Documents obtained in the
FBI's 1977
raids on Scientology's Los Angeles and Washington DC premises included an undated memo entitled "PR General Categories of Data Needing Coding". This memo listed what it called "Secret PR Front Groups" which included the group Alliance for the Preservation of Religious Liberty (APRL), later renamed Americans Preserving Religious Liberty. In 1991,
Time investigative reporting identified several other fronts for Scientology, including the
Citizens Commission on Human Rights (CCHR),
The Way to Happiness Foundation,
Applied Scholastics, the
Concerned Businessmen's Association of America and HealthMed. Their article
The Thriving Cult of Greed and Power resulted in years of litigation. The case was dismissed, but not before
Time had spent $3.7 million in legal fees. The
Cult Awareness Network (CAN) was an organization that provided information on cults, receiving the most number of inquiries about Scientology and one other group. CAN, founded in 1978, considered Scientology to be "the most dangerous, rapacious, and destructive cult in contemporary America". In 1996, CAN was forced into bankruptcy by a series of frivolous lawsuits orchestrated by the Church of Scientology. In a bizarre twist, the Church of Scientology acquired CAN's assets including files on Scientology, and
re-opened CAN under Scientologist leadership, becoming a front group for Scientology. In 1998, the
Boston Herald identified
Narconon and the
World Literacy Crusade as front groups for Scientology. Other Scientology groups include
Downtown Medical,
Criminon and the
Association for Better Living and Education (ABLE). Other organisations with links to the Church of Scientology include
EarthLink and Striker Systems. == List of Scientology front groups ==