“Yes, you are making this too complicated.”
Thank you for providing what I have no reason to suspect is anything other than your honest opinion.
Here’s an example of a distinction between the existence of a person and the ability to name a person. In 1971, an FBI office was broken into by an organization that called itself “The Citizens’ Commission to Investigate the FBI.” All of the documents were removed. Copies of some of the documents were mailed to at least one senator and at least one newspaper.
(Mailing copies was a mistake that could have had serious consequences for the participants. For technical reasons, it was possible to identify a particular machine that was used to make some of the copies. If they had saved copies and mailed the originals, then they would have been safer. They had always used gloves when handling the papers.)
One day – many years after 1971 – some people learned that their parents were among those involved. The names didn’t become readily available information – although there were many suspects – until after they could no longer be prosecuted because of the statute of limitations.
State your question clearly, please.
“Can you name anybody who was deliberately killed merely for converting from Scientology to another religion?” ← that’s the question
I can try to make it more clear, but first somebody needs to identify where clarity is lacking.
A journalist was killed in a building in Istanbul where he was seeking to handle paperwork to marry his fiancee. Allegedly, he wasn’t deliberately killed. Initially, the story from the government of Saudi Arabia was that he had walked out of the building and his waiting fiancee simply failed to notice. Somehow he had gone missing, and the government of Saudi Arabia hoped that he was safe. Later, the story was that there was an unanticipated violent conflict inside the building, although the body was dismembered by somebody who had flown in on one jet with a bone saw before the meeting in the consulate building occurred. People flew into Turkey on two different jets in preparation for the meeting, and flew out after the meeting.
With such kinds of stories, you might begin to wonder what is meant by the phrase “deliberately killed”, but there are cases where people die during surgery, and in such cases it is not ordinarily a deliberate killing, provided that the patient isn’t a journalist being operated on by a surgeon who works for the government of Saudi Arabia.