I M Dex
Well-known member
My perspective is that Aaron let his egotism, his need to grandstand for an audience play right into Scientology's hands, and he will take satisfaction in his martyrdom, and/or learn from this experience not to do what makes him vulnerable to such punishment, justified or otherwise. As I understand it, and someone please correct me if I'm mistaken, he tried to push and force his way in to their building while they tried to hold the door to keep him out. If you're not trying to be arrested, charged and penalized, that's not very well thought out.Yeah exactly.
My opinion about all of this:
- The battery charge was bogus to begin with. I've not seen anything other than incidental contact there and the state should be the one to prove that physical contact was deliberate. To me, it is obvious the contact was accidental and caused by him having the door slammed on him.
I have no idea how the jury came up with the notion it was deliberate, unless maybe they got swayed by the testimony of the guards.
I think the real issue here was if Aaron was trespassing or not, although my bet is that he was not, otehrwise the prosecution would ahev banged on this point a lot stronger.
All in all, it is an OSA op that actually worked for a change. They had a long string of failures, they must be surprised and possibly confused about actually having won anything.
It also gives the cult something to use to portray Scientology protesters in general as unbalanced dangerous criminals; Aaron's actions may be intended to make him look heroic, but in the bigger picture, it could be unhelpful publicly.

And I'd attempt to hand him a letter if I could, or say something to him.