E-meter Legal Cases and Government Reports
- United States, 1969
- The Founding Church Of Scientology Of Washington, D. C., et al., Appellants, v. United States of America
- United States, 1971
- United States of America, Libelant, v. An Article Or Device "Hubbard Electrometer" or "Hubbard E-Meter," etc., Founding Church of Scientology et al., Claimants
- United States, 1971
- The Church Of Scientology Of California, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. Elliot Richardson et al., Defendants-Appellees
- Victoria, Australia, 1965
- "The Anderson Report", Report of the Board of Inquiry into Scientology. Chapter 14 specifically addresses the e-meter.
Other Electro Frauds
- Electropathy
- Popular from 1850-1900, electropathy promised to cure most diseases and conditions including mental illness.
- The Electronic Reactions of Albert Abrams
- According to the 1916 theory of Abrams, all diseases had their own "vibratory rate" which can be measured and treated with his electronic boxes, which were leased to 3500 practitioners at the height of his popularity, in 1923.
- ZAP! Electrotherapy Diseases Conquered
- An ad from "Australasian Medical Gazette and Advertiser", December 1891.
Additional E-meter Information
- A Study of E-meter Frequency Response
- An Electrical Review by Perry Scott, BSEE
- Biophysics and the E-Meter
- by Chris Schafmeister, Biophysics graduate student at the University of California in San Francisco.
- Hubbard's E-Meter Patent
- Shows the e-meter to be nothing more that a classic electric circuit known as the "Wheatstone Bridge".
- Secrets of Scientology: The E-Meter
- Dr. David S. Touretzky, Carnegie Mellon University, exposes the e-meter.
- Chapter 18, The E-Meter, from "The Scandal of Scientology", by Paulette Cooper
- The E-meter is never wrong. It sees all; it knows all. It tells everything.
-- L. Ron Hubbard
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