HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex HCO POLICY LETTER OF 27 MAY 1965 Remimeo Sthil Class VII Course Students Sthil Staff Ethics Hats Star-rated Check Qual & Tech Divs All Hats HCO Div All Hats Keeping Scientology Working Series 31 PROCESSING Since 1950 we have had an ironbound rule that we didn't leave pcs in trouble just to end a session. For fifteen years we have always continued a session that found the pc in trouble, and I myself have audited a pc for nine additional hours, all night long in fact, just to get the pc through. Newer auditors, not trained in the stern school of running engrams, must learn this all over again. It doesn't matter whether the auditor has had a policy on this or not -- one would think that common decency would be enough, as to leave a pc in the middle of a secondary or an engram and just coolly end the session is pretty cruel. Some do it because they are startled or afraid and "rabbit" (run away by ending the session). Auditors who end a process or change it when it has turned on a heavy somatic are likewise ignorant. WHAT TURNS IT ON WILL TURN IT OFF. This is the oldest rule in auditing. Of course people get into secondaries and engrams, go through misemotion and heavy somatics. This happens because things are running out. To end off a process or a session because of the clock is to ignore the real purpose of auditing. The oldest rules we have are: a. GET THE PC THROUGH IT. b. WHAT TURNS IT ON WILL TURN IT OFF. C. THE WAY OUT IS THE WAY THROUGH. These now are expressed as POLICY. A falsified auditor's report is also subject to a Court of Ethics. Any auditor violating this policy letter is liable to an immediate Court of Ethics convened within 24 hours of the offense or as soon as is urgently possible. Auditing at all levels works well when it is done by the book. The purpose of ethics is to open the way for and get in tech. Then we can do our job. THERE IS NO MODERN PROCESS THAT WILL NOT WORK WHEN EXACTLY APPLIED. Therefore, in the eyes of Ethics all auditing failures are ethics failures -- PTS, suppressive persons as pcs or noncompliance with tech for auditors. And the first offense an auditor can commit is ceasing to audit when he is most needed by his pc. Hence, it is the first, most important consideration of Ethics to prevent such occurrences. Then we'll make happy pcs, Releases and Clears. L. RON HUBBARD Founder Adopted as official Church policy by CHURCH OF SCIENTOLOGY INTERNATIONAL LRH:wmc.pm.cden.iw.gm