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  • Report:  #442031

Complaint Review: Suncoast Rehabilitation Center - Spring Hill Florida

Reported By:
- Browns Summit, North Carolina,
Submitted:
Updated:

Suncoast Rehabilitation Center
8213 Cessna Dr. Spring Hill, 34606 Florida, U.S.A.
Phone:
352-684-9650
Web:
N/A
Categories:
Tell us has your experience with this business or person been good? What's this?
Sun Coast Rehab failed to provide a safe, honest, and clinical drug rehabilitation for my sister. Families affected by drug addiction need honesty to help alleviate the pull of the addiction. Honesty was never apparent in my experience with Sun Coast Rehab.

The facility claimed not to have any "connection" with the church of scientology. The staff sold the notion of a holistic rehab practice prior to admission and down played the Narconon classes and program of Scientology. However, we learned later that the program is formed completely from the pseudo science of Scientology.

The facility failed to provide substantive clinical metrics. At no time during my sister's stay with the Narconon facility Sun Coast Rehab, did she see a doctor, clinician or have any lab reports performed. The staff postponed any such diagnostics until my sister departed the facility.

My sister repeated detoxification steps for non-compliance with the program and for asking to leave the facility. A staff person threw the "Ethics" book at her and shut her in a room after the staff learned she spoke about leaving the facility with her family.

The "Ethics" book is a series of writings from LRH that is used to break contact with the family and past associations of the person in rehab. This is called disassociation.

I called the facility to ask about these issues. I was told that no such incidence was reported. No staff would ever throw a book at another person. I was also told that the "Ethics" book is to help form stronger relationships with friends and family.

The Sun Coast Rehab Center like all Narconon centers appear to be what they claim they are not . . . a front for the church of scientology. Rehab cost $30,000.00 and is not refundable paid up front.

Paul

Browns Summit, North Carolina

U.S.A.



6 Updates & Rebuttals

ReactorCore

Victoria,
British Columbia,
Canada
Hey, "Valid Fact"!

#2

Sat, August 22, 2009

HOW ARE YOUR STATS?

Sorry, but it really goes against my grain to allow an obvious Scientology shill to get the last word in on these poor people. You sure assume a lot about these folks, and that you're a CoS spokespuppet is obvious from the way you express yourself, including your laughable lack of knowledge of the effects of drugs.

All you clams sound the same. "Never defend, always attack"... that was the LRH directive, right? I'm sure I could find the reference to the original HCOPL for you somewhere.

Nice of you to give me a springboard though, to let people know what the CoS and Narconon are really about

What's next? Are you going to maybe tell them that they "pulled it in"? Maybe you'll try and steer them to an FSM who'll help them "find their ruin" so they can be told that "Scientology can help them with that"... sure it can. *cough*.

I can just see it now... Get 'em in for some nice, costly Life Repair sessions! Seen the IAS price list for members in good standing lately? Wow! This is, of course, after they've been given all the steps from Book One on, right? Right up to OTIII Incidents I & II.

By that time, it's too late for anyone to escape, because they'll have drank the Kool-Aid and will be forcing themselves to believe LRH's absurd space opera cosmology that he turned into a (dubious) "religion" and will have spent upwards of $300k, so they'll be terrified to abandon such a large financial investment...

Hey, how about this! Get the daughter through the door as "raw meat" and body route her after she is forced to complete the Purification Rundown which is the exact same program as Naconon, but the name is just changed to appeal to "Wogs", but you and I know that it's called the "Purif" inside the halls of ol' Big Blue, right?

Anyway, keep your eye on those delicious stats! "Never reward a downstat", right? Make sure you get the credit for routing her to the Sea Org, where she can begin her life (after signing the Billion Year Contract) as a slave, working for $38 a week (if she's lucky and "keeps her ethics in"), getting caught up in endless ethics cycles, winding up on the RPF, or worse, the RPF's RPF, probably for trying to be human and "going Out-2D", where she'll be put in "pig berthing" in deplorable conditions and fed the scraps leftover from the staff who aren't working off conditions. Then she'll get to maybe do some hard labor scrubbing asbestos off the piping under Big Blue with no protective gear.

Wow... what a life! By now OSA is probably getting a little uncomfortable, perhaps wondering who I am. I personally urge ANY person filing a Rip-Off Report against a front group of Scientology (Narconon, the CCHR, WISE... GOOGLE THESE!) to guard your identity as closely as possible.

See, the "Church" of Scientology has a nice little division in it known as OSA. This stands for Office of Special Affairs, and it's sole reason for existence, is to ensure that the name of LRH remains "untarnished". This is accomplished in many, many unsavory ways, including, but not limited to, threatening phone calls, the hiring of P.I.s to stalk you, damage to your private and personal property, killing your pets, picketing your home and distributing information to your neighbors, accusing you of anything they can find on you and blowing it so far out of proportion as to be laughable to you, but your family and neighbors don't know any better... OSA will make you out to be a pedophile, a drug abuser, anything to take the scrutiny OFF of Scientology and put it somewhere else, especially you. This policy, although CoS will deny it exists, is called the "Fair Game Doctrine"

This is the organization "Valid Fact" is working for... The "most ethical group on the planet" is what they call themselves. Note Valid Fact doesn't bring any facts to the table here? He/She can't. He/She dare not. Scientology is loathe to allow any unbiased 3rd party examination of any of it's methods, especially those of a medical nature like NarCONon. All the data provided to the public regarding the program are skewed, biased and internally generated. This is because CoS knows that any peer review of their Purification Rundown would result in distribution of the fact that it's laughable pseudo-science, dreamed up by a man who had no medical training, flunked out of his Nuclear Physics class at Georgetown University after one semester (with a D), was a bigamist, beat his spouse and had, shall we say, a very dim view of ethnic minorities:

"You shouldn't be on your hands and knees scrubbing floors. Get yourself a ni**er, that's what they were born for" - LRH

So... The only avenue Valid Fact has here is to target and run down the individual. That's his or her job as dictated by OSA. He or she has been sent onto the Internet to "handle" what they call "Black PR" against the CoS and "shudder people into silence".

Hey, Valid Fact... did you know the business attached to the Scientology "mission" here is FAILING? Could that be because of the incredulous "franchise fees" charged by the CoS? Your faux "religion" was never able to get a foothold in this city, and I doubt it's going to take off now. Enjoy your STAT CRASH. Did the Super Power building ever get finished? Or is it still rotting in the Florida sun?

There's more... TONS more. However, I could spend DAYS typing about everything I know; disconnection policy, how there's an armed compound at Gilman Springs, the RPF gulags, the Sea Org fake navy, the forced abortions for female Sea Org members who become pregnant on post, how the CoS grossly inflates it's membership numbers (8 million? LOL!)... It just goes on and on.... Every layer you peel off of the rotten onion of Scientology, there's a worse layer below.

In better news though, Narconon Stone Hawk in Michigan is being sued. By the former director no less.

Enjoy hawking Book I and "Stress Tests" on the E-Meter, "Valid Fact". It's pretty much all the CoS has left.


Valid Fact

Santa Ana,
California,
U.S.A.
Sounds like...

#3Consumer Suggestion

Fri, April 24, 2009

A personal problem. Suing anyone for any amount of money needs valid facts/evidence. And I'm sorry but the fact of a drug user accusing people of "throwing a book of ethics" at her sounds pretty "trippy" to me. If I am correct- Most people on drugs hallucinate? And if she was going through a "detox" as you describe it- isn't it common for people to have such effects come back or "flashbacks" to happen. And I'm pretty sure anyone persons actions alone make themselves liable and not "the company" in this case. If there was a contract signed and a contract broken then if any of this did happen- its for that contact to decide. Go encourage your sister to get a job and a real life rather then blaming her inability to follow suit on some totally insane situation, unlike the thousands of other people who've been helped by the program. Honestly.


Marysmith

CLEARWATER,
Florida,
U.S.A.
Contact an attorney to sue for return of the fee obtained under fraudulent circumstances

#4Consumer Suggestion

Thu, April 09, 2009

Contact an attorney. Narconon pulls this "no refund" trick over and over again. They service only about 10% of the customers; the other 90% are "sorry, no refund". They commit fraud repeatedly by not telling anyone they are associated with L. Ron Hubbard and/or the Church of Scientology, whereas they actually are (not hard to prove). Others have successfully sued and settled for return of their $30K. You should, too.


Marysmith

CLEARWATER,
Florida,
U.S.A.
Contact an attorney to sue for return of the fee obtained under fraudulent circumstances

#5Consumer Suggestion

Thu, April 09, 2009

Contact an attorney. Narconon pulls this "no refund" trick over and over again. They service only about 10% of the customers; the other 90% are "sorry, no refund". They commit fraud repeatedly by not telling anyone they are associated with L. Ron Hubbard and/or the Church of Scientology, whereas they actually are (not hard to prove). Others have successfully sued and settled for return of their $30K. You should, too.


Marysmith

CLEARWATER,
Florida,
U.S.A.
Contact an attorney to sue for return of the fee obtained under fraudulent circumstances

#6Consumer Suggestion

Thu, April 09, 2009

Contact an attorney. Narconon pulls this "no refund" trick over and over again. They service only about 10% of the customers; the other 90% are "sorry, no refund". They commit fraud repeatedly by not telling anyone they are associated with L. Ron Hubbard and/or the Church of Scientology, whereas they actually are (not hard to prove). Others have successfully sued and settled for return of their $30K. You should, too.


Marysmith

CLEARWATER,
Florida,
U.S.A.
Contact an attorney to sue for return of the fee obtained under fraudulent circumstances

#7Consumer Suggestion

Thu, April 09, 2009

Contact an attorney. Narconon pulls this "no refund" trick over and over again. They service only about 10% of the customers; the other 90% are "sorry, no refund". They commit fraud repeatedly by not telling anyone they are associated with L. Ron Hubbard and/or the Church of Scientology, whereas they actually are (not hard to prove). Others have successfully sued and settled for return of their $30K. You should, too.

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