weapon. The group then surrounds the victim on the other side of the street and can be seen punching and kicking him.

LAPD Officer Norma Eisenman, a department spokeswoman, said the victim suffered multiple stab wounds and was pronounced dead at a hospital a short time later. Police arrested three suspects that day: Bruce Lamont Fuller Jr., Isaul Hernandez and Robert Anthony Garcia, Eisenman said.

Anthony allegedly beat the victim and stuck him repeatedly with a “small bat,” Eisenman said. The dog’s owner, Patrick Randall Perry, was arrested on May 28, according to Eisenman, who said detectives believe Perry stabbed the victim.

A man by the same name was arrested in the same area in 2024 for getting into a fight outside a Church of Scientology building on the Walk of Fame, according to a report by NBC Los Angeles. Police said Perry is 55 years old. The man described in the 2024 news story was 52 at the time.

All four men were arrested on suspicion of murder and are being held in lieu of $2 million, Eisenman said. It was not immediately clear if a case had been presented to the Los Angeles County district attorney’s office.

Henderson, who lived in downtown L.A., was waiting for a bus when the deadly melee began, according to his loved ones.

“My cousin was not the aggressor, my cousin was just here. He was running away. He was down on the ground,” his cousin, Demeya Brewer, said during a vigil held in Hollywood on Friday afternoon, and later published on Facebook.

At least one local activist said he had expressed concern about Perry and his dog before. William Gude, better known online under the handle “Film The Police L.A.,” claimed Perry’s dog had bitten him in the past.

Gude also sent the Los Angeles Police Department video of a man he identified as Perry threatening someone with a collapsible baton in 2024. The man in the video can be seen holding a dog on a leash that looks similar to the one captured in the surveillance footage of Henderson’s killing.

Police officials wrote back to Gude in 2024 that an investigation had been opened. It was not immediately clear what happened to that investigation. Criminal court records do not show recent charges against Perry.

Relatives described Henderson as a happy-go-lucky man who “brought a smile” everywhere he went.

“He was someone who was loved by many family and friends. Anyone who knew Berry loved him. Everyone is just really devastated that it happened to Berry because he is one of those cool dudes. Berry don’t cause trouble,” said his sister, Latoya Payne. “It’s devastating ... he was murdered. We just want justice for our brother.”

###
 
Last edited:
~
"And after 40+ years of drug and alcohol abuse
.. I dare say I’m looking pretty damn good!!!"

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . Patrick Perry, Facebook


pp-jpg.24554
. . .
pp2-jpg.24556
 
Apparently LAPD have found Patrick Perry and arrested him.....



He's being held with a $2,000,000 bond. Maybe the CoS can help him get out, given that he seemed to be helping them intimidate the protesters with his dog in the past. :unsure: He should phone his OSA handler and ask.

I wonder how Aaron found out about Perry's involvement prior to him being named at all in the media. :unsure:
 
Bad scene!

So, Perry must have let the dog loose on him......it chased him across Hollywood Blvd.... Very vicious...

Why? What was going on? The guy that was attacked was black also....so don't think some sort of racist attack....

Seems kinda strange for some sort of Scientology thing.......

Knowing what I know about the LA gang scene.....it really sounds like some sort of turf or territory situation....?

 
Why? What was going on?
Psychopaths don't need reasons. Psychopaths often look for trouble and violence.

They're not like us. It's a fool's errand and folly to try to understand or divine anything
about them or why they do what they do.

Dirty Harry
Inspector Harry Callahan (Clint Eastwood) makes it clear to District Attorney​
Rothko that the killer is going to strike again.
Harry Callahan: You know, you're crazy if you think you've heard the last
of this guy. He's gonna kill again.​
District Attorney Rothko: How do you know?​
Harry Callahan: 'Cause he likes it.​
¯\_(ツ)_/¯​
 
Psychopaths don't need reasons. Psychopaths often look for trouble and violence.

They're not like us. It's a fool's errand and folly to try to understand or divine anything
about them or why they do what they do.

Dirty Harry
Inspector Harry Callahan (Clint Eastwood) makes it clear to District Attorney​
Rothko that the killer is going to strike again.​
Harry Callahan: You know, you're crazy if you think you've heard the last​
of this guy. He's gonna kill again.​
District Attorney Rothko: How do you know?​
Harry Callahan: 'Cause he likes it.​
¯\_(ツ)_/¯​
Yes, of course. I’m experienced with the psycho stuff.,. Forgot to mention it. Or chimping out…,
 
This is a my own personal viewpoint which I very much doubt anybody here will approve of:

Aaron decided to get right up in the face of an entirely formidable L.A. street person whom he knew nothing whatsoever about - literally screaming in his face on the video (IIRC). Native Angelinos like myself know that deliberately provoking such a person in that manner amounts to begging for a trip to the Emergency Room - or the Morgue. Mr. Perry chose to have his street buddy dog drive off a clear and present threat (Aaron Smith-Levin) rather than beat Aaron into a bloody crater in the concrete like he might have.

That Mr. Perry was apparenty on friendly terms with Sea Org Security is a demonstration of properly done PR Area Control, not a demonstration of a "Scientology hired thug".

As a survivor of two years living in L.A.'s Skid Row, I can tell you I've met numerous persons there who were similarly dangerous and never once managed to provoke any violence or even threats of violence.

IMO, Aaron went well out of his way to provoke Mr. Perry on camera for clicks and views while entirely failing to demonstrate even the tiniest bit of Los Angeles street savvie. He still seems to have not even the remotest clue how close he came to dying that day.

My prediction is this: If Aaron continues like this, he will eventually meet someone who won't show him any mercy at all.
 
Last edited:
Back
Top