Well, I am back.
Now the Dubs have my address because some idiot ignored a confidentiality clause in the rent agreements here and gave one my apt. number. Oh well!
Now to get back to where I was before I was interrupted so rudely. I can't cite the case, but somebody took a congregation of the Worldwide Church of God to court over their practice at the time of announcing the reason behind disfellowshipping to the whole congregation. The local church lost big according to what I've heard because the announcment had the effect of blemishing that person's otherwise shinning character in the community. I do reember hearing shortly thereafter that the WTBTS sent strict instructions to the local BOEs that all such information from JCs was to be kept strictyl confidential.
There is a problem, though, that many elders that I know of just can't keep their mouths shut. I recall hearing details of a committee hearing I had been present at from the mouth of the son of an elder who had absolutely no business being privy to any of the information within days of that hearing. In that case, the elder's son wasn't even a Witness, but he knew all the intimate details of a rape case in which the girl was DF'd for fornication! I also know of cases where local elders told details of hearings to local gossips to be spread around in order to further humiliate and defame the tvictim of their action. What these elders are too arogant to see is that "ecclesiastical priviledge" can't be invoked when they spread it around for all to hear and they can find themselves liable for defamation in a big way, like Rutherford found out when he published the attack on Mr Miles. Therein lies a weakness in the practice among the Dubs which lawyers would be wise to look into and exploit.
By taking the measures Marvin suggests when confronted by a JC, one puts them on notice that one will not just rollover and let them have their way unchallenged. One also reserves one's right's, whatever they may be, to oneself if one plans to bare their claws. The best defense against any action is to be well-informed and insist on one's rights as outlined in the elder's manual. So before going into any hearing, if one plans to go, is to download a copy and be as familiar with it as the elders themselves. One can always make it look like they gone to another elder and found out what those rights were, that would set a fox among the hens!
So far, Barbara Anderson's case has had unexpected success because she is pursuing her action along lines the WTBTS's policies are vunerable, the defamation angle. To prevail she has to show that the action not only came from the top, but was also done maliciously, rather than simply in accord with "ecclesiastical law." That is the key, when one warns the elders that they could face consequences if they don't follow the rules to the letter and they go ahead and vindictively break those rules anyway, then they well and truly had. That takes, as the man siad in his title, PREPARATION!
Forscher