Scientologist real estate agent who thought she was battling Lyme disease set fire to herself and shot herself dead after saying she wanted to 'drop the body' - which followers believe allows their 'thetan' to live on
- Whitney Mills, a 40-year-old real estate agent and deeply involved Scientologist, shot herself on May 12 and later died
- Mills reached the highest level in Scientology, known as Operating Thetan Level 8 or OT 8, in 2019
- OT 8 Scientologists believe they have gained control over matter, energy, space, and time and are immune to disease
- Clearwater Police Department say Mills was suffering from a number of health issues in 2022, including Lyme disease and depression
- Mills set herself on fire and shot herself, dying a day and a half later
- Clearwater Police found no evidence of foul play or involvement by Scientology in Mills' death
A woman from Florida who took her own life may have committed suicide because she believed codes laid down by the Church of Scientology would let her start afresh in a new body.
Whitney Mills, was a high-ranking member of the Church in Clearwater but shot herself after believing she was facing significant health issues and would be able to 'transfer to a new body.'
According to reporter Tony Ortega, who has been following the story for some time, Mills, 40, had been diagnosed with Lyme disease and also had a mass on one of her ovaries that she refused to have removed.
Those close to her have suggested Mills was actually suffering from depression rather than any specific ailment.
On the day of her death, her friends requested a welfare check after she stopped answering her phone.
A spokesman for the Church said: 'There is no Scientology belief to encourage anyone to drop their body.'
Whitney Mills, a 40-year-old real estate agent and deeply involved Scientologist, shot herself on May 12 and later died
Mills reached the highest level in Scientology, known as Operating Thetan Level 8 in 2019
According to the Clearwater Police Department's investigation, Mills shot herself on May 12 and died a day and a half later at Morton Plant hospital.
When her brother forced his way into her apartment, he found her incapacitated from a self-inflicted gunshot wound and noticed the smell of burning hair, indicating that she had set herself on fire before shooting herself.
Clearwater Police investigated Mills' death and found there were no suspicious circumstances, but a text message she sent to Albertina Mejias, a fellow high-ranking member of the Church, outlines 'advice' as to what she might do next.
Referring to what she believed to be the onset of Lyme disease she texted: 'I wish it wasn't in my brain. It's so annoying that I have it so bad, and so bad mentally.'
'The d of p wants me to come in for an interview', Mills then states.
'D of P' refers to the 'Director of Processing'.
In Scientology, the director of processing is a person responsible for overseeing and administering auditing sessions, which are a central practice in Scientology.
Auditing sessions are a form of counseling in which an auditor asks a series of questions to a person in order to help them identify and address any spiritual or emotional problems they may be experiencing.
The goal of auditing is to help the preclear 'clear' their mind and achieve a state of spiritual freedom and enlightenment.
Mills then states how she was told by Albertina [Mejias] that 'there's an assist for someone that is really sick and to drop the body. I asked for that assist.'
An assist is a type of spiritual counseling or therapy that is intended to help a person overcome physical or emotional difficulties or injuries.
It is based on the belief that the human mind and spirit are capable of healing the body, and that the process of healing can be facilitated through spiritual guidance and counseling.
Asked by Clearwater Police if an 'assist' was a Scientology method of healing that was 'not physical' and when a detective also asked if Scientology would assist with a suicide, they were told 'absolutely not.'
Mills may have believed she could start fresh in a new body - or as the Church explains it, to 'drop' her body.
In Scientology, the term 'drop the body' refers to the process of leaving ones physical body, usually through death.
When a Scientologist 'drops the body,' it is believed that their spirit, or 'thetan,' will continue to exist and can potentially occupy a new physical body in the future.
A text message sent between members of the Church and Mills suggests how she may have ended her life with the idea of starting fresh in a new body
"'He always talked about that experience he had when he walked into Stonehenge and he thought, 'The Druids were really on to something,' and that there was some kind of cosmic connection that that shape created," Carmen said.
"'He had a spiritual relation to that shape and form."
"But he was most famous for training Canadian geese to fly alongside him in his tiny ultra-light plane, which was immortalized in his autobiography Father Goose and the feature film Fly Away Home.
"Carmen said the idea came to him in the mid-80s, when he was flying his home-built aircraft and was briefly joined by a flock of ducks.
"'He came home from that flight just raging. He said nothing before that moment in his life was as meaningful as that moment when he could see a bird in flight, each feather passing over itself when the bird was flapping," she said.
'"Just the whole experience was so magical for him he had to repeat it.'"
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