

22 rifle and I sat on the stairway with him in my sights, and I almost blew his head off.” He also said: “To be perfectly frank, my life’s been pretty much of a disaster and a miserable mess because of Scientology-and you can quote me on that.” L. I remember in 1946 or 1947 when he was beating up my mother one night. He had a violent, volcano-type temper, and he smacked her around quite a bit. You’ll see throughout early Scientology literature, ‘PDH.’” In his 1982 interview with News Herald, DeWolf described his father as a wife-beater. The use of PDH, coupled with black magic, was an effective for brainwashing or mind control. His mother Polly told him that his father made repeated attempts to invoke the Devil for power and practices: “My mother told me about him trying out all kinds of various incantations, drugs and hypnosis… His initials for it were PDH - pain, drugs, hypnosis. The seventh was a daughter, Catherine May. LRH himself stated in a private document (his Admissions) that he aborted five of Polly’s seven pregnancies. DeWolf remembered that when he was six years old he saw his father performing an abortion on his mother with a coat-hanger. It seems more probable, since he manifestly survived, despite a birth weight of only one kilo (2.2 lbs), that Ron Jr was simply born prematurely, and his memories of familial abortions were from a later period in his life. claimed that, like King Duncan, he had been ripped untimely from his mother’s womb, destined to be one of the several abortions she experienced at the hands of her husband but surviving the experience. Ron Hubbard, inventor of Dianetics and founder of Scientology, and his first wife, Margaret (Polly) Grubb. Lafayette Ronald Hubbard Jr, who changed his name to Ronald DeWolf when he went into hiding, was the son of L. News Herald “Mr Hubbard: do you think you are quite mad?” “Oh yes! T he one man in the world who never believes he’s mad is the madman.“ Granada Television 1967 documentary on Scientology
