I am posting this to help get the widest possible distribution of this very important piece by my friend Yashar Ali.
He has done an astonishing job of telling the story of Shelly Miscavige, especially the cover-up by scientology assisted by the LAPD. He has uncovered new and shocking information about the circumstances of how the LAPD “verified” Shelly was OK. And a tragic photo of Shelly, taken from her last issued driver’s license that tells so much.
It is a masterpiece of giving the big picture, while including and explaining details of the scientology world that make the big picture understandable. And he has some new reporting that will have both the LAPD and scientology spinning.
You can find the story at Yashar’s substack (you can sign up for free with just a valid email address or better yet get a monthly or annual subscription).
In the interest of making this information as widely known as possible, with Yashar’s blessing, I am reprinting the article in full.
NOTE: Yashar updated his article with further information and documents — the latest version is below.
Exclusive: Shelly Miscavige and The Missing Scientologists: How The LAPD Made Scientology’s Problem Go Away
Part 1 – Shelly’s Fingerprints: Four Days In August
The meeting was arranged by an attorney for the missing woman. It was scheduled after a short period of rapid negotiation about where the woman would agree to meet the detectives and what she would agree to do when she met them.
As they pulled up to the coffee shop, the detectives faced a woman who said she was Shelly Miscavige, the wife of Scientology’s leader David Miscavige. Jeffrey Riffer, a longtime attorney for Scientology, accompanied the woman.
The detectives checked her ID, took her fingerprints, and returned to LAPD headquarters.
The next day, two LAPD lab technicians determined that the fingerprints taken at the coffee shop could not definitively be matched to the fingerprints the California DMV had on record for Shelly.
Instead of contacting Shelly’s attorney to arrange for another set of prints to be taken, the LAPD removed her from the missing person’s database, closed the investigation, and issued a press statement saying that the missing person’s report had been “unfounded.”
Fingerprint experts who examined the prints told me that the technicians shouldn’t have even attempted to match the fingerprints; the prints taken by LAPD detectives weren’t of a high enough quality to conduct a match. Without prior knowledge about the subject of my story or her association with Scientology, one of the experts I interviewed asked if the person who provided their fingerprint had been trained to intentionally leave a fingerprint that wouldn’t be suitable for a match.
This alarming lapse, which has never been reported before, is just one piece of a larger story that reveals that the LAPD has repeatedly disregarded standard law enforcement procedures to protect Scientology.
But not getting a second set of prints from the woman claiming to be Shelly was just one of the things the LAPD didn’t do in this case that, at best, would involve incompetence and negligence, and worst, that certain LAPD employees were engaged in a conspiracy to protect Scientology from law enforcement action.
Days later, for unknown reasons and even though the missing person’s investigation into Shelly had been closed out, the detectives contacted the coffee shop to obtain security camera footage from the meeting.
When the coffee shop sent the footage over a week later, the videos for all the cameras were inexplicably scrambled.
As part of reporting this story, I reviewed the footage and confirmed that it was unusable for any investigative purpose.
The meeting at the coffee shop was ignited by a missing person’s report filed by one of the most well-known Scientologists at the time, actress Leah Remini, who was best known at that point for co-starring in the CBS sitcom “King of Queens.” In the summer of 2013, after years of tortuous abuse at the hands of Scientology and its top officials, Remini and her family left Scientology.
One of the first things Remini did after leaving Scientology, which she was a member of for 35 years (since she was eight years old), was to file a missing person’s report on Shelly Miscavige, which she did on August 5, 2013.
For Remini, involving a non-Scientology law enforcement agency in what Scientologists would consider an internal matter, marked an earth-shattering departure. After 35 years of being brainwashed and drilled into the belief that it was a high crime to involve non-Scientology authorities in matters that only involved Scientologists, her public action was a major rebuke to Scientology.
This story is based on reporting gathered over the last six years. I had conversations with 11 sources, including former Scientologists, elected officials, law enforcement contacts, and sources in the entertainment industry. These sources spoke to me only on the condition of anonymity. Their reasons for this condition varied: some were not allowed to talk to the press without prior authorization, others had signed restrictive non-disclosure agreements, or they did not want to become a target of Scientologists in the entertainment business.
However, all of my sources shared something in common; they required anonymity because they were terrified of backlash from Scientology and its proxies, including the private investigation firms it retains globally to track, intimidate, and gather intelligence on those it labels as enemies.
As part of reporting this story, I obtained internal Scientology documents, text messages, emails, and privileged and confidential legal documents.
I obtained copies of Shelly’s fingerprints, her DMV photo, and other related documents from sources in the legal and law enforcement world.
The records I obtained gave me a glimpse into Shelly’s life since she vanished. For example, in 2010, she got her driver’s license renewed at a West Covina, California, DMV field office.
By the time she took the sullen photo — the first glimpse the public is getting of Shelly since a photograph taken in 2004 — she had not been seen in public for three years since she attended her father’s funeral in 2007 with a Scientology handler watching her every move.
Scientology will deny nearly everything in this report. I have a longstanding policy of not quoting Scientology spokespersons, as they almost always fill their statements with lies. They must lie per Scientology policy; telling the truth, which could harm Scientology, would be considered a high crime.
An email detailing this story’s allegations had yet to receive a response from LAPD’s public information office when this story was published. Two attempts to connect with Jeffrey Riffer, the attorney for Scientology and the Miscaviges, failed to produce a response.
Stunning Abandonment of Standard Law Enforcement Procedures
Part of the report read, “The PR [person reporting] believes, as do other ex-members of the Church, that the MP [missing person] is being secreted against her will and not allowed to communicate with anyone on orders by her husband. Given the PR’s intimate knowledge of the Church and their harsh response to any criticism, the PR fears for the MP’s safety.”
The report also said on two occasions that, Remini observed Shelly get nervous and anxious when her husband was around.
Knowing that information and learning the next day that the print came back inconclusive/unsuitable for a match, it’s shocking that the LAPD moved on from the investigation.
But it gets worse.
My sources, along with a review of documents, told me that Shelly was not informed that she was the subject of a missing person’s report by the LAPD detectives and that Remini was the one who filed it. There is also no indication that they ascertained why she was missing or what led her to withdraw so severely from life and her friends.
Not presenting Shelly with this critical information goes against every standard practice of law enforcement when a missing adult is found, even if they claim they are voluntarily missing. And not attempting to learn why someone whose friends expressed concern that she was being held against her own will and the subject of abuse also goes against standard law enforcement practices for investigations involving missing and kidnapped persons and possible victims of domestic violence.
The location of Shelly’s meeting with the LAPD detectives was also unusual.
The LAPD detectives met with the woman claiming to be Shelly and her attorney Jeffrey Riffer in Covina, an incorporated city with its police department in Los Angeles County. Law enforcement experts who spoke to me, including LAPD sources, said the detectives should have arranged to meet with the woman and her attorney at the Covina Police Department. As a courtesy, Covina PD would have given the LAPD detectives a private room, and cameras would provide security footage if needed. If Shelly was accompanied by Scientology security agents (which would have further intimidated her into silence if she was being held against her own will), the detectives could have required them to wait outside as they met with her and her attorney.
The LAPD, which does not train its officers and detectives on Scientology policies and how to deal with cult-like organizations, treats Scientology as if it operates like any other organized religion.
And based on my reporting, the LAPD takes its treatment of Scientology a step further.
What LAPD did in this instance, or instead what they didn’t do, and what they have done in other cases involving Scientology is give Scientology the equivalent of law enforcement courtesy and reciprocity. For example, if the San Francisco Police Department were to send a message to the LAPD about a case, the LAPD’s position would be to trust the accuracy of what SFPD communicated unless something disproves what they said. In the case of Scientology, the LAPD has consistently taken Scientology’s word for it.
Scientology’s use of prominent attorneys allows them to avoid law enforcement accountability, particularly when it involves missing persons investigations and welfare checks.
Usually, it wouldn’t be out of the ordinary for a law enforcement agency to assume that a prominent attorney at a major Los Angeles firm would represent their client’s best interests and tell the truth.
But attorneys for Scientology operate differently. L. Ron Hubbard wrote policy letters making it clear that instead of seeing attorneys as well-educated, experienced counsel who could guide Scientology, they were tools for Scientology to do its business and that attorneys hired by Scientology should bend to Scientology’s objectives.
It’s an exchange Scientology attorneys make for incredibly consistent business.
I reviewed one Scientology internal document from the early 2000s that revealed that two longtime Scientology attorneys had billings of over $250k each in 11 months just for one department and organization in Scientology. That doesn’t include their work for other Scientology organizations and projects. Scientology has dozens of attorneys on retainer at any given time.
And even though Scientology is no longer litigious in that it initiates litigation, it still needs a lot of legal defense.
I have no evidence that Jeffrey Riffer, the Scientology attorney who negotiated with detectives and then accompanied Shelly to the coffee shop, knowingly lied to the LAPD about Shelly’s state of mind and communication with her, and I am not suggesting it. I am suggesting that he was likely lied to by Scientology officials about her desires and that he telegraphed those lies to the LAPD.
Decades of investigations that fell apart due to Scientology’s intervention show that the LAPD is not set up to deal with how Scientology operates, impacting how Scientology-related crime is reported and investigated.
Four Days In August
The records I reviewed reveal that the case was transferred to the missing persons unit, and detectives set out to contact Shelly via her attorney. But there are a lot of gaps, and we still don’t know who else Scientology and its attorneys were in touch within the LAPD. It’s also unclear what conditions detectives agreed to before meeting Shelly at the coffee shop.
After the LAPD closed the missing person’s case prematurely, they abandoned standard law enforcement procedures again. LAPD detectives did not inform Remini that they believed they had found Shelly. Remini found out through the media when the news first leaked, and then the LAPD released a statement saying: “The investigation has been closed, and we consider the report to be unfounded.”
Another statement they released a few days later said, “Our missing person’s detectives have met with the alleged missing person within the past two days. We consider this case closed.”
News organizations worldwide reported on the LAPD’s announcement that Remini’s report was “unfounded” and included Scientology’s statement uncritically.
“This ill-advised, ludicrous self-promotion and the media inquiries it generated caused an inexcusable distraction for the LAPD. The entire episode was nothing more than a publicity stunt for Ms. Remini.”
The coverage focused on the LAPD’s statement and Scientology’s attack on Remini instead of asking why a woman who was so powerful and surrounded by so many influential people and then suddenly disappeared.
The mixed messages and stonewalling only emboldened Remini to push on the Shelly issue further. She filed a series of public records requests (spending tens of thousands of dollars in attorneys fees) to learn more about Shelly’s case but to no avail.
Not satisfied that Shelly was well or even alive, Remini kept pushing.
She repeatedly brought up Shelly in her A&E docuseries and dedicated an entire episode to Shelly’s disappearance. She has regularly posted about Shelly’s disappearance on social media, pushing the hashtag #whereisshelly.
While there were articles about Shelly’s disappearance before Remini left Scientology and filed the missing person’s report, she has taken the case to another level. If you look at the replies and comments of Scientology social media posts, you will often see people posting, “Where Is Shelly?”
I have focused on Scientology and its abuses for two decades and have been reporting on it since 2016. It is the most complicated organization I’ve ever studied, with thousands of policies and directives, its own language (called Scientologese for lack of a better choice), and significant use of acronyms. Scientology and its policies, teachings, practices, and procedures are so nuanced and multi-layered that it frequently fools even the most cynical people.
But the “Where Is Shelly” message has stuck because, unlike Scientology, it’s straightforward: a woman who used to be ubiquitous hasn’t been seen in public in 17 years, and every time the organization she was the second most powerful official in is asked about her, they go on an aggressive attack.
People understandably wonder why Scientology can’t just release a new photo or video of Shelly or have her sit in the front row at one of Scientology’s big events to stop speculation about her whereabouts and welfare.
But David Miscavige will never do that, at least not with the current level of pressure on him. According to Mike Rinder, a former top Scientology executive who escaped Scientology in 2007 and has known Shelly since she was 12 when they both worked directly for Hubbard, it would be tantamount to admitting that the evil people (the media and Shelly’s friends) were right.
(Over the years, as I have reported on Scientology, I have become good friends with many former Scientologists, including Remini and Rinder)
Putting Shelly on video would also be acknowledging her existence and humanity. To Miscavige, that’s untenable as she is a non-person. Shelly, who he is still married to, is someone he doesn’t want to think about or know exists, so when he is reminded of her, usually by Remini, he lashes out via his staff and proxies.
The public position of the LAPD, then and now, was that Remini filed a report that Shelly was missing, and after meeting with Shelly they determined that she was not missing. But if a fingerprint was used to confirm her identity, and that result was inconclusive, how could they say she was no longer considered missing?
There is no scenario too improbable when it comes to Scientology. For over 70 years, Scientology has been operating in the most brazen manner and has undertaken thousands of complex intelligence operations to protect itself and its leadership, specifically founder L. Ron Hubbard and the current leader, David Miscavige.
Scientology is responsible for the most extensive infiltration into the US government in history. Its two intelligence agencies, first with the Guardian’s office and now with the Office of Special Affairs, have infiltrated dozens of other governments worldwide, law enforcement agencies, including Interpol, and local and state governments. They have broken up marriages, separated families, destroyed careers and businesses, and disappeared people deemed enemies or threats.
There is nothing Scientology and Scientologists won’t do to protect Scientology.
Nothing.
Understanding Scientology = Understanding Shelly
The answer to both of these questions lies in understanding what Scientology truly is, and unfortunately, a vast majority of people, including law enforcement, don’t understand Scientology in a way that reveals how incredibly evil it is. Even those who have watched documentaries like HBO’s “Going Clear,” or the A&E docuseries “Leah Remini: Scientology and the Aftermath” co-hosted by Leah Remini and Mike Rinder don’t fully understand what Scientology is like and how Scientologists live day-to-day.
It takes years of studying and learning every part of Scientology and how it operates to grasp its true nature.
Scientology is often called a cult, and while it has some cultish aspects, a more accurate way to describe Scientology is that it is a borderless totalitarian state and a cult of personality. For Scientologists, Scientology is like North Korea without state-sanctioned executions. From brainwashing, indoctrination, prison camps, multi-generational punishment, holding people against their will, chasing those who try to escape, and transnational repression of dissenters, it all exists in Scientology.
Like North Korea, Scientology even has what is known as face crimes. David Miscavige has been known to beat Scientology executives whose facial expressions at any given moment displease him. Former Scientologists I have spoken to over the years have told me stories of being scolded and interrogated (at their own expense) when they didn’t appear to be sufficiently enthusiastic at Scientology events.
For Scientologists, Scientology is like a separate state with its own laws and justice system.
What people have a hard time understanding is how obsessively dedicated Scientologists are. No one, outside of a jihadist terrorist, is more committed to a cause than a Scientologist is committed to Scientology. Scientologists will give up everything for Scientology, including their kids. They will commit crimes for Scientology; they will abuse people for Scientology.
And the reason is simple: Scientologists, who believe we live innumerable lives, think they are on a mission to save humanity.
As part of becoming a Sea Org member (Scientology’s paramilitary workforce), Scientologists sign a 1-billion-year contract. These contracts are often made fun of. It’s ridiculous; I get it. But in reality, it’s a terrifying indicator of commitment. What would you do for a cause that meant so much to you that you were willing to give it total control over not just this lifetime but many lifetimes over one billion years?
Scientology and Scientologists are governed by thousands of policies and directives written by founder L. Ron Hubbard. Because Scientologists believe that Hubbard is the sole source for Scientology technology and policies which, when applied perfectly, will solve every problem, these policies can never be altered and must be interpreted literally. For Scientologists, Hubbard’s policies are law. Scientologists consider Scientology law to be entirely above what they call “WOG law.” The term WOG is a slur that Scientologists use to refer to non-Scientologists.
Hana Whitfield says
Claire Headley recently interviewed by me on tape about Shelly and her mother, Flo Barnett in which I talked about the following in more detail. Flo contacted me in Los Angeles in the 80s begging for help. She was panicking, crying, and said she was afraid she was going mad. Scientology had kicked her out and refused to help her. So had David Mayo’s AAC in Santa Barbara; Flo didn’t have $ for auditing at the time. She called me. I told her, yes, we’d help, no charge, your sessions can start today. But the turmoil around her was tearing her apart; she either could not use her car, or could not get a ride. Flo even agreed to come and stay with Jerry and me; we had a vacant apartment next to ours that we regularly “sheltered” former Scientologists in to ensure they would rest, sleep, and eat healthy food for a week, and do it away from issues that were dogging them before starting any remedial auditing. Flo agreed wholeheartedly. But she was unable to maintain focus on anything … over 2 to 3 days of trying to get with her, I lost touch with her. A few days later, I heard the tragic news. Bringing this up again has been deeply disturbing. My heart goes out to all those who suffered at the hands of Scientology, and those who lost their lives in their attempts to break free.
Accordion-Girlfriend says
I have been doing research on Shelly; her disappearance is not the only strange thing that has happened in her life: Her mother death and the events leading up to her death. It is very strange and police not fully investigating an obvious homicide. What did her mother know?
Chris says
Kia ora Mike
There is an interesting German Doco on Scientology member’s deaths that have been poorly investigated https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e9ZV-LAoYDA – Police collusion/corruption is rampant 🙁
Nga mihi
Chris
Ellanorah Wilson says
Shelly does not donate large sums of money to LAPD or LA Couny SD. She does not hire officers for well paid hours as private security. Why would they “protect her interests?” She is just a woman – who has probably been labeled as “crazy” to them. So she does not count or matter in the big finacial picture. I am sure the powers that be look at the “stats” and go with the scio-bot flow. Shame on them…wish this article had been page one in the LA Times…or any publication that would get civilian attention. Where is 20/20 or other news programs? Again never mind – no one cares except us ex-bots.
otherles says
Shelly’s not showing anyone the money.
otherles says
You’re supposed to trust the police.
Phillip says
Excellent article. One question.
How many of Shelly’s “handlers” were already in the Coffee Shop when Shelly and Atty showed up? (The LAPD wouldn’t know who they were and that they were there. And probably wouldn’t care based on the quality of their work that day.)
GL says
As I’ve been saying for a long time, Demento is absolutely terrified of what Shelly knows about him getting out into the public arena and will do everything short, to be very blunt, of having her killed, to keep her hidden away until she dies of old age. And even then I expect he won’t even announce her passing: out of sight, out of mind.
Mary Kahn says
Thank you Mike.
I think of Shelly and my heart breaks. Umpteen years since she’s been missing and the only one who has reached out to find out where she is has been Leah Remini. I hope one day Shelly is free and taken in by someone who she does or can love, is shown the highest degree of kindness and patience while she recovers from years of isolation from the outside world and a mindset that has been nothing short of batshit crazy.
FREE SHELLY.
Geoff Levin says
Excellent article. This is the modern day GASLIGHTING movie. It should be a film.
Fred G. Haseney says
Thank you, Yashar Ali and Mike Rinder for today’s blog. Over the years, I’ve read about this subject from various sources, but today’s presentation is the first time that I really, truly got the story.
Todd Cray says
There is good cause to question the presence of Jeffrey Riffer during this meeting, specifically whose interests Riffer was actually representing. Was he there to generously help Shelly, a presumably penniless woman? Was the “church” thoughtful enough to foot her bill for an attorney to represent her personal interests? Or was Riffer representing the interests of the “church” which are clearly NOT identical with Shelly’s? In that latter case, he would have been obligated to act as the “church’s” watchdog and dutifully report back to his real client about what she said and how she comported herself. And Shelly would have been keenly aware of that.
Given their general negligence (and even less transparence) during this meeting, it is doubtful that the police ever raised this question. That alone would taint their interview irredeemably.
Todd Cray says
In California (where Shelly is believed to be held), every patient attending a doctor’s office even for the most routine of matters is separated from any accompanying friends or family right at the outset of their appointment. Behind closed doors, the medical staff will ask the patient whether they are safe in their home and around their family. This is done even if the patient is known to live on their own. Only once the medical staff has received a satisfactory answer are companions permitted to re-join the appointment if the patient requests it.
This raises a troubling question: If medical personnel, who are untrained in law enforcement procedures but are undoubtedly observing CA state law must routinely exercise this degree of caution, why wouldn’t police officers practice at least the same degree of diligence? Especially in a case where actual suspicions have been raised and an actual interview had to be arranged solely for this purpose.
Even more puzzling, why would law enforcement have to requisition a third party’s security footage after the “investigation” is closed, and the proclamation has been made that there is no probable cause to suspect any foul play whatsoever? Footage from a location that they chose and that offers no legal expectation of privacy. Such footage offers strictly video but no relevant audio. It would have been incumbent on the officers to create an audio and/or video record of their own if they felt the circumstances warranted that.
Karl Woodrow says
Not exactly true about california medical appointment laws.
I am always present during my wife’s exams and she for mine.
Just keeping it real.
Maybe you are thinking about exams for rape rather than all medical exams?
Todd Cray says
We are always present for each other’s exams too. But they also separate us for a moment to inquire about safety at home. And that part is mandatory and has nothing to do with medical history.
As I clearly mentioned, I “assumed” that this ritual is due to CA law. But no, I didn’t scour the law books. It’s possible that the clinic created this requires on their own. So, not quite sure where I am offering info that falls short of being “true” or where you’re providing corrections that are keeping it “real.”
In any event, I am contrasting this level of concern for people in mere routine matters with that of the police in response to a specific complaint.
Karl Woodrow says
I totally agree that the subject of a missing-person police interview should be separated from other parties and the interview video recorded.
And I would be surprised if that is not standard police procedure for MP interviews
GatChild says
In my experience, there are no routine medical exams in the Sea Organization from outside professionals unless a serious and known medical condition exists. Even then, it is highly avoided, many times by the staff member themselves. I acted as a “Medical Liason Officer” for a Sea Org base.
Most ailments or “case on post” is dealt with via HCOB “Vitamins” or HCOB “Assists”.
Alan Hubbert, who had been having chronic migraines for YEARS, never saw a doctor until he fell over dead in the FLO mess hall from his brain tumor. IIRC at the time his wife of years was yelling at him right before he fell over about being “case-y”.
David Rosseau was having major physical issues for nearly seven months, but still getting OT5 auditing and assists from his auditor, Mandy K, until his testicular cancer caused bleeding from lower orifices in such a copious amount that he was sent to the hospital, where he died a couple of weeks later from inoperable Stage 4 cancer that had spread to his pancreas, intestines and other internal organs.
Those are two examples of at least 10-15, we can start rattling off names like Enid, Eunice, etc. who suffered similarly.
If she’s seen a doctor, it’s likely he was a Scn contact, if she was even sent at all.