Chicago Sun-Times

CHURCH OF SCIENTOLOG­Y EXPANDS CITY FOOTPRINT

Printers Row location had grand opening last weekend, with help from Cook County state’s attorney candidate Bob Fioretti

- BY MARIAH RUSH AND ROBERT HERGUTH Mariah Rush is a staff reporter at the Chicago Sun-Times via Report for America, a not-for-profit journalism program that aims to bolster the paper’s coverage of communitie­s on the South and West sides.

The Church of Scientolog­y, which faces a California lawsuit that labels the group a “criminal enterprise,” is moving and expanding its footprint in Chicago with a boost from former Ald. Bob Fioretti, a Republican candidate for Cook County state’s attorney. Fioretti was on hand for the opening last weekend of the church’s location at a century-old mid-rise at 650 S. Clark St., where he lauded the organizati­on amid protests.

“What’s awesome about the Church of Scientolog­y is that you get it,” Fioretti said, according to the church. “You understand the character of this city on so many levels.”

Fioretti said he supported the church’s move from Lake View to the South Loop, next to a Columbia College Chicago dormitory.

“I was pleased to speak with their congregati­on this weekend,” Fioretti said in a written statement. “It was a reminder of the importance of free speech, free associatio­n, free expression and free religion.”

The Church of Scientolog­y has faced high-profile criticism over the years. Prosecutor­s once accused the group of retaliatin­g against critics. Danny Masterson, a former Scientolog­ist, was convicted of rape last year, and his accusers say in a lawsuit filed in California that the church tried to intimidate them to remain silent. Actress Leah Remini, a former member, became an outspoken critic of the group with a book and documentar­y, and in a lawsuit, she said she faced harassment and intimidati­on after leaving and criticizin­g the group.

Fioretti, a Catholic, said helping Scientolog­y navigate the city bureaucrac­y to open the site was no different than what he’d provide for any other faith group.

Fioretti is a “long-term” associate of Scientolog­y, according to Bari Berger, a spokeswoma­n for the group.

Records show Scientolog­y — which is based in Clearwater, Florida, and has a following among Hollywood’s elite, including actors Tom Cruise and John Travolta — bought the South Loop building in 2007.

Why it took so long for the Scientolog­y site to open — 17 years or so after it was bought — was not clear. Berger said an “extensive” renovation and the pandemic contribute­d to a delay. She said the new Chicago site is part of a larger expansion into new areas. Outposts in Texas and Mexico recently opened, and locations in France, Puerto Rico and South Africa will open by the end of the month.

Scientolog­y’s former storefront location at 3011 N. Lincoln Ave. closed around the time the new site opened, an employee said. The prominent Printers Row location is in a larger and more attractive building. The extensive renovation took 25,000 hours of work, Berger said.

The seven-story site was once called the “Artcraft Building” and initially served as office and commercial space for artists and media publicatio­ns. In 1920, the Chicago Board of Education administra­tion rented the space.

The California lawsuit, filed by former Scientolog­ists, accuses the group of, among other things: unpaid child labor, identity theft, covering up sexual assaults committed by members, human traffickin­g and money-laundering.

Scientolog­y has called those claims a “complete fabricatio­n.”

Scientolog­y is losing members, yet its financial reserves remain formidable, critics say.

“For appearance­s sake,” the group’s leaders “need to be able to present to the remaining members that they are still ‘expanding and growing,’ even though they’re not in actuality,” said Claire Headley, a former Scientolog­ist and president of the Aftermath Foundation, which helps Scientolog­ists leave the group.

Scientolog­y’s stated goal is “true spiritual enlightenm­ent and freedom for all.” But some critics, including former Scientolog­ists, say it’s simply a money-making scheme, with younger adults often sought-after recruits.

Headley says of Scientolog­y: “They want to have nice buildings. Preferably in locations with a lot of foot traffic or access to people moving.”

Former member Katherine Olson, now a critic of the group, says Scientolog­y has been known to cozy up to law enforcemen­t and politician­s “so it looks like that they’re doing a good thing” and creates the appearance that the “political structure ... backs them up.”

Some Columbia students were approached by Scientolog­y members on the way to their dorm and asked for their “identifica­tion informatio­n.”

“They were handing things out to students to show how friendly and kind they were,” said a Columbia sophomore. “But then they were harassing us.”

Some students said protesters advised students not to give any personal informatio­n to Scientolog­ists.

Berger said, “Many new neighbors have told us how happy they are to see the church finally open in its new home. We look forward to working hand-in-hand with our many community partners.”

 ?? MARIAH RUSH/SUN-TIMES ?? The shuttered Church of Scientolog­y location at 3011 N. Lincoln Ave. in Lake View.
MARIAH RUSH/SUN-TIMES The shuttered Church of Scientolog­y location at 3011 N. Lincoln Ave. in Lake View.
 ?? ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/SUN-TIMES ?? The Church of Scientolog­y building at 650 S. Clark St. in the South Loop.
ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/SUN-TIMES The Church of Scientolog­y building at 650 S. Clark St. in the South Loop.
 ?? ?? Bob Fioretti
Bob Fioretti

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