Keith Henson was working for the company that bought the Xanadu license when Scientology lawyer
Helena Kobrin tried to destroy the news group
alt.religion.scientology. and later e-mailed legal warnings to participants who had quoted as few as six lines of
Scientology texts. Henson is one of the focal points of the ongoing struggle between the
Church of Scientology and its critics, often referred to as
Scientology versus the Internet. Henson entered the Scientology conflict when it was at its most heated in the mid-1990s. In 1996, many of
Scientology's secret writings were released onto the Internet, and the Church of Scientology embarked on a massive worldwide campaign to keep them from being spread to the general public. Henson examined these writings, titled
New Era Dianetics (NOTS), and from his examination of these secret documents, said that Scientology was committing
medical fraud. The NOTS procedures, Henson claimed, were a violation of this decision. To prove his claim, Henson posted two pages from the NOTS documents onto the
Usenet newsgroup
alt.religion.scientology. The Church of Scientology immediately initiated legal action, but Henson did not retract his claims. He was served with a lawsuit by the
Religious Technology Center (RTC), a Scientology organization which holds the trademarks related to Scientology and
Dianetics. Henson defended himself. After a lengthy court battle involving massive amounts of paperwork, Henson was found guilty of
copyright infringement. He was ordered to pay $75,000 in fines. Henson declared bankruptcy in response to the judgment. Henson began protesting Scientology regularly, standing outside Scientology's
Gold Base with a picket sign. The organization sought to obtain a restraining order, which was not granted. Henson was, however, charged with three
misdemeanors under California Law: making criminal threats (California Penal Code section 422), attempting to make criminal threats (California Penal Code section 422, charged pursuant to Penal Code 664, the "general attempt" statute), and threatening to interfere with freedom to enjoy a constitutional privilege. Sheriff's Detective Tony Greer,
Riverside County lead investigator, said: "In reviewing all of the Internet postings I did not see any direct threat of violence towards the church or any personnel of the church." Henson stated his belief that his life would be placed in jeopardy if he went to prison. Rather than serve his sentence, Henson chose to enter Canada and apply for
political asylum. Henson lived quietly in
Brantford, Ontario for three years while he awaited the decision. His request was ultimately denied, and in 2005 he was ordered to present himself for
deportation and transfer to US authorities. Instead, Henson fled to the United States and later presented himself to the Canadian consulate in Detroit. Then he settled in Prescott, Arizona, where he remained for two years until his arrest in 2007 by Arizona authorities. The
Electronic Frontier Foundation, as well as Henson's supporters on the
USENET newsgroup
alt.religion.scientology, say that his trial was biased, unfair and a mockery of justice. Henson was prohibited by the trial judge, for example, from arguing that copying documents for the purpose of criticism is
fair use. that he was fighting extradition and requested release. Judge Lindberg set a court date for March 5, 2007, in the Prescott Justice Court and set release at $7,500 cash or bond, with standard conditions. Henson's release on bond was secured. In spite of these distractions, Henson finished a
space elevator presentation for a European Space Agency conference. The paper was presented by proxy on February 28, 2007. The extradition hearing for Henson was postponed until May 8, 2007, at the request of Henson's attorney and the County attorney. At his release from jail, Henson was handed paper work from Riverside County, including a warrant from September 15, 2000. At the May 8, 2007 hearing, Henson was presented with an arrest warrant and returned to jail. In 2007, Henson was jailed in Riverside, California for "using threats of force to interfere with another's exercise of civil rights". He was released in early September 2007. ==Energy systems==