Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

‘ SORE THROAT,’ THE CHURCH OF SCIENTOLOG­Y… … AND THE PLOT AGAINST THE AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATIO­N

In an excerpt from new book,book former Sun- Times reporter writes of the Chicago whistleblo­wer who was a spy for L. Ron Hubbard’s church

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BOOK EXCERPT

In the 1970s, major institutio­ns from the White House down were being challenged. The environmen­talist known as “The Fox” exposed Chicago’s corporate polluters. “Deep Throat” helped the Washington Post expose the Watergate scandal and bring down President Richard M. Nixon.

In 1975, a Chicago whistleblo­wer known as “Sore Throat” — a takeoff on Bob Woodward’s Deep Throat — gave reporters incriminat­ing documents taken from the Chicago- based American Medical Associatio­n. He claimed to be a medical doctor fired from the AMA’s staff in a massive layoff known to insiders as the “May Day Massacre,” brought on by the group’s precarious finances. He turned out to be a spy for L. Ron Hubbard and the Church of Scientolog­y, which had the AMA on its enemies list.

‘“Dr. Throat,” as he called himself, gave reporters key documents, stolen by spies who had infiltrate­d the AMA’s executive offices, that revealed the organizati­on was evading millions in taxes and running a secret campaign to try to put chiropract­ors and other alternativ­e healers out of business.

Former Chicago Sun- Times medical writer Howard Wolinsky tells that story in the new book “Contain and Eliminate: The American Medical Associatio­n’s Conspiracy to Destroy Chiropract­ic” ( Louis Sportelli). The following excerpt is taken from the book, which will be available via the website Containand­eliminate.com.

Acloud hung over the offices of the American Medical Associatio­n in the summer of 1975. Or, more accurately, clouds.

The nation’s largest physician group faced bankruptcy. Staff morale was at a low following the layoffs on the May Day Massacre, and membership numbers were plummeting. The AMA was not as invincible as many believed.

Then, there was “Sore Throat,” the supposed former AMA physician who claimed he had been laid off and now was leaking AMA secrets to the media and government agencies. The leaks had triggered four Congressio­nal investigat­ions and had exposed the AMA to more than $ 20 million in back taxes, just as AMA coffers were nearly empty, and its tax- free status was in jeopardy.

Dr. James Sammons, the AMA’s scrappy CEO, was trying to save the sinking ship amidst rumors that he was following orders from the prison cell of an AMA board chair-

man who had been convicted of bank fraud. Things were in shambles.

Soon, Sore Throat would disclose AMA documents exposing its plan to “contain and eliminate” the chiropract­ic profession. And Dr. Chester Wilk, the chiropract­or pushed and guided by Sore Throat, would be taking on the AMA in an antitrust suit.

Who was this Sore Throat? The question ate away at the leadership of the AMA. Was he indeed a former AMA doctor gone rogue? A few doctors laid off in the May Day Massacre fit the descriptio­n of Sore Throat. Or did he come from somewhere other than the ranks of the AMA?

Identifyin­g Sore Throat became a guessing game among AMA executives, but it was a serious matter. Sammons and his executive staff needed to stop the leaks.

Sammons and his lieutenant­s observed that the leaked documents were, in many cases, old, dating back to the 1960s. But after the AMA dismissed them as ancient history, Sore Throat began leaking recent documents and telling reporters things only a current insider could know. He told reporters that the AMA had hired a private investigat­or to plug the leaky AMA and also that select staffers were undergoing polygraph tests. Sammons now thought Sore Throat came from the AMA — or had access to a current staffer.

New York Daily News reporter Judith Randal wrote that the AMA tried to have the Chicago office of the FBI investigat­e the leaks. “This effort was unsuccessf­ul, however, because the FBI said that no violation of federal law was at stake,” she reported on Aug. 5, 1975.

Meanwhile, Jack Bierig, a 28- year- old attorney at Sidley Austin, the AMA’s external legal counsel, recognized that some leaked documents revealed in the press were Sidley’s confidenti­al work relating to the AMA that somehow had been stolen from Sidley’s Chicago headquarte­rs.

The AMA- Sidley relationsh­ip began in 1974. AMA general counsel Bernard Hirsch approached Newton Minow, a partner at the prominent Chicago- based firm, to represent the AMA against the federal government in a suit involving Medicare regulation­s. It was the first time the AMA sued the federal government.

Bierig said there was no formal discipline of health law in those days. But Sidley wanted to demonstrat­e its health expertise. Bierig was tapped to represent the AMA because he had handled food and drug cases for Sidley and also had written a pioneering paper about for- profit, health- care delivery as he finished his J. D. at Harvard Law School.

The Chicago native won the case for the AMA before Judge Julius J. Hoffman, the short, combative jurist famed for tangling with lawyers and defendants in the Chicago 7 trial in 1969- 70, in which the defendants, including Abbie Hoffman and Jerry Rubin, were charged with conspiring to cross state lines to incite riots at the 1968 Democratic convention in Chicago.

Bierig didn’t know if burglars had broken into the AMA and Sidley offices or if moles had been planted in the offices to copy and steal AMA documents. He recommende­d that the AMA and Sidley hire a private eye.

He asked for help from his boss, Minow, the former head of the Federal Communicat­ions Commission under President John F. Kennedy who famously described commercial television as a “vast wasteland.” ( The lost charter boat SS Minnow on the 1960s sitcom “Gilligan’s Island” was a mocking tribute to Minow.)

In a 2018 interview in a conference room in Sidley’s downtown Chicago office with Lake Michigan in the distance, Bierig said he approached Minow.

He recalled: “I’ll never forget this. Minow says, ‘ OK, hire a detective.’

“And I said, ‘ Newt, what am I supposed to do, look in the Yellow Pages under detectives? I have no idea who would be appropriat­e.’

“He said, ‘ It was your idea. Carry it out.’ ” Perry Mason, the pop fiction attorney of Erle Stanley Gardner’s books, radio, TV and movies, always had his PI. “Perry Mason had Paul Drake,” Bierig said, adding he had never encountere­d a PI at Sidley.

Sidley, founded in Chicago in 1866 with Mary Todd Lincoln, President Abraham Lincoln’s widow, among its first clients, is a white- shoe law firm with a blue- chip clientele. It didn’t handle the likes of Perry Mason’s clientele, who typically were being defended for murder with PI Drake coming through for Mason at the last minute.

Was Sore Throat a one- person operation as he told the press? Or was he a part of something bigger? Bierig wanted to know and wanted to stop the leaks, but didn’t know which way to turn.

He finally sought advice from Marlin Johnson, head of security of one of his clients, Canteen Corporatio­n. Johnson had firsthand experience with counterint­elligence, planting spies and even taking on the Mafia. Johnson had been head of the FBI’s

Chicago field office. Johnson had deep expertise in this shadowy world and seemed like a good resource in the search for Sore Throat.

In the tumultuous late 1960s, J. Edgar Hoover, the longtime director of the FBI, had asked Johnson to “neutralize” what he saw as threats to the country. One was the Black Panther Party, a black revolution­ary group. The FBI operation resulted in a 1969 raid by Chicago police and the FBI on the Panthers’ shabby headquarte­rs on Chicago’s West Side. Ninety rounds were emptied into the building. Two Panthers died in a blaze of gunfire. The FBI had an informant inside the Panthers.

Hoover also asked Johnson to enlist the help of the Mafia to “neutralize” Dick Gregory, the Chicago comedian and presidenti­al candidate for the Peace Party in 1968. Hoover didn’t understand Gregory’s jokes, especially about the FBI chief, and saw him as a genuine threat. The affable and discreet Johnson told Hoover that he would do what he could, but wisely Johnson did nothing.

Bierig described Johnson as a “very nice man. I called Marlin up, and I said, ‘ Marlin, you’ve got to help me. I need to hire a detective. I have no idea what to do. Got any ideas?’ ”

Johnson referred Bierig to two detective agencies, one of which was the Pinkerton detective agency, which provided security to Lincoln during the Civil War, and also made its name by infiltrati­ng unions on behalf of America’s biggest corporatio­ns. But both Pinkerton and the other agency took a pass on the AMA- Sidley job, saying it wasn’t the sort of thing they did anymore, said Bierig.

One of the companies referred him to Thomas Spinelle, 36, a hungry private eye. Bierig called Spinelle and described the issue. “And Spinelle said, ‘ I’d be happy to handle this. This would be great,’ ” Bierig recalled.

Before pulling the trigger on the job, Bierig called “a big meeting” at the AMA’s Chicago headquarte­rs that included Minow, AMA executive vice president James Sammons, general counsel Hirsch and some Sidley honchos. The group decided to hire Spinelle to plug the leaks at the AMA and Sidley.

Spinelle ordered lie- detector tests starting at the AMA’s Washington office and used other counterint­elligence tools to try to unearth Sore Throat and boost security.

The AMA did not make the investigat­ion public. But Sore Throat knew about it and tipped William Hines, science and health reporter in the Washington bureau of the Chicago Sun- Times.

Hines had a field day with Spinelle, who he revealed had flunked his Illinois licensing exam as a private investigat­or twice in 1975,

WHO WAS THIS SORE THROAT? THE QUESTION ATE AWAY AT THE LEADERSHIP OF THE AMA. WAS HE INDEED A FORMER AMA DOCTOR GONE ROGUE? A FEW DOCTORS LAID OFF IN THE MAY DAY MASSACRE FIT THE DESCRIPTIO­N OF SORE THROAT. OR DID HE COME FROM SOMEWHERE OTHER THAN THE RANKS OF THE AMA?

in February and May, the latest just months before he had been hired for the AMA job. The Secret Service confirmed Spinelle had worked for the agency for three years ending in 1973, but wouldn’t say why Spinelle had left, Hines reported. Spinelle came off like a bumbling gumshoe.

AMA spokesman David Baldwin confirmed that Spinelle had interviewe­d AMA employees and used lie- detector tests. The PR guy said that he himself had taken and passed a polygraph. Randal reported that at least 20 top AMA executives and staff had undergone lie- detector tests.

Sore Throat taunted the AMA when he told Hines in a phone interview: “They’re looking in the wrong place. I have no direct contacts here [ in Washington]. My principal contact is in Chicago and passed the test with flying colors.”

Sore Throat, in part, was telling the truth — the part about his Washington contacts inside the AMA having passed their polygraph exams. But he was trying to misdirect the investigat­ion with claims about Spinelle looking in the wrong place.

Two years later, Los Angeles Times reporters Robert Rawitch and Robert Gillette, who had been following Scientolog­y closely, reported on Aug. 27, 1977, that Spinelle found the AMA had hired three secretarie­s who were Church of Scientolog­y moles, one in Chicago and two in Washington.

Despite how he was portrayed, Spinelle was the real deal. He was the one who picked up the first solid clues that the Church of Scientolog­y appeared to be behind Sore Throat and the leaks, driven by founder L. Ron Hubbard’s conviction that the AMA had an ongoing plan to destroy his contentiou­s church. Hubbard and his goons didn’t expect to find that the AMA was gunning for chiropract­ic rather than Scientolog­y.

In Chicago, AMA officials acknowledg­ed administer­ing lie- detector tests to four employees thought to have had access to the documents Sore Throat had made public. Among those tested was a secretary named Sherry Canavarro, who had joined the AMA four months earlier to work in the executive offices, the Los Angeles Times reported.

Confidenti­al minutes from meetings of the AMA board of trustees were found in Canavarro’s desk in the AMA’s executive offices in Chicago, and it was determined that she had spent four or five weekends at work with no specifical­ly assigned task, the sources said.

The AMA refused to discuss the polygraph results beyond a statement in which the associatio­n confirmed everyone passed. However, Canavarro’s duties were later reduced, and subsequent­ly she resigned. Canavarro was a Scientolog­y plant. Her

‘‘ I’LL NEVER FORGET THIS. MINOW SAYS, ‘ OK, HIRE A DETECTIVE.’ AND I SAID, ‘ NEWT, WHAT AM I SUPPOSED TO DO, LOOK IN THE YELLOW PAGES UNDER DETECTIVES?’ ’’

JACK BIERIG, ( above) who in 1975 was a 28- year- old attorney at Sidley Austin, the American Medical Associatio­n’s external legal counsel

experience with Scientolog­y’s E- meter, an electronic device similar to a polygraph, used in Scientolog­y’s auditing procedure, might have helped her pass the polygraph test by Spinelle.

In a July 1977 affidavit, the FBI said Canavarro also used the names “Sherry Hermann” and “Sandy Cooper” and described her as the Pacific secretary of the church’s Guardians office in the United States. The Guardians were the espionage and dirty tricks arm of the Church of Scientolog­y.

Canavarro later owned a PI agency, a common profession for those who had worked in the Guardians office.

On her job applicatio­n to the AMA, sources said, she listed her husband Mitchell Hermann, who was a Scientolog­y operative, and a local Chicago reference, the mother of the man who would later be revealed to be Sore Throat.

Sore Throat and the rest of his crew were tied to the Guardians office. None of this was known in 1975 when Spinelle conducted his investigat­ion.

Hermann, who the FBI had said worked for Sore Throat and ran the spies in Scientolog­y’s covert operation in Washington, D. C., from Jan. 1, 1974, through March 1, 1975, was among the 11 persons indicted by a federal grand jury Aug. 15, 1975, on charges of burglarizi­ng government offices.

Church spokesmen told the Los Angeles Times they thought Canavarro was “on leave” from their staff and that she was “not interested” in discussing these allegation­s with reporters. Canavarro was not charged in the matter.

A federal grand jury indictment charged that Hermann, also known as “Mike Cooper,” and two other “Scientolog­y agents” bugged a high- level meeting of the IRS in Washington Nov. 1, 1974, in which the church’s tax- exempt status was being reviewed by the IRS general counsel.

The church responded to Spinelle’s findings with tongue- in- cheek. “Whoever ‘ Sore Throat’ is should get a medal,” Jeffrey Dubron, a church spokesman, said. He added, “I don’t know who that person was. . . . If this person went in and lied to get a job in the AMA and exposed crimes and created change, should that person be prosecuted for his or her actions?”

Scientolog­ist or not, Sore Throat’s AMA disclosure­s prompted investigat­ions by Congressio­nal committees, the post office, the Federal Election Commission and the IRS but resulted in no conviction­s against the AMA. The AMA eventually paid some back taxes, but the negative headlines tarnished the AMA’s image.

Before her employment at the AMA, Canavarro worked from 1972 through 1974 for the Washington- based Council of Better Business Bureaus’ philanthro­pic advisory section, dealing with tax- exempt organizati­ons. Local

DESPITE HOW HE WAS PORTRAYED, SPINELLE WAS THE REAL DEAL. HE WAS THE ONE WHO PICKED UP THE FIRST SOLID CLUES THAT THE CHURCH OF SCIENTOLOG­Y APPEARED TO BE BEHIND SORE THROAT AND THE LEAKS, DRIVEN BY FOUNDER L. RON HUBBARD’S CONVICTION THAT THE AMA HAD AN ONGOING PLAN TO DESTROY HIS CONTENTIOU­S CHURCH.

bureaus had, in the past, questioned Scientolog­y’s recruitmen­t approaches and its frequent lawsuits against critics and people seeking refunds. Sources in the council said that in 1974 Canavarro persuaded officials to open their files on Scientolog­y to her husband, Mitchell. The sources said she identified him as a freelance writer preparing a story critical of the church.

Canavarro resigned from the council on Dec. 31, 1974, and moved on to the AMA. Canavarro did not respond to several calls and emails requesting interviews.

Spinelle may have flunked his PI test, but the former Secret Service agent quickly sleuthed what turned out to be a campaign against the AMA perpetuate­d by a spy ring whose members managed to be hired for clerical jobs at the AMA and Sidley, including a secretary to a top AMA executive. A former AMA staffer said the spy worked for Waylon Strobhar, a senior AMA executive.

Bierig said the PI checked phone calls made to and from the AMA and Sidley and found that they led to a phone for the Church of Scientolog­y. Scientolog­y plants had been going through and copying confidenti­al AMA files for about 18 months before Sore Throat began making the findings public in June 1975.

In response to its discovery, the AMA launched its own media campaign against Scientolog­y. In August 1975, Stuart Auerbach of the Washington Post reported that AMA officials “privately” accused the Church of Scientolog­y of planting its spies in AMA offices.

Both Sore Throat and the Church of Scientolog­y denied that Sore Throat represente­d Scientolog­y. “While the AMA officials have refused to make these charges publicly, their views became so widely known that the Scientolog­ists have issued an official denial through their Ministry of Public Relations,” Auerbach reported. “The anonymous man who has been passing on the AMA documents nicknamed ‘ Sore Throat’ by reporters called the Washington Post to deny that he is a plant of the Scientolog­ists and to insist that he will continue to make AMA documents public.”

Chris Volz of Scientolog­y’s Ministry of Public Relations wrote in a letter to the Washington Post: “The covert allegation­s by AMA officials Joe Brue and Frank Campion [ the AMA’s chief public relations men] are illustrati­ve of an incredibly corrupt organizati­on grasping in the dark to cover their crimes.

“The Church of Scientolog­y does not foster or house this ‘ Sore Throat,’ ” Volz said.

It was a lie, one of many. Ironically, it took these lies for the truth to become known about the AMA’s campaign to contain and eliminate chiropract­ic.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Church of Scientolog­y founder L. Ron Hubbard
Church of Scientolog­y founder L. Ron Hubbard
 ?? SUN- TIMES FILES ?? Attorney Newton MInow, a partner at the prominent Chicago- based firm Sidley Austin, was approached to represent the AMA against the federal government in a suit involving Medicare regulation­s.
SUN- TIMES FILES Attorney Newton MInow, a partner at the prominent Chicago- based firm Sidley Austin, was approached to represent the AMA against the federal government in a suit involving Medicare regulation­s.
 ?? SUN- TIMES FILES ?? Dr. Chester Wilk, seen here in 1992, was one of four chiropract­ors whose lawsuit led to a ruling that the American Medical Associatio­n tried to destroy a competitor.
SUN- TIMES FILES Dr. Chester Wilk, seen here in 1992, was one of four chiropract­ors whose lawsuit led to a ruling that the American Medical Associatio­n tried to destroy a competitor.
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? William Hines
William Hines
 ?? RICHARD A. CHAPMAN PHOTO ?? Author and former Sun- Times medical writer Howard Wolinsky.
RICHARD A. CHAPMAN PHOTO Author and former Sun- Times medical writer Howard Wolinsky.

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