May 21, 2026

CultNEWS101 Articles: 5/21/2026


Science
"...Skeptics have a bad reputation, rooted in the dictionary definition of the word: “a person inclined to question or doubt accepted opinions.” But that’s not really what the word originally meant. The English term comes from the Greek skeptikos (pl. skeptikoi), meaning “inquirer” (which is why the ongoing joke with the editor of SI is that the title of this magazine is redundant: “Inquirer Inquirer,” like ATM machine).

In other words, skeptics are not people who are inclined to disbelief. On the contrary, they are prone to inquiry and therefore to adjust, or proportion, their beliefs to the available evidence—which just as importantly means that true skeptics are always open to changing their mind should the evidence warrant it."

"...[P]eople have been doing skepticism for a long time, and arguably the first book on pseudoscience was written in 44 BCE by Roman philosopher Marcus Tullius Cicero (see Damian Fernandez-Beanato 2020). Called On Divination, it was a systematic takedown of astrology and other types of future-telling. In book one, section 7, Cicero wisely writes: 'To hasten to give assent to something erroneous is shameful in all things.'"

Research
Call for Participants: Survival & Recovery in Victim-Survivors of Adult Clergy Sexual Abuse. Your story can help shape a better understanding of clergy abuse and contribute to trauma-informed change in faith spaces!
Have you experienced sexual grooming, sexual abuse, or sexual coercion by a Christian faith leader when you were age 16 or older?
You are invited to participate in a confidential research study exploring survival, recovery and growth following clergy sexual abuse.

This research study invites English-speaking adults worldwide to share their experiences anonymously via an online survey (45–60 minutes).

For people subjected to abuse in Australia, there is also an option to participate in a confidential interview.
  • Must be 18+
  • Must have been 16+ at the time of the abuse (or if abused continued after age 16).
  • Your experience must involve a Christian faith leader of any Christian faith denomination.

You will have the opportunity to describe your experience in your own words, using language that feels right to you. Scan the QR code in the image below to find out more.Or click on the links shared in the comments.

For further information, please email: Jaime.Simpson@uon.edu.au

Domestic & True Crime Updates
Michail Chkhikvishvili, a 22-year-old Georgian national known as "Commander Butcher," was sentenced on May 13, 2026, to 15 years in prison in a Brooklyn federal court.
Chkhikvishvili was a leader of the Maniac Murder Cult (MKY) , an international neo-Nazi extremist group. Here are the key details from the case:

The Crimes & Sentencing
• Solicitation of Violence: Chkhikvishvili pleaded guilty in November 2025 to soliciting hate crimes and distributing instructions for making bombs and ricin.
• The Plot: Prosecutors revealed a horrific scheme to carry out a mass-casualty attack in New York City. Chkhikvishvili attempted to recruit an undercover agent to dress as Santa Claus on New Year’s Eve and distribute poisoned candy to Jewish and minority children in Brooklyn.
• Ideology: The group adheres to "accelerationism," a neo-Nazi ideology that seeks to trigger a racial and religious war through extreme violence and social collapse. Chkhikvishvili authored a manifesto called the "Hater’s Handbook," which encouraged mass murder and ethnic cleansing.

Connection to Real-World Violence
Authorities noted that Chkhikvishvili’s online rhetoric and recruitment efforts on platforms like Telegram were linked to actual acts of violence. Specifically, the group’s influence was cited as an inspiration for multiple real-life attacks, including a school shooting in Nashville, Tennessee, the previous year that resulted in the death of a 16-year-old student.

Background
Chkhikvishvili traveled to Brooklyn in 2022 to scout locations for attacks. He was eventually arrested in Moldova in 2024 on an international warrant and extradited to the United States in May 2025. During the sentencing, Chkhikvishvili claimed he was "ashamed" of his actions, while his defense attorneys argued he had been radicalized as a teenager and suffered from mental health struggles.
U.S. Attorney Joseph Nocella Jr. described the defendant as a "hate-mongering menace" and stated that the 15-year sentence "takes a monster off our streets." 
The article from CultNews101 (originally reported by St. Louis Magazine on May 14, 2026) details the federal charges against Makeda Charles, a 36-year-old follower of alleged cult leader David E. Taylor.

Key Details of the Case
• Threats Against Officials: Charles is charged with sending threatening emails, faxes, and text messages to an FBI special agent, a federal prosecutor, and a U.S. District Judge. Her goal was reportedly to derail the criminal case against Taylor.
• Nature of the Threats: The communications included a photo of Charles holding a rifle in front of flames and messages claiming there was a "hit" on the lives of the judge and prosecutor. She warned that they and their families would "be together in hell forever" if they interfered with "General David E. Taylor and God’s money."
• Request for Jail Time: In a bizarre turn, she requested to be placed in a "couples psych ward" with Taylor, who has been in jail since his 2025 indictment.
Background on David E. Taylor

The article provides context on the broader investigation into Taylor’s organization, the Kingdom of God Global Church:
• Forced Labor Allegations: Taylor and two lieutenants are accused of running a forced labor conspiracy. They allegedly operated 24/7 "dream interpretation" call centers out of luxury properties (including a mansion formerly owned by the rapper Nelly).
• Abusive Tactics: Members were reportedly forced to work grueling hours to meet donation quotas and were punished with sleep deprivation, food restriction, and threats of "divine punishment."
• Financial Exploitation: The FBI began investigating Taylor in early 2024 after reports of him exploiting elderly and cognitively impaired individuals. One victim reportedly sent over $263,000 to the church after contacting their hotline while feeling suicidal.

Status of the Case
The evidence against Taylor is described as massive, including 46 GB of data and thousands of pages of financial records. While Taylor remains in custody, his long-time follower Makeda Charles was arrested last week following the unsealing of the threat-related charges in Michigan.

News, Education, Intervention, Recovery


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CultRecovery101.com assists group members and their families make the sometimes difficult transition from coercion to renewed individual choice.

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How do Psychics Manipulate?

Psychics (and similar performers or scammers) often rely on psychological techniques, not real supernatural abilities. Here are some of the most common ways they can manipulate people:

1. Cold Reading

  • They make broad, vague statements that could apply to many people.
  • Then they watch your reactions (facial expressions, tone, body language) and refine what they say.
  • Example: “I sense you’ve had some recent stress around family.”
    → This fits almost everyone.

2. The Barnum Effect

  • People tend to believe general statements are highly personal.
  • Statements like “You’re independent but sometimes doubt yourself” feel specific—but apply to most people.

3. Fishing for Information

  • They ask subtle or leading questions and let you provide the details.
  • Then they repeat your information back as if they knew it.
  • Example:
    Psychic: “I’m sensing a name… does ‘J’ mean anything?”
    You: “My brother John.”
    Psychic: “Yes, John is coming through.”

4. Confirmation Bias

  • You remember the “hits” and forget the “misses.”
  • If they make 20 guesses and only 3 are accurate, those 3 can feel very convincing.

5. Shotgunning

  • Rapidly stating lots of guesses until something sticks.
  • Works especially well in group readings.

6. Emotional Targeting

  • They often pick people who are:
    • Grieving
    • Stressed
    • Seeking answers
  • These situations make people more open to suggestion.

7. Creating Authority

  • They may use props (crystals, cards, rituals) or confident language to build perceived credibility.
  • Once you believe they’re credible, you’re more likely to accept what they say.

8. Gradual Escalation (in scams)

  • Some start with a small “reading,” then:
    • Claim you have bad energy or a curse
    • Offer expensive “cleansing” or follow-up sessions

Quick way to spot manipulation

Look for:

  • Vague statements that could apply to anyone
  • Lots of questions disguised as “insight”
  • High confidence without evidence
  • Pressure to spend money or return

May 20, 2026

Guru / Cult Red Flags (Quick Check)

Authority
• ☐ Claims special status (“I have unique truth”)
• ☐ No questioning allowed
👉 Example: You’re told “Doubt is weakness—trust me completely.” 1

Mind Influence
• ☐ Repeats same ideas to shape thinking
• ☐ “Us vs. them” mindset
👉 Example: “Everyone outside this group is lost or dangerous.”

Control
• ☐ Tries to control your life choices
• ☐ Pushes you away from friends/family
👉 Example: “Your family is holding you back—you should spend less time with them.”

Guilt & Fear
• ☐ Makes you feel not good enough
• ☐ Uses fear or pressure
👉 Example: “If you leave, your life will fall apart.” 1
👉 Example: “Problems happen because you’re not committed enough.” 2

Exploitation
• ☐ Pressures for money, time, or labor
• ☐ Leader benefits more than members
👉 Example: “Donate more—it proves your loyalty and growth.”

Secrecy
• ☐ Keeps rules or actions hidden
• ☐ Justifies harmful behavior
👉 Example: “You wouldn’t understand yet—this must stay inside the group.”

Identity
• ☐ You feel less like yourself
• ☐ Encourages submission
👉 Example: “Your old identity is flawed—you must rebuild under my guidance.”

Leaving
• ☐ Leaving feels scary or wrong
• ☐ Ex-members are criticized
👉 Example: “People who leave become failures or enemies.” 1

───

✅ Quick Rule
• ✔ 3+ checks → pause & question
• ✔ Many checks → high-risk situation

May 19, 2026

Checklist of Abusive Techniques Used by Manipulative Gurus / Cult Leaders

Checklist of Abusive Techniques Used by Manipulative Gurus / Cult Leaders

1) Authoritarian Control & Power Centralization
  • Leaders are described as authoritarian personalities who shape the group’s structure, methods, and norms. [1]
  • The group revolves around devotion to a single person, idea, or thing. 2
What this looks like:
  • Leader is treated as uniquely correct, superior, or unquestionable
  • Decision-making authority is concentrated at the top

2) Psychological Coercion & Passive Submission
  • Leaders psychologically coerce followers into a passive, submissive state[1]
  • Cults use thought-reform programs to persuade, control, and socialize members. [2]
Key indicators:
  • Pressure to conform emotionally and intellectually
  • Reduced autonomy in personal decisions

3) Induction of Dependency
  • Groups systematically induce states of psychological dependency. 2
How it manifests:
  • Members feel unable to function without the group
  • Increasing reliance on the leader for identity, meaning, or guidance
4) Exploitation of Members
  • Members are exploited to advance leadership goals, including financial gain. [2,1]
Examples:
  • Pressure to donate money or labor
  • Use of followers to expand influence or recruitment

5) Blame Shifting & Induced Guilt
  • Followers are conditioned to believe they are “never good enough” and are responsible for problems[1]
Effects:
  • Internalized guilt and self-blame
  • Reduced likelihood of questioning authority

6) Deception & Manipulative Messaging
  • Abuse often becomes clear only after deception and exploitation are recognized[1]
Indicators:
  • Misrepresentation of intentions or beliefs
  • Gradual escalation of demands or commitments

7) Excessive Devotion & Identity Control
  • Cults are defined by excessive dedication and high levels of commitment[2,3]
Signs:
  • Identity becomes tied to the group
  • External relationships and independent viewpoints diminish

8) Emotional and Psychological Harm
  • These systems cause psychological harm to members and their families. [2]
Common outcomes:
  • Post-group distress
  • Trauma-related symptoms (e.g., PTSD references in clinical context) [2]

9) Charismatic Authority Reinforcement
  • Groups are held together by charismatic relationships demanding total commitment[4]
Implications:
  • Leader’s personal influence substitutes for institutional checks
  • Emotional attachment overrides critical thinking

10) Maintenance of Control Through Belief Systems
  • • Thought reform and influence frameworks (e.g., persuasion continuums) are used to shape beliefs and behavior[2]
Typical pattern:
  • Gradual reshaping of worldview
  • Reinforcement of group ideology over external evidence

How to Use This Checklist

Your internal materials emphasize focusing on patterns of behavior rather than just labels. [3]

A group or leader doesn’t need to exhibit every item, but clusters of these techniques are strongly associated with harmful, coercive environments.


Quick Summary (Rapid Scan)

If you need a fast filter, watch for:
• Centralized, unquestioned authority
• Psychological coercion + dependency
• Exploitation (financial, emotional, or labor)
• Blame shifting and guilt conditioning
• Identity control and isolation from outside perspectives

───

If you want, I can turn this into a scoring rubric or risk assessment tool you can apply to specific groups or individuals.


References
1. Giambalvo, C., & Ryan, P. Characteristics of a Cult Leader (Based on Captive Hearts, Captive Minds by Madeleine Landau Tobias & Janja Lalich)

 Henry, R. (LPC). Psychological Manipulation: Cults and Cultic Relationships (Professional Seminar)

Langone, M. D. (Ed.). (1993).Recovery from Cults: Help for Victims of Psychological and Spiritual Abuse

 

Singer, M. T. (1995). Continuum of Influence and Persuasion (referenced within seminar materials)

 3. Zablocki, B. (1997). Definition of cults as charismatic, high-commitment organizations

4. International Cultic Studies Association (ICSA). FAQ and Articles on Cults and Group Characteristics

Bring Me The Beauties: A Model Cult

HBO Original Documentary Series BRING ME THE BEAUTIES: A MODEL CULT Debuts June 1
Media Release
Tuesday, May 19, 2026
 
The Three-Part Series Explores Male Supermodel Hoyt Richards’ Experiences With The 1980-90s Cult “Eternal Values” And The Guru Obsessed With Youth And Beauty




The HBO Original three-part documentary series BRING ME THE BEAUTIES: A MODEL CULT, directed and executive produced by Chris Smith (HBO’s Emmy®-winning “100 Foot Wave”), debuts MONDAY, JUNE 1 at 9:00 p.m. ET/PT on HBO and will be available to stream on HBO Max. Subsequent episodes will debut Mondays at the same time.
 
Synopsis: BRING ME THE BEAUTIES: A MODEL CULT chronicles Hoyt Richards, who, at 16 years old, meets an enigmatic Manhattan socialite on a Nantucket beach and is pulled into his spiritual group, Eternal Values. Soon after, Richards ascends to fame as one of the first male supermodels of the 1980s.

Eternal Values, the cult-like group, and its larger-than-life leader Frederick von Mierers, leveraged the glamorous world of 1980s New York to prey upon a community of young models and professionals, seducing them with his New Age cocktail of metaphysical and spiritual teachings, and entangling them in a web of fabrication and exploitation.

Told through intimate, first-person narration, the series tracks Hoyt’s involvement with the group and its charismatic guru. Richards, who met von Mierers in high school, was captivated with his worldly wisdom and teachings on spirituality, love and self-improvement. After graduating college, Hoyt moved into Frederick’s New York City apartment where he became a devoted follower of von Mierers, all while rising to fame as one of the world’s first male supermodels.

As he was drawn further into Eternal Values, Hoyt, now well-paid and well-connected, helped fund von Mierers’ group while living an ascetic lifestyle — sleeping on a mat and sharing the apartment with other devotees. As Hoyt’s story unfolds, the series reveals how von Mierers gained celebrity by claiming to be an alien “walk-in” from the planet Arcturus. His mission was self-realization and he convinced his acolytes to buy expensive “healing” gems that would save them from tribulation, while also encouraging them to recruit attractive new followers.

Incorporating archival footage from the group’s public access television shows, the series reveals how its ideas were presented to a broader audience. Former members describe how the group’s early emphasis on abstinence shifted over time, giving way to pressure to engage in sexual relationships while discouraging emotional intimacy that might threaten the group — an evolution that unfolded in the shadow of the AIDS crisis. As these accounts deepen, questions also emerge about von Mierers, including whether he was who he claimed to be.
 
Episode Descriptions:
Chapter 1: “The Promise”
Debut date: MONDAY, JUNE 1 (9:00-10:00 p.m. ET/PT)

Hoyt Richards recounts how, in 1978, he met Frederick von Mierers, a self-proclaimed guru preaching a seductive gospel of Eastern philosophy, astrology, and New Age spirituality. To the outside world, Hoyt was a successful, jet-setting model, but at the same time, he lived an ascetic life while espousing Frederick’s teachings and funding much of his lifestyle.

Chapter 2: “The Antichrist Tapes”
Debut date: MONDAY, JUNE 8 (9:00-10:00 p.m. ET/PT)
In preparation for Frederick’s prediction of a coming global cataclysm in 1999, the group sets up a compound in North Carolina, where he claims alien spaceships can land to take them to safety. Jacki Adams, another top model, joins the group, only to trigger a series of events that end up publicly exposing the true nature of the Eternal Values.

Chapter 3: “Mind Games”
Debut date: MONDAY, JUNE 15 (9:00-10:00 p.m. ET/PT)
The group splinters and eventually dwindles in North Carolina. As 1999 approaches, Hoyt grows skeptical and escapes to California where he grapples with the shame and regret of recruiting others while hurting his own family, as he reconnects and reflects on his experiences with former members. 
 
Featured Participants: Former Eternal Values members Hoyt Richards, Paul Hinton, Dar Dixon, and Elissa Melaragno; models Fabio Lanzoni, John Pearson, and Jacki Adams; modeling agents; family members of Hoyt Richards; and archival footage of Frederick Von Mierers.

 https://press.wbd.com/us/media-release/hbo-0/bring-me-beauties-model-cult/hbo-original-documentary-series-bring-me-beauties-model-cult-debuts-june-1

What are Guru Cults?

What are Guru Cults?

“Guru cults” usually means groups centered on a spiritual teacher whose authority becomes so dominant that followers treat the guru as unquestionable or even divine. In that sense, it overlaps with the idea of a **cult of personality**, where loyalty to the leader matters more than open inquiry or accountability.

## What the term implies
A guru cult is not the same as every guru-led tradition. Many Hindu, Jain, Sikh, and Buddhist traditions have respected guru-disciple relationships, but the concern starts when the teacher demands total obedience, suppresses doubt, or controls members’ beliefs and behavior.

## Common warning signs
- The guru is treated as infallible.
- Questioning or disagreement is discouraged.
- The group claims exclusive access to truth.
- Members are pressured to donate money, labor, or loyalty.
- The leader’s personal interests override ethics or transparency.

## Simple distinction
A healthy teacher-student relationship supports learning, reflection, and independence. A guru cult pushes dependence, surrender, and emotional or social control, sometimes using spiritual language to justify it.

## In plain language
So, “guru cults” is a critical label for spiritually centered groups where devotion to the leader has become unhealthy or coercive, rather than a neutral term for all guru-based traditions.

May 18, 2026

The Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution discontinues separate monitoring of Scientology

Scientology has been under surveillance by the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution since 1997. In the future, the authorities intend to focus on other issues. The organization has lost significance.

DIE ZEIT
May 15, 2026

The Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution (BfV) has discontinued its systematic monitoring of the Scientology organization . The agency stated that Scientology has lost significance at the federal level in recent years. Therefore, the organization will no longer be subject to separate and ongoing surveillance by the BfV.

It was also announced that Scientology will no longer appear as a separate item in the annual report of the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution . This is because the agency wants to focus more on other threats, such as espionage, sabotage, and terrorism.

The organization was founded in the USA in 1954 by science fiction author L. Ron Hubbard . It opened its first branch in Germany in 1970. The Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution (Germany's domestic intelligence agency) has been monitoring Scientology nationwide since 1997.

The organization considers itself a church. Outside experts and former members describe it as a dangerous cult that leads its members into psychological and financial dependence. The Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution (BfV) estimated in its 2024 report that Scientology had around 3,600 members in Germany. The report stated that this number had stagnated since 2021.

The authority will decide on a case-by-case basis.

The 2024 report by the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution states that the organization aims to establish a global "Scientology" society according to its own vision. Hubbard's writings make it clear "that in a society based on Scientology principles, essential fundamental and human rights, such as human dignity and the right to free development of one's personality, are not guaranteed, nor is the right to equal treatment."

The agency intends to continue monitoring anti-constitutional activities by units or members of the organization. "Regardless, however, activities against the free democratic basic order emanating from this pool of individuals will continue to be investigated by the Office for the Protection of the Constitution," the BfV stated. The agency pointed out that the ideological classification of extremist activities serves "organizational purposes."

According to information from SWR and ARD-Hauptstadtstudio, the state authorities in Baden-Württemberg, Bavaria and Hamburg, which are particularly affected by Scientology activities, are also considering discontinuing the separate monitoring of Scientology or have already done so.

https://www.zeit.de/gesellschaft/2026-05/scientology-verfassungsschutz-beobachtung-organisation-deutschland-gxe?hl=en-US

Why the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution is reclassifying Scientology – but continuing to monitor it

Daniel Staffen-Quandt
Sonntagsblatt
May 18, 2026

"The Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution will no longer conduct nationwide surveillance of Scientology, but does not consider the organization unproblematic. Sect expert Matthias Pöhlmann warns against prematurely sounding the all-clear – and points to continuing risks associated with the movement.

According to the Protestant expert on sects, Matthias Pöhlmann, Scientology still poses a threat. However, according to media reports from Friday, the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution has discontinued its systematic monitoring of the "Church of Scientology Germany".

The agency could not be reached for comment on Saturday. The Bavarian Interior Ministry stated in response to an inquiry that the state's Office for the Protection of the Constitution will maintain its surveillance 'until further notice.'"

'...Scientology announced late Friday evening that it welcomed the discontinuation of surveillance of its organization by the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution - even though it had only known about it from the media so far.

"Other German states, such as Lower Saxony and North Rhine-Westphalia, had already ceased monitoring Scientology in 2025," the organization added. The decision sends an "important signal for a more objective, nuanced, and legally balanced assessment" of Scientology."


Sonntagsblatt

Sect expert Pöhlmann warns against Scientology despite the end of observation.

Evangelisch: Sect expert Pöhlmann warns against Scientology despite the end of observation.

"...Published interviews with prominent German cult and ideology experts, such as Dr. Matthias Pöhlmann (the chief representative for sect issues for the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Bavaria). Pöhlmann’s public briefs analyze the BfV’s withdrawal, warning that the end of tracking shouldn't be misconstrued as an endorsement of the group's practices, but rather a reflection of its shrinking public influence and shifting geopolitical priorities.

https://www.evangelisch.de/inhalte/255531/16-05-2026/sekten-experte-poehlmann-warnt-trotz-beobachtungs-ende-vor-scientology

The 'Cult of Jared Leto' controversy: How Hollywood ignored rumors for decades

MSN: The 'Cult of Jared Leto' controversy: How Hollywood ignored rumors for decades

The article from Front Page Detectives details the escalating controversy surrounding actor and musician Jared Leto, focusing on how Hollywood ignored warning signs about his behavior for decades.
The key points from the summary include:
• The "Cult" Image: For years, Leto (frontman of Thirty Seconds to Mars) leaned into a "cult leader" persona as a marketing tactic. He hosted high-priced annual "Mars Island" fan retreats in Croatia costing up to $6,499, where devotees dressed in matching white clothing, received band tattoos, and engaged in spiritual activities. While originally dismissed by the public as harmless performance art, the imagery has faced severe scrutiny following serious allegations.
• The 2025 Air Mail Investigation: In June 2025, Air Mail published an investigative report featuring testimonies from nine women who accused Leto of sexual misconduct, unsolicited sexual messaging, and predatory behavior at private parties.
• Allegations Involving Minors: Multiple women alleged they were minors when Leto targeted them. The catalyst for the investigation came when DJ and music producer Allie Teilz posted that Leto had assaulted and traumatized her when she was 17. Another woman alleged that in 2006, when she was 16 and didn't even have a driver's license, Leto approached her in Los Angeles, took her number, and initiated late-night sexual phone calls.
• An Open Secret in Hollywood: The article notes that rumors about Leto’s behavior had been an open secret since at least 2005, when Page Six published a piece titled "Jared Leto Likes 'Em Young." However, Hollywood largely ignored the rumors, allowing his eccentric public persona to act as a cover for his behavior.
• Professional Fallout: Unlike past controversies that faded, Leto is experiencing tangible fallout. A film project he was developing, The Talented Dr. Grey, has reportedly been put on hold, and his involvement in Disney’s Tron: Ares remains fluid.
Ultimately, the article concludes that the controversy exposes an industry that gave a powerful celebrity a "very long leash," using his known eccentricity as an alibi to ignore predatory behavior.


https://www.frontpagedetectives.com/p/the-cult-of-jared-leto-controversy-how-hollywood-ignored-rumors-for-decades

May 15, 2026

Neuroscience News: Harsh Parenting Biologically Distorts Child Stress Regulation

The study highlighted in the *Neuroscience News* article—which utilizes Respiratory Sinus Arrhythmia (RSA) to track real-time biological "co-regulation" between parents and children—offers profound insights into the psychological and physiological binding mechanisms that occur to **children raised in high-demand cults or coercive isolated groups**.

Cult environments often rely on authoritarian, highly punitive, and emotionally volatile parenting or leadership styles to enforce absolute compliance. Applying the study's findings on "harsh parenting" and "physiological inertia" to the context of high-control groups reveals several key insights into how children are conditioned and psychologically trapped in cults:

### 1. Arrested Independence and Forced Dependency

 * **The Study’s Finding:** In healthy environments, a parent's physiological regulation over a child naturally declines as preschoolers grow, allowing the child to develop independent self-regulation. Conversely, harsh, aggressive parenting upends this evolutionary pipeline, causing the child to become *more* dependent on external parental regulation as they age.

 * **Cult Insight:** Cults structurally thrive on dependency. This research provides a biological mechanism for how authoritarian cult parenting prevents children from developing autonomy. By continuously subjecting children to high-stress, hostile environments (e.g., severe physical discipline, public shaming, fear of apocalypse or damnation), the child's autonomic nervous system is biologically blocked from transitioning into independent self-regulation. The child remains permanently tethered to the "driver's seat" of the abusive parent or cult leader just to stabilize their own body, fundamentally crippling their ability to conceive of an independent life outside the group.

### 2. "RSA Inertia" and the Prolonged State of Fear

 * **The Study’s Finding:** Children exposed to harsh parenting exhibit greater "RSA inertia," meaning that once their fight-or-flight response is triggered, their elevated stress levels take significantly longer to return to baseline. Their stress response becomes rigid and less responsive.

 * **Cult Insight:** Children in high-control groups are often kept in a constant state of hypervigilance due to rigid rules, threats of spiritual or physical punishment, and surveillance. Because of "RSA inertia," a child in a cult who is reprimanded or frightened doesn't just calm down when the immediate threat passes; their body stays trapped in a high-stress, physiological panic state for prolonged periods. Over time, this creates a rigid, fragile nervous system that associates any deviation from cult rules with prolonged, agonizing physical distress, making psychological exit or rebellion feel like a biological threat to survival.

### 3. Biological Co-Regulation as a Tool for Trauma Bonding

 * **The Study’s Finding:** Young children naturally look to their parents’ physical state to calibrate their own nervous systems. When a parent is volatile, this calibration becomes distorted.

 * **Cult Insight:** In a cult, the abusive authority figure is simultaneously the source of the terror and the *only* permissible source of comfort. When a child's nervous system is thrown into chaos by harsh treatment, they are biologically driven to seek co-regulation from the very parent or leader who caused the distress. This physiological loop—where the child must hug, appease, or look to an aggressive captor/parent to physically calm their own heartbeat—is the foundational biological architecture of a **trauma bond**.

**Summary:** This research shows that harsh parenting does not just damage a child's feelings; it **biologically rewires their nervous system to reject independence**. 

Neo-Nazi 'butcher' gets 15 years for plot to poison Jewish Children in NYC

**Michail Chkhikvishvili**, a 22-year-old Georgian national and leader of the neo-Nazi group **Maniac Murder Cult** (also known as MKY) who operated online under the alias **“Commander Butcher,”** was sentenced in Brooklyn federal court to **15 years in prison** for plotting mass-casualty attacks against Jews and minorities in New York City.

Key details of the case include:
 * **The Poisoned Candy Plot:** Prosecutors revealed that Chkhikvishvili devised a plan to distribute toxic, poison-laced candy to racial minorities and Jewish children in Brooklyn on New Year's Eve. He attempted to recruit an undercover FBI agent to carry out the attack, instructing them to dress up as Santa Claus to distribute the lethal treats.

 * **Extradition and Plea:** After being extradited to the United States from Moldova, Chkhikvishvili pleaded guilty to soliciting hate crimes and distributing instructions for making bombs and lethal poisons, including ricin.

 * **Extremist Ideology:** As the leader of the Maniac Murder Cult, Chkhikvishvili authored and distributed a manifesto titled the "Hater's Handbook." The text encouraged white supremacists to carry out school shootings and other violent acts to trigger a racial and religious war. Officials noted his online incitement has been linked to multiple violent incidents.

 * **Official Statements:** Federal and local officials, including the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Eastern District of New York and the NYPD, condemned Chkhikvishvili as a "hate-mongering menace" who specifically targeted vulnerable populations, including children. They credited the swift intervention of federal and local counterterrorism investigators for preventing the mass tragedy.

Psychics & Fraud

Legislative & Legal Updates

• The "Deceptive Trade Practices" Shift: More jurisdictions are moving away from outdated "fortune telling" bans (which are often challenged on First Amendment grounds) and are instead prosecuting psychics under Consumer Protection Acts. This focuses on the financial harm and the promise of specific results (e.g., "I will return your lover for $5,000") rather than the practice itself.

• Vulnerable Adult Statutes: There is an increasing push to apply "Elder Abuse" or "Vulnerable Adult" enhancements to sentencing in psychic fraud cases. This recognizes that many victims are targeted during periods of intense grief or cognitive decline.

Domestic & True Crime: Recent Patterns
• The "Curse Removal" Scam: This remains the most prevalent high-dollar fraud. Cases often involve "egg cleansing" or "money purification" rituals where the victim is told their cash is "tainted" and must be handed over for a blessing, only for the psychic to disappear.

• Digital Mediumship Fraud: With the rise of social media, "impersonation scams" have spiked. Fraudsters create fake profiles of well-known mediums to solicit "emergency readings" or "cleansing fees" from grieving followers.

• Asset Recovery Hurdles: A major ongoing legal focus is the difficulty of recovering "gifted" assets. Defense attorneys often argue the money was a voluntary gift for spiritual services, making the "intent to defraud" difficult to prove without extensive documentation.
Research & Science
• The "Barnum Effect" in the Digital Age: Recent psychological studies are looking at how AI and algorithms make "Cold Reading" more effective. By gathering data from a victim's social media, a fraudster can make "hits" that seem impossible, creating a deeper psychological bond of trust.

• The Neurobiology of Grief: Research continues to show how the "executive function" of the brain is dampened during acute grief, making otherwise skeptical individuals highly susceptible to magical thinking and high-pressure sales tactics.

"Red Flags to Watch"
• The "Secret" Requirement: If a practitioner tells you not to tell your family or bank about the payments, it is almost certainly fraud.

• The Escalation: Legitimate spiritual services usually have a set fee; scammers always find a "new, darker curse" that requires more money to break.

• The Physical Transfer: Any request to bring physical cash, gold, or gift cards to be "blessed" or "buried" is a major warning sign.

May 14, 2026

ED cracks down on “illegal” sale of SRMF properties worth crores

Agency conducts searches in Delhi and Noida in money laundering probe linked to alleged forged documents, fake resolutions and sale of Spiritual Regeneration Movement Foundation lands across multiple States

The Hindu Bureau
Msy 14, 2026

The Enforcement Directorate (ED) has launched search operations against a syndicate accused of forging documents and impersonating office-bearers to allegedly sell prime properties belonging to the Spiritual Regeneration Movement Foundation of India (SRMF), the agency said on Thursday (May 14, 2026).

The case involves land transactions allegedly worth hundreds of crores. The agency initiated the investigation on May 7 under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act and is now focusing on key conspirators.

“The ED’s preliminary investigations have identified G. Ram Chandra Mohan and Akash Malviya as the principal suspects and alleged masterminds behind the elaborate conspiracy. Despite being previously arrested in FIR No. 328/2011 in Chhattisgarh, he (Mr. Mohan) continued his unlawful activities in active connivance with associates,” the agency said.

The ED conducted searches at the premises of Mr. Mohan and Mr. Malviya in Delhi’s Narayan Vihar, and at the premises of one Ram Shyam in Burari. Searches were also carried out at Singhvahini Infra Projects Private Limited in Sector 100 of Noida in Uttar Pradesh and at the residence of its associate, Pradeep Singh, in Sector 105, Noida.

SRMF, a society registered in 1963 under the Societies Registration Act and linked to the teachings of Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, owns substantial immovable properties across multiple States.

“However, a group of accused persons allegedly used forged authority letters, fabricated resolutions, and fake seals to illegally sell these lands,” the agency alleged.

In one case reported in December 2025, a 3.3610-hectare parcel of land in Gejha Tilpatabad village in Noida was allegedly sold fraudulently by Mr. Malviya using a fictitious entity with an identical name, “The Spiritual Regeneration Movement Foundation of India”, to Singhvahini Infra Projects Private Limited for a declared consideration of ₹16 crore, far below the circle rate of ₹33.61 crore, according to the ED.

At least seven FIRs have been registered in Noida in Uttar Pradesh, Dhar and Shajapur in Madhya Pradesh, and Bilaspur in Chhattisgarh.

In another case in Noida, the same land was allegedly sold again in January 2026 to Vaam Dev Private Limited. The agency alleged that the accused executed a ₹3.48-crore sale using a fake board resolution.

The ED further alleged that 39.96 hectares of land were “illegally” sold in Shajapur, while in Bilaspur, 75 acres were sold through eight “fake” sale deeds in alleged conspiracy with revenue officials.

https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/ed-cracks-down-on-illegal-sale-of-srmf-properties-worth-crores/article70978633.ece?hl=en-US

Gen Z’s "discovery" of Scientology

Gen Z’s "discovery" of Scientology is often viewed through the lens of social media irony, it has evolved into a chaotic mix of viral stunts, digital activism, and heightened security measures at Scientology centers across the country.

The "Scientology Speedrunning" Trend
The most visible interaction Gen Z has with the organization is a 2026 viral trend known as Scientology Speedrunning (or "Scientology Runs").

• The Concept: Drawing from video game culture, participants film themselves sprinting into Church of Scientology buildings—most notably the Information Center on Hollywood Boulevard—to see how deep they can get before being intercepted by staff.

• Viral Mechanics: These clips are often set to high-energy music and edited to look like an "infiltration mission."

• The Reaction: The trend has led to real-world consequences. In April 2026, the Hollywood location famously removed its exterior door handles to prevent "raids." By May 2026, police in New York City, San Diego, and Brisbane had responded to coordinated group attempts to enter facilities.

Post-Irony and Activism
For many Gen Z creators, the interest isn't just about the "meme" of Tom Cruise or Xenu; it’s a form of decentralized, chaotic activism.

• Anti-Recruitment: Many creators use TikTok and Instagram to "live-stream" the famous "Free Personality Test" (the Oxford Capacity Analysis) to mock the results in real-time, effectively "de-mystifying" the recruitment process for their followers.

• Exposing Tactics: Creators often film their interactions with "Sea Org" members to highlight what they describe as "stilted" or "rehearsed" behavior, using the organization's own secrecy as a catalyst for engagement.

The Institutional Pushback
The Church of Scientology has responded aggressively to this new wave of attention:

• Legal Action: Officials have labeled the speedrunning trend as "organized trespass" and "harassment," with some incidents being investigated as potential hate crimes.

• Indoctrination Defense: Critics, including journalist Yashar Ali, note that these stunts may inadvertently help the organization’s internal narrative by proving to members that the outside world is "hostile and violent."

Comparison of Perspectives

Viewpoint
Stance on Gen Z "Discovery"

Participants
A "fun," harmless way to troll a controversial organization and gain views.

Anti-Cult Activists
Divided; some see it as effective disruption, others see it as immature and dangerous.

Church Officials
An illegal, coordinated campaign of religious harassment and property damage.

Follower of alleged cult leader is charged with threatening FBI, prosecutors

Makeda Charles now faces criminal charges for seeking to derail the case against David E. Taylor, who allegedly ran a forced labor call center out of Nelly’s Wildwood mansion.

Ryan Krull
St Louis Magazine 
May 14, 2026

The latest twist in the criminal case against alleged cult leader David E. Taylor is a wild one, even by the standards of the bizarre saga surrounding the self-described “apostle,” whose organization operated 24/7 prayer call centers out of luxury properties around the country, including in Chesterfield and Wildwood.

Last week, charges against 36-year-old Makeda Charles, described as a “long-time follower” of Taylor’s Kingdom of God Global Church, were unsealed in Michigan. According to the criminal complaint,  Charles sent emails and text messages to an FBI special agent, a federal prosecutor, and a federal judge, threatening harm if the case against Taylor continued. The threatening communiques dated back to at least January 2025 but intensified in tone and frequency last month, according to an FBI affidavit.

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In January of last year, according to that affidavit, Charles texted an FBI special agent a photo of herself holding a rifle in front of towering flames. Included with the photo was a text message saying, “You’ll get one bullet and be shot dead if you try that shit again, and General David E. Taylor can choke you to death or pistol beat you to death.” Notably, that threat predated any criminal charges against Taylor, whose indictment was made public in August 2025. 

The pattern of unhinged threats escalated last month. In the course of a few days in April, Charles sent a fax to a U.S. District judge, presumably to the one overseeing the Taylor’s Michigan case, accusing the judge of engaging in human trafficking and “ethnic intimidation.” The next day, she emailed the judge and federal prosecutor saying, “There is a hit on your life.”

The very next day after that she emailed the same individuals again, writing, “Don’t fuck with His excellency General David E Taylor and God’s money, your life will be robbed and you and all your bloody family be together in hell forever.” She also offered to have herself taken to the jail with Taylor, asking to be put in a “couples psych ward” with him. Charles was arrested last week, although she appears unlikely to get her wish when it comes to that placement.

Taylor has, however, been in jail since his indictment. The charges against his acolyte come amid new court filings in the criminal case against him that suggest how the preacher whose visage long adorned a billboard opposite Lambert Airport may have first gotten on the FBI’s radar.  

He and two others are alleged to have run the Kingdom of God Global Church as a forced labor conspiracy, exploiting followers to work grueling hours in call centers across the country, soliciting donations from people who called into a 24/7 “dream interpretation” hotline. Those hotlines were operated out of call centers in multiple states, including several in West St. Louis County, where members rarely left. (A Wildwood mansion previously belonging to rapper Nelly was just one of the sites.) Prosecutors say members who failed to meet aggressive quotas were punished through food and sleep deprivation, humiliation and threats of “divine punishment.”

Taylor, along with his top lieutenant, Michelle Brannon, were indicted in Michigan in August of last year. A third person, Kathleen Klein, who also went by “Prophetess” was charged as part of the forced labor conspiracy in February. 

There was certainly no shortage of red flags surrounding Taylor’s operations. In 2022, neighbors of one house owned by his church in Chesterfield, on Wildhorse Meadow Drive, suspected it was being used as a call center. 

But new court filings in the criminal case indicate that the FBI was being contacted as early as 2024 by people concerned that their elderly and coginitvely-impaired family members were sending large sums of money to Taylor. An FBI document dated January 2024 memorializes an interview an agent conducted with an elderly woman who had been referred to the agency as a “potential financial fraud victim.”

The elderly woman, identified only as K.W., had made multiple large wire transfers to the Kingdom of God Global Church, totalling $263,400. She attempted at one point to send more money, but a bank teller refused to facilitate the transaction. The FBI form states that K.W. had received the money she sent to Taylor from a settlement and that she’d initially reached out to to the church, which operated a 24/7 hotline, because she was suicidal. The woman’s husband, who also spoke to the agent, said that his wife has many medical issues and had been “completely taken advantage of” and “manipulated” by the church. 

Even after the federal charges against Taylor were made public, FBI agents continued to encounter elderly followers of Taylor eager to send their money to him. An FBI interview with a 79-year-old showed that she donated $10,000 to Taylor’s church the month after the indictment was unsealed. She said she was told the money would go toward building a school. She indicated she would be OK if some of the money went toward Taylor’s legal defense, “but not all of it.” 

Court filings in the case also state that agents have uncovered recordings of the calls that came into the church’s call centers and these recordings show that some of the “donors” display a “level of cognition of the donor is notably concerning.”

Taylor and Brannon had originally been represented in the case by noted St. Louis criminal defense attorneys Scott Rosenblum and John Rogers, respectively. However Rosenblum’s firm exited the case in April, with Rogers withdrawing last week. Both Taylor and Brannon are now represented by a firm out of the Detroit metropolitan area. 

The evidence in the case is reportedly massive, including thousands of pages of financial records, 14,000 pages of FBI reports and other documents, and 46 GB of data, including from software used by churches to track donations as well as from Taylor’s iCloud.

https://www.stlmag.com/news/david-taylor-nelly-wildwood-makeda-charles/

Maniac Murder Cult

Michail Chkhikvishvili, a 22-year-old Georgian national known as "Commander Butcher," was sentenced on May 13, 2026, to 15 years in prison in a Brooklyn federal court.

Chkhikvishvili was a leader of the Maniac Murder Cult (MKY) , an international neo-Nazi extremist group. Here are the key details from the case:

The Crimes & Sentencing
• Solicitation of Violence: Chkhikvishvili pleaded guilty in November 2025 to soliciting hate crimes and distributing instructions for making bombs and ricin.
• The Plot: Prosecutors revealed a horrific scheme to carry out a mass-casualty attack in New York City. Chkhikvishvili attempted to recruit an undercover agent to dress as Santa Claus on New Year’s Eve and distribute poisoned candy to Jewish and minority children in Brooklyn.
• Ideology: The group adheres to "accelerationism," a neo-Nazi ideology that seeks to trigger a racial and religious war through extreme violence and social collapse. Chkhikvishvili authored a manifesto called the "Hater’s Handbook," which encouraged mass murder and ethnic cleansing.

Connection to Real-World Violence
Authorities noted that Chkhikvishvili’s online rhetoric and recruitment efforts on platforms like Telegram were linked to actual acts of violence. Specifically, the group’s influence was cited as an inspiration for multiple real-life attacks, including a school shooting in Nashville, Tennessee, the previous year that resulted in the death of a 16-year-old student.

Background
Chkhikvishvili traveled to Brooklyn in 2022 to scout locations for attacks. He was eventually arrested in Moldova in 2024 on an international warrant and extradited to the United States in May 2025. During the sentencing, Chkhikvishvili claimed he was "ashamed" of his actions, while his defense attorneys argued he had been radicalized as a teenager and suffered from mental health struggles.
U.S. Attorney Joseph Nocella Jr. described the defendant as a "hate-mongering menace" and stated that the 15-year sentence "takes a monster off our streets."

Cults In The News - May 14, 2026

International News

• Kenya Shakahola Forest Investigation: Authorities continue to manage the aftermath of the doomsday cult led by Paul Mackenzie. The death toll has surpassed 200, with many victims linked to forced starvation. Government officials have compared the group's actions to domestic terrorism.

• Unification Church (Japan): Legal proceedings are intensifying as the Japanese government seeks a court order to dissolve the church’s status as a religious corporation. This follows long-standing investigations into "spiritual sales" and the group's political influence after the assassination of Shinzo Abe.

• Malaysia & Fiji: Recent reports detail the deportation of "Grace Road Cult" members from Fiji back to South Korea following allegations of ritualistic violence. Meanwhile, in Malaysia, dozens of individuals associated with a local group face charges linked to organized crime and child abuse.

Domestic & True Crime Updates

• Southern California Prosecution: Members of the "His Way Spirit Led Assemblies" in the Inland Empire recently appeared in court. Former members have testified about years of starvation and torture, with leaders facing charges including murder.

• The "Zizians" Group: Investigations are ongoing into a radical vegan group known as the Zizians, which has been linked to several deaths. Trial proceedings have highlighted the group’s high-control dynamics and the challenges witnesses face due to psychological trauma.

• Scientology "Raids": A viral social media trend involving "speed runs" or "raids" on Scientology buildings has prompted the organization to increase security measures in Los Angeles and other major cities.

Culture & Media

• Opera Philadelphia: The U.S. premiere of The Listeners by Missy Mazzoli recently explored the psychological allure of high-control groups, reflecting a continued public fascination with how these organizations recruit and maintain power.

• Historical Context: With the 50th anniversary of the Jonestown massacre approaching in a few years, survivors and journalists are increasingly speaking out about the "cult typology" in media and the warning signs of modern-day extremist groups.

Beyond these headlines, many smaller groups—often described as "under the radar"—continue to face scrutiny for child labor violations and financial exploitation in rural communities across the U.S.