Jefferson Hawkins

Bill

Well-known member
I am sad to announce the death of my brother Jeff Hawkins. He died late on Jan 5th after a severe stroke. He was 79. He will be missed by his family and thousands of friends.

From his Amazon author's bio:
Jefferson Hawkins spent 36 years inside the Church of Scientology, becoming one of its top marketing executives. He helped craft Scientology's polished public façade, which he now reveals as hiding a merciless world of physical and mental abuse, harassment, sleep deprivation, labor camps, family disconnection, and human rights violations.

Now an outspoken critic and whistleblower, Hawkins exposed the shocking abuses that go on at Scientology’s highest levels in his 2010 memoir, Counterfeit Dreams: One Man’s Journey Into and Out of the World of Scientology.

He has written two additional nonfiction books exposing Scientology's system of mind control: Leaving Scientology: A Practical Guide to Escape and Recovery, and Closing Minds: How Scientology's "Ethics Technology" is Used to Control Their Members.

Hawkins has appeared on the Emmy-winning A&E series, Leah Remini: Scientology and the Aftermath, and was featured in Louis Theroux's My Scientology Movie. He was interviewed by the St. Petersburg Times for their groundbreaking series unveiling Scientology’s abuses, and appeared on Anderson Cooper 360 for CNN’s three-part exposé, “Scientology: A History of Violence.”
 
I'm so sorry for your loss Bill, your brother is someone to be very proud of, for his skills and for who he is.
 
I'm sorry for your loss, Bill. It is a loss for all of us in this community. Your brother was my favorite writer of anyone in our community. He was the very first ex-scientologist I ever communicated with after leaving the CoS; after reading his blog, I just messaged him to thank him. Reading his Counterfeit Dreams blog (before his book was published) was what convinced me to begin posting on ESMB back in 2009.
 
In Memory of Jefferson Hawkins
A brave man who chose truth over terror
I am feeling the loss on the passing of my dear friend Jefferson Hawkins, who died on January 5th after a severe stroke. He was 79 years old.
Jefferson was not only loved by his family and friends—he was respected, admired, and relied upon by thousands of people around the world who found courage through his voice. His life mattered profoundly, and so did the risks he took to tell the truth.
For 36 years, Jefferson lived inside Scientology. He rose to the highest levels of its marketing and public relations apparatus and became one of the architects of the organization’s carefully polished public image. Few people understood better than Jefferson how that façade was constructed—and what it was designed to hide.
And then, at great personal cost, he told the truth.
Jefferson became one of the earliest and most credible whistleblowers to expose what life inside Scientology’s upper ranks was really like: relentless psychological abuse, physical violence, sleep deprivation, forced labor, coerced confessions, family separation, and systematic human rights violations. He did not speculate. He testified. He had been there.
In his memoir Counterfeit Dreams, Jefferson pulled back the curtain on a world most outsiders could barely imagine. In Leaving Scientology and Closing Minds, he went further—offering practical guidance, clarity, and hope to those trying to escape a coercive system designed to break autonomy and silence dissent. These books were lifelines. They still are.
Jefferson did not merely write—he showed up.
He appeared on national television, in documentaries, and in major investigative reports. He spoke calmly, clearly, and consistently about what he had witnessed and endured. He told the world that David Miscavige had physically assaulted him—punched him violently, repeatedly—and he never recanted, never softened the truth, never backed down.
That courage cannot be overstated.
Speaking out against Scientology is not like criticizing an ordinary institution. It invites harassment, surveillance, smear campaigns, and lifelong retaliation. Jefferson knew this. He paid that price anyway. Not for fame. Not for revenge. But because silence would have made him complicit.
What made Jefferson extraordinary was not only his bravery, but his decency.
He was thoughtful. Measured. Kind. He listened. He cared deeply about people who were still trapped inside systems of control, and he believed—quietly but firmly—that truth, once spoken, had its own power. He never exaggerated. He didn’t need to. The facts were devastating enough.
Jefferson Hawkins helped change the historical record. He helped other survivors trust their own experiences. He helped journalists, lawmakers, and the public understand that what happens behind closed doors in Scientology is not eccentric belief—it is abuse.
His voice helped crack the wall.
I will miss him dearly—not only as a whistleblower and author, but as a friend. He was also an Outer Banks moderator that worked behind the scenes. The world is better because Jefferson Hawkins lived, spoke, and refused to be erased.
May he rest in peace.
May his truth endure.
And may we honor him by continuing to speak, clearly and without fear.Jefferson.h.jpg
 
CNN followed St. Petersburg Times expose on Church violence, especially at INT basE.
CNN did a series of shows running all week called

SCIENTOLOGY a HISTORY OF VIOLENCE
Jefferson Hawkins exposed his assaults and battery attacks by David Miscavige. Here is the series
~~

 
Long term comrades from Apollo days until escaping the Sea Org, Bill Franks and Jefferson Hawkins had
fallen out of touch til I pulled off a dinner date for all of us to re-unite.
It was an enlightening evening with much laughter and reminiscing old times...Screenshot 2026-01-07 185854.png
 
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