Date: Sun, 10 Jan 1999 19:05:06 -0800
I bet scientology LOVES how the Denver police handled this cult
situation:
====
Cops help cultists avoid kin
The Denver Post
By Kevin Simpson and Virginia Culver
Jan. 10 - Hands pressed hopelessly to the glass at Gate
B-24, friends and family of 14 Concerned Christians cult
members deported from Israel watched their loved ones
scurry across the tarmac Saturday afternoon at Denver
International Airport and onto buses that took them to an
undisclosed location.
The move, requested by the cultists and arranged by Denver
police, revolved around unspecified concern for the safety
of the deportees, followers of self-proclaimed prophet
Monte Kim Miller, who were ordered out of Israel amid
suspicion they planned violence to hasten the apocalypse.
But it also shattered those who waited at the gate with
tight-lipped smiles and hands clasped in prayer that they
might reconnect with cult members they haven't heard from
in months or more.
The cultists did not offer so much as a glance of
acknowledgment toward the window above, where those who
came to meet them stood, stunned with anger, frustration
and disappointment.
"It feels so far away, so very far away," said Anna
Brutan of Clifton, who hoped to see her brother,
20-year-old James Dyck, simply to tell him she loves him.
Some friends and family members were not altogether
surprised that the 14 - eight adults and six children -
would try to circumvent the welcoming party of perhaps two
dozen, plus a large-scale media contingent.
But they fumed that local authorities would help the cult
members avoid them.
Nelma Smith, whose son Terry, his wife and children were
aboard the plane, said she was "dumfounded" that police
gave the Concerned Christians special protection from
their families.
"They should have been forced to walk into the terminal,"
she said. "Why were they even given the option of not
seeing us? This action just leaves the door wide open for
the cult members to make connections and take off again
someplace."
Bill Honsberger, a local cult watcher and Conservative
Baptist missionary who also waited at the gate, said it
was "a lame idea" for police to protect cult members.
"If I had a child in that cult group, they might have had
to arrest me to keep me away from him," said the usually
low-key Honsberger.
The deportees left Israel about 4:25 p.m. MST Friday and
were routed on an Air Canada flight through Toronto
because many of them already held return tickets on the
airline. After a customs delay in Toronto, the plane
arrived just after noon in Denver, and regular passengers
and the Israeli escort disembarked first.
Then, after local authorities entered the plane to speak
to the cultists, Denver police spokesman John Wyckoff
addressed the waiting friends and relatives.
He said the deportees had unanimously voiced a "conscious
decision to get off the plane by another route" based on
"concerns for their safety and well-being." Wyckoff also
told the crowd that the cult members said they would
contact their families soon.
But families weren't so sure.
"This might have been our last chance," said Josh Dyck,
18, brother of James Dyck. "I just feel really let down. I
guess we'll just go home and wait for James to call."
Honsberger figured it could be a long wait.
"It's against their pattern," he said. "That's why they
had to leave - to get away from family."
according to Wyckoff, police and U.S. Customs officials
boarded the plane and told the 14 remaining passengers
about the crowd waiting at the gate and gave them three
options: walk off by themselves, walk off with a police
escort or exit by a different route.
Wyckoff did not say specifically what the cult members'
safety concerns were, but did note that they were told of
some information police had developed. He said concern
about "deprogrammers" was mentioned by the deportees.
"That's an absolute crock," said Honsberger. "That tells
you something about Kim Miller when family members are the
threat. That tells you all you need to know about this
group."
Wyckoff took slips of paper bearing phone numbers from
some family members and promised to have them delivered to
the cult members. Friends and family gradually dispersed,
some heading straight home in hope that the telephone
would ring.
"I can hope - period," said Del Dyck, a 55-year-old
builder from Gypsum and father of James. "But I can't rest
on that."
Indeed, Del Dyck arrived in Denver, sleepless, at 5 a.m.
Saturday from New York, where he'd spent nearly three days
meeting flights from Tel Aviv that he hoped might be
carrying his son. By the time he got to the window at the
gate, it was apparently too late to see James board the
bus.
Del walked dejectedly down the concourse and prepared to
head back to Gypsum.
"It's what Kim Miller would like - to see the whole thing
fall through," he said. "Maybe they'll choose to contact
us, but at this point, Miller's won."
The whereabouts of Miller, 44, remain unknown, although
some cult members detained in Israel claimed he was doing
"research" in London. But his prophesy that he will die
on the streets of Jerusalem in December 1999, and the
subsequent migration of cult members to that city in
recent weeks, prompted Israeli authorities to round up the
14 cultists.
The Israelis believed the Concerned Christians were
planning to provoke police into a shootout that would
trigger violence that, in turn, would hasten the second
coming of Jesus Christ.
Ultimately, no charges were filed against any of those
detained, but all were ordered deported. Family members
seized the development as a prime opportunity to see the
loved ones who abruptly dropped out of sight, anticipating
Miller's prophesy that Denver would be destroyed by an
earthquake on Oct. 10.
Those awaiting the flight knew that they could be setting
themselves up for disappointment, but Norm Smith of
Lakewood, father of cultist Terry Smith, figured it could
have been worse.
"I think I would rather have looked at my son through a
window," he said, "than have had him walk by and shun
me."
In any event, Saturday's events only aggravated families'
anger toward the cult's leader.
"Kim Miller has won a big victory," said Del Dyck. "I
know he's cheering. But my attitude from Scripture hasn't
changed: He's a great deceiver, and those who have given
their lives to deceit will continue to hurt."
Nelma Smith took heart in her own deep religious belief.
"We'll do what we've done before - just keep waiting,"
she said. "God's in control. Not Kim Miller.'
--
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From: David Rice
Subject: Denver Police Shield Cult Members From Concerned Family Members
10.1.1999
Denver Post Staff Writers
Rev David Michael Rice
Mariner's Ministries, Dana Point.
http://holysmoke.org/icr-cult.htm
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