Dec 31, 2024

Melbourne doctor formed cult before using god-like status to rape members’ children

Pradeep Dissanayake forced members to give him money and send hourly messages of praise before he sexually abused two girls, court of appeal says

Christopher Knaus
Guardian 
December 30, 2024

A Melbourne skin doctor established a Buddhist-Christian cult and used his “godlike status” to rape his followers’ children while forcing them to give him money and send hourly text messages of praise.

Pradeep Dissanayake, the founder of the Windsor-based Melbourne Medical Skin Clinic, returned from a trip to Sri Lanka in 2016 and began to preach, eventually establishing a sect that blended Buddhism and Christianity, according to a Victorian court of appeal decision published earlier this month.

As the leader of the sect, Dissanayake exerted significant control over his followers.

He told them where they should live, how they should raise their children, and demanded hourly text messages praising him, according to the court’s judgment.

His followers were forced to seek permission for everything they did, including showering and leaving the home, and were made to kneel when he entered their homes.

Men were instructed to stay together at one house and women at another. Parents had to “relinquish the parenting of their own biological children and parent their co-habitants’ children instead”.

The doctor assumed a “godlike status”, the court decision said, which gave him access to and control over two 12-year-old girls, who were daughters of his followers.

He was found to have sexually abused both repeatedly over a period of months, including during a December 2021 trip to Bunnings to purchase supplies to help members of the sect paint a Melton home. On other occasions, the abuse occurred in hotel rooms and at a car park.

He later told psychologists that he raped the girls to teach them how to “respect the lord” and said his desire was to “fix” his victims by showing them love, the court judgment said.

Dissanayake said he did not derive any sexual satisfaction from the abuse, a claim the court of appeal described as both “delusional and chilling”.

“The complainants were vulnerable young girls whose families were in the thrall of the respondent,” the court of appeal said. “He used his position and influence to facilitate access to the complainants and exert influence over them to commit the crimes. The offending was predatory offending of a disgusting and shameless kind.”

Dissanayake was initially sentenced in the Victorian county court to eight years’ imprisonment, with a non-parole period of five years.

Prosecutors appealed against the sentence, saying it was manifestly inadequate. They told the court of appeal that the offending was serious because of the 37-year age gap between the offender and his victims, the vulnerability of the girls, and the use of Dissanayake’s position as leader of the sect to facilitate access and exert influence over the girls.

The court of appeal agreed, increasing the sentence to 10 years and 10 months’ imprisonment, with a non-parole period of eight years.

“In this case, the respondent’s conduct has harmed two complainants and was particularly egregious given his role, not as a doctor, but as the leader of the sect to which the complainants’ parents belonged and over whom he exercised significant authority and control,” the court found.

“Furthermore, the offending was planned and then concealed from other adults with lies. The respondent continued to be indifferent to the harm inflicted on the complainants until well after he was charged and, until at least April 2023, he was peddling the explanation that he had been doing the complainants some kind of favour.

“He left his substantial expression of remorse to the day of sentencing.”

The court rejected the notion that Dissanayake had been blinded by some kind of “religious ‘fog’” that clouded his ability to recognise the illegality of his actions.

Dissanayake, the court said, was a “medical practitioner and an obviously intelligent and well educated man” who “well knew” he was engaging in criminal conduct.

He initially migrated to Australia with his wife and two sons in 2006. He was an accredited doctor and only stopped working in April 2022 when he told the Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency of the charges against him, prompting a suspension of his licence.

https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2024/dec/31/melbourne-doctor-pradeep-dissanayake-formed-cult-members-children-ntwnfb

Rev. James Bevel

Lyndon LaRouche’s ticket, Bevel worked for the Moonies
From The LaRouche Planet [accessed 12/31/2024]


"Before he ran for vice presidential candidate in 1992 on Lyndon LaRouche’s ticket, Bevel worked for the Moonies cult (Unification Church of reverend Sun Myung Moon). As a matter of fact, he never left the Moonies while still working for LaRouche. (See John Gorenfeld  at iapprovethismessiah.com)

The LaRouche-Bevel campaign marked a rapprochement between LaRouche and Reverend Moon. Indeed, the “LaRouche-Bevel campaign” paid, in February and March of 1992, for a series of 11 full-page ads in the Moonie Washington Times. Source: “Meet the Candidates”  at etext.org.

During 1992 Bevel was also involved in a LaRouche campaign to remove the statue of General Albert Pike, allegedly a founder of the KKK, from its place of honor in Washington, D.C.’s Judiciary Square.
LaRouche had connections with the KKK with KKK Grand-Dragon Roy Frankhouser, who worked for LaRouche as a security consultant since the mid-1970s. But, by then (in 1992), LaRouche was in jail and his KKK friend was convicted at the same time as LaRouche. Their friendship was over.
LaRouche and Bevel took the opportunity to blame… the Jews (eg, the ADL and the B’nai B’rith) for being behind the KKK!

Then in 1995, Bevel’s association with (antisemite) Louis Farrakhan led to his participation in the National Day of Atonement/Million Man March movement. This rapprochement between LaRouche and Farrakhan was started earlier by the end of ’80s.

Strangely, the LaRouche’s “Honey-Reverend-Moon” was suddenly over. EIR ran a series of unprecedented attacks against Reverend Moon in October-November 2002. Even more intriguyingly is this “press release” titled ““Is Your Clergyman or Congressman a Moonie Sex-Cultist?”  where it is said: “The dirty money is frequently followed by sexual favors from an army of young women—all brainwashed into Moon’s bizarre sexual rituals.” Strange accusations, since the Moonies defend chastity, campaign against “free sex” and regard extra-marital affairs as “satanic”! For instance Rev. Moon said :
“The Bible refers to the origin of free sex by using the image of a snake. Woman’s sexual organ is like the open mouth of a snake filled with poison. Man’s sexual organ is like the head of a snake. If you think of fallen love action in these terms you feel disgusted and so you should. It is poison to humanity.”

The Moonies don’t do “free sex” (unlike the “Children of God” cult for instance.) But, as it appears now, Rev. Bevel did…

Five years later, Bevel was arrested in Alabama after being charged with “unlawfully committing fornication.” The charges stem from an alleged incestuous relationship he had some time between October 14, 1992, and October 14, 1994 in Loudoun County, Virginia (where and while he was associated with LaRouche…) The accuser is one of his daughters, believed to have been between 13 and 15~years old at the time. Some of his other daughters have corroborated the accusation from their own experiences with their father, who has allegedly admitted to the acts on tape, claiming they were part of the daughters’ “religious training”. Currently charged in Virginia–which has no statute of limitations for incest–Bevel faces up to 20 years in prison if convicted and is free on bond until his trial. Source: Wikipedia

Did LaRouche know anything about Bevel’s sex life? Was this a tactic to distance himself from his old running mate and partner in crime?

James Bevel has played an important role to try convincing the African-Americans and other persons whose origins come from Black Africa that LaRouche is their “friend”. He played a similiar role as the “Jews for LaRouche” do.

More on LaRouche and the “Blacks”
Bevel is also suspected to have introduced “Moonie Mind Control” techniques (like sleep deprivation) which are used to recruit and manipulate the LaRouche Youth Movement."

The Planet of LaRouche

ABOUT: So who are we?

"After the tragic deaths of Jeremiah Duggan in 2003 and Ken Kronberg in 2007, we hope this website will give those who are intrigued, puzzled, distressed or harmed by LaRouche and his destructive political cult, a better “picture” of what is often dismissed as weird, creepy or insane. What unite us are these two words: NEVER AGAIN!

This website about the “LaRouche phenomenon” is special because it is written by those who knew him best: the former members of his cult who have not deserted their moral integrity.

They have spent decades of their lives working with and for him. They knew him personally and helped build his organization.

It is therefore an insider view on that Bizarro Planet of Lyndon Hermyle LaRouche Junior… a kind of (ideological) colonoscopy… to expose his destructive group for what it is: a political, intellectual deception and a criminal fraud."

Dec 18, 2024

CultNEWS101 Articles: 12/18/2024 (Jesuits, Sensory Stimulants, Catholics, Scientology, Andrew Cohen)


Jesuits, Sensory Stimulants, Catholics, Scientology, Andrew Cohen

JSTOR: Making Scents of Jesuit Missionary Work
The use of sensory stimulants like incense gave Jesuits a common framework with the North American nations they encountered on missionary trips.

"Missionaries operating in cultures very different than their own often find themselves trying to communicate across a wide gulf. For Jesuits who arrived in parts of North America claimed by France in the seventeenth century, writes historian Andrew Kettler, one thing that helped bridge the gap was the fact that they and the Indigenous societies they hoped to convert to Catholicism shared a deep respect for the power of scent.

Kettler writes that, from the beginning, smells played a significant role
Catholicism. Incense was a crucial part of the immersive experience of worship. Pleasing or terrible smells could also signify holiness or evil. For example, when the fifteenth-century saint Lydwine of Schiedam became gravely ill, she was said to have vomited out parts of her internal organs, which emitted holy scents.

The Reformation called for controlling the "lower" senses of smell and taste, replacing sensual aspects of Catholic worship with the reading of scripture. But the Jesuits continued to valorize the sense of smell, using multi-sensory stimuli including scents during their periods of seclusion and arguing that a sufficiently purified person could recognize good and evil on Earth by their respectively sweet and sulfurous scents.

Kettler writes that the Jesuits who arrived in "New France" in 1625 followed the networks created by French fur traders toward the interior. They set up their central mission, Saint-Marie, on Huron land. As they introduced themselves to Native nations across the region, they marveled at the Indigenous people's sensory capacities, particularly their ability to locate fires from a great distance away. The Italian Jesuit missionary Francesco Giuseppe Bressani described people he encountered as having 'a rare sense of smell.'"

Where Peter Is: What Faithful Catholics can learn from Ex-Scientologists
" ... Mike Rinder's journey from a high-ranking official in Scientology to a vocal critic offers valuable insights for faithful Catholics. His story underscores the importance of discernment and personal integrity in one's faith journey. Rinder's eventual departure from Scientology, prompted by his recognition of systemic abuses, highlights the necessity of critically evaluating our own religious leaders — as well as our groups and practices — to ensure that we aren't being coerced or manipulated into unhealthy spiritual practices and ways of thinking.

As Catholics, it is important to engage in continuous self-examination and to uphold the moral principles of our faith, even when faced with institutional challenges. Rinder's advocacy for transparency and accountability resonates with the Catholic call for transparency and accountability from our leaders within the Church and the broader community. His commitment to exposing wrongdoing, despite personal costs, exemplifies the courage required to confront issues that may arise within any religious institution. Ultimately, Rinder's experience encourages Catholics to balance faithful adherence with critical reflection.

I have argued in the past that although Catholicism as a whole is not a cult, there are many cult-like groups within Catholicism. Identifying and exposing spiritually abusive groups and leaders is absolutely necessary for the health of our Church. Rinder's work serves to remind us of this principle.
But the most important lesson we might take from Mike Rinder's life journey is that people can change. After spending most of his life working on behalf of a destructive and corrupt organization, he spent his final years working to bring the truth to light.

One of the most poignant moments for me in watching Scientology and the Aftermath was in the final episode of season one, in which cult expert and former Moonie Dr. Steven Hassan was interviewed. After describing cult mind-control tactics in groups like Scientology and the Moonies, Hassan remarked that he had seen every episode of the program to that point, and then he started to become emotional. Hassan said, "Scientology has threatened me, gone through my trash … They've had people in Nazi uniforms picketing outside my office, telling my neighbors that I'm evil person, I'm an anti-religious bigot."

He then turned and looked directly at Mike Rinder and said, "I have to say, I was scared shitless of you for so many years. I love that you are modeling for ex-members of thousands of other cults that you can be a leader. You can do horrible things and you can wake up and be a human being. … I just think that what you're doing is heroic."

He then turned and looked directly at Mike Rinder and said, "I have to say, I was scared shitless of you for so many years. I love that you are modeling for ex-members of thousands of other cults that you can be a leader. You can do horrible things and you can wake up and be a human being. … I just think that what you're doing is heroic."
I have been moved deeply by the stories of Catholics who have had the courage to speak out after leaving high-control groups in the Church, from charismatic communities to the traditionalist movement. Speaking out for the truth comes at a high cost. These are the people "who hunger and thirst for righteousness." Jesus said they will be satisfied."

Arkansas Times: Former cult leader's name still on public art in downtown Little Rock
"A disgraced former cult leader's name is still on a piece of public art in Little Rock, despite a city spokesperson's assurance in July that the name would be removed.

"Responding is spirit in action. We are the change agents that give rise to the possibilities that don't exist," the quote reads. Engraved on a basalt pillar in Inspiration Plaza, the newest piece of public art in downtown Little Rock, the quote and its origins are puzzling.

The quote is attributed to a man named Andrew Cohen — a self-proclaimed guru and spiritual teacher accused of physical and mental abuse and financial exploitation by many of his former students and followers, including his own mother — but it isn't clear if he ever actually said it.

So why is the quote etched in stone in a statue garden by the Arkansas River? Because At-Large City Director Dean Kumpuris' wife chose it. (This article from July will catch you up on the convoluted details.)
Essentially, Cohen's name made it all the way on to the statue, seemingly without anyone checking who he is, if the quote is his, or if the quote is even real. During our reporting, a spokesperson for the Little Rock Parks and Recreation Department provided a statement that said the city would replace Cohen's name with "Anonymous" but leave the quote itself intact, since staff liked its message and, in researching it, could not find where it came from."

News, Education, Intervention, Recovery


CultEducationEvents.com

CultMediation.com   

Intervention101.com to help families and friends understand and effectively respond to the complexity of a loved one's cult involvement.

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

CultNEWS101.com news, links, resources.

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Cults101.org resources about cults, cultic groups, abusive relationships, movements, religions, political organizations, and related topics.


The selection of articles for CultNEWS101 does not mean that Patrick Ryan or Joseph Kelly agree with the content. We provide information from many points of view to promote dialogue.


Please forward articles that you think we should add to cultintervention@gmail.com.


Dec 17, 2024

CultNEWS101 Articles: 12/17/2024 (Samuel Bateman, Legal, Australia, Coercive Control, Jim Jones)


Samuel Bateman, Legal, Australia, Coercive Control, Jim Jones

Salt Lake Tribune: Samuel Bateman gets 50 years in prison after admitting he sexually abused his child 'wives' in FLDS offshoot
The 48-year-old man rose to power among several polygamous families in 2019 after claiming that he was a new prophet.

She was 14 years old in 2021 when Samuel Bateman decided he wanted her as a wife — and the self-proclaimed prophet took her as one of 20 women and girls he "spiritually married."

Bateman was leading a sect that broke off from the polygamous Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints. Being a Bateman "wife," the girl said in a victim impact statement, harmed every part of her life.

He stripped her of her personality, her dreams and her ambitions, she wrote. She lost her chance for an education and self-confidence. He sexually abused her and he harmed her family relationships.

This girl and the nine other children that Bateman married will "live with the memories and the trauma" for the rest of their lives, federal prosecutors argued in court papers prior to Bateman's Monday sentencing in an Arizona courtroom. For that, the government attorneys urged, Bateman deserved to spend 50 years in federal prison — essentially a life sentence for the 48-year-old."


Sydney Morning Herald: Call to outlaw 'coercive' cults, stop financial secrecy for extreme churches
"A widening of coercive control laws to cover groups such as cults and changes to the tax breaks afforded to religious organisations are among reforms proposed after the exposure of extreme teachings at a secretive Australian church.
Former members of the hardline Geelong Revival Centre want criminal coercive control laws, which predominantly target domestic violence, expanded to include extreme religious sects and high-demand groups."

CNN: It was a cult compound where more than 900 people died. Now it might become a tourist attraction
"Guyana is revisiting a dark history nearly half a century after U.S. Rev. Jim Jones and more than 900 of his followers died in the rural interior of the South American country.
It was the largest suicide-murder in recent history, and a government-backed tour operator wants to open the former commune now shrouded by lush vegetation to visitors, a proposal that is reopening old wounds, with critics saying it would disrespect victims and dig up a sordid past.

Jordan Vilchez, who grew up in California and was moved into the Peoples Temple commune at age 14, told The Associated Press in a phone interview from the U.S. that she has mixed feelings about the tour.
She was in Guyana's capital the day Jones ordered hundreds of his followers to drink a poisoned grape-flavored drink that was given to children first. Her two sisters and two nephews were among the victims.

"I just missed dying by one day," she recalled.
Vilchez, 67, said Guyana has every right to profit from any plans related to Jonestown.
"Then on the other hand, I just feel like any situation where people were manipulated into their deaths should be treated with respect," she said.

Vilchez added that she hopes the tour operator would provide context and explain why so many people went to Guyana trusting they would find a better life."


News, Education, Intervention, Recovery


CultEducationEvents.com

CultMediation.com   

Intervention101.com to help families and friends understand and effectively respond to the complexity of a loved one's cult involvement.

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

CultNEWS101.com news, links, resources.

Facebook

Flipboard

Twitter

Instagram

Cults101.org resources about cults, cultic groups, abusive relationships, movements, religions, political organizations, and related topics.


The selection of articles for CultNEWS101 does not mean that Patrick Ryan or Joseph Kelly agree with the content. We provide information from many points of view to promote dialogue.


Please forward articles that you think we should add to cultintervention@gmail.com.


Dec 16, 2024

Scary Terri, New Podcast From Sony Music, Explores Story of Spiritual Leader Behind Mysterious Deaths in the 1970s and 80s

  • Scary Terri, New Podcast From Sony Music, Explores Story of Spiritual Leader Behind Mysterious Deaths in the 1970s and 80s
  • Dec 02, 2024

Podcast dives into the world of Terri Hoffman, the Charlie Manson you’ve never heard of.

New York, NY – December 2, 2024 – Sony Music Entertainment today premiered Scary Terri, a new podcast season digging into the shocking story of Terri Lee Hoffman, a spiritual leader in Dallas whose followers kept dying one after the other. A tragic double suicide. A teenager suspiciously drowned. A mother and her childhood nanny drove off a cliff. Between 1979 and 1989, a dozen people died – all of them connected to Terri Hoffman. In many instances, Terri was the beneficiary of assets they left behind. 

In Scary Terri, Jonathan Hirsch, investigative reporter and host of this year’s hit My Fugitive Dad, unravels the web of lies, manipulation, and dubious deeds that surround Hoffman and her organization, Conscious Development of Body Mind and Soul. Many of her victims’ families believe Terri Hoffman convinced her followers to kill themselves so she could benefit financially. Hirsch uncovered tapes of counseling sessions Terri gave to one student, so you can hear Terri’s manipulation for yourself. 

Hirsch spoke to many relatives who still wrestle with the mysterious death of their loved ones. In one case, Terri welcomed a grieving family into her fold, only to drive a wedge between wife and husband. Soon after their divorce, she married the father, and then when she tired of him, she convinced him he had terminal cancer and should die. The father took his own life, but after, an autopsy showed he never had cancer. His adult children – brother and sister – both spoke to Jonathan Hirsch for Scary Terri, hoping to get closure and expose her manipulation. 

This is a dark Texas Gothic about a unique kind of serial killer. She had no blood on her hands; there’s no smoking gun to find because Terri never shot a single one of her victims. How can you prove a homicide if someone dies by their own hand? 

Scary Terri gives listeners an unprecedented look into Hoffman’s devious world. Through never-before-heard recordings and interviews with Terri’s inner circle, victim’s families, and law enforcement, listeners can join Hirsch as he explores questions that continue to remain today: how involved was Terri in these deaths? And how did she get away with the destruction of so many people’s lives? 

“The story of Terri Lee Hoffman is one of the most eerie and disturbing I have ever come across,” said host, Jonathan Hirsch. “Throughout the season, we dive into why this one woman had so much power and how she manipulated so many people into doing things they would not normally act upon.”

Scary Terri is written and reported by Jonathan Hirsch. Cooper Moll is the lead producer and co-reported the series. Catherine Saint Louis is our story editor. Scary Terri is executive produced by Jonathan Hirsch

CultNEWS101 Articles: 12/16/2024 (Cult News Team: Joseph Kelly, Patrick Ryan, Cult Intervention, Andrew Tate)

Cult News Team: Joseph Kelly, Patrick Ryan, Cult Intervention, Andrew Tate

After being part of a group in their youth that claimed people could levitate or bring about world peace through meditation, Joe Kelly and Patrick Ryan, from the US city of Philadelphia, now help others escape abusive cults. One of the cases they are working on is a 21-year-old from a wealthy family who is fascinated by Andrew Tate.

  • Together with psychologists, psychiatrists and other specialists, Patrick and Joe develop strategies for the families of people who have been brainwashed so that they can escape the influence of the leaders of controversial groups. 
  • These two spoke with the HotNews journalist in Philadelphia.

I met Joe Kelly (69) and Patrick Ryan (67) in a hipster coffee shop in the neighborhood where they live. Joe and Patrick are a couple who are what are called " cult interventionists " or "deprogrammers." That is, they help people get out of abusive cults: they say they "deprogram" them, after they have been brainwashed by charismatic leaders who, most of the time, are nothing more than scammers. 

In most cases, Joe and Patrick are called to help by the families of those who fall under the influence of such a leader. According to some estimates from 2023, there would be over 10,000 cults active in the United States . But it's not just America on this map because the two have had cases from Europe to Australia. And in America, Joe and Patrick are not the only ones who are involved in this activity. 

Success as a cult interventionist is by no means guaranteed, however. Joe Kelly tells me that since he began rescuing people involved in cults in 1992, he has had a failure rate of about 40-50 percent. 

The Cult of Andrew Tate in America

Although when we talk about cults our mind automatically leads us to the idea of religion, in reality things are much more complex. Andrew Tate, for example, is nothing more than the leader of such a cult, even if there is nothing religious in what he preaches, according to Joe Kelly. And he is not the only one.

Beyond the criminal charges brought against him by prosecutors in Romania, of trafficking minors, sexual exploitation of women, money laundering and others, Tate has a huge impact on young people, even across the ocean. Or especially here.

The Tate brothers have both American and British citizenship, but have moved to Romania, which they describe as "a country where corruption is accessible to all. "

The influence in the United States of leaders who preach extreme misogyny is no coincidence, says Patrick Ryan. 

"In the US, for example, there is the 'Sterling Institute of Relationships' where young men sign up to be taught to be 'real men'. And if they are real men, they can have sex with whoever they want. Because that's what men do. And women's role is to submit," Patrick Ryan explains to me.  

The two say that they are currently working with a young man from Philadelphia whose parents want to remove him from the influence of Andrew Tate and the internet groups that follow the teachings of the former kickboxer, who moved to Romania. 

The young man who started calling his own mother "unfortunate"

I asked Joe and Patrick to give me some details about the case they're working on.

It's about a young man from a wealthy family, with a father known in the U.S. The name and other identifying details are confidential, the two explain to me. 

The 21-year-old was sent to one of the good schools in the USA. 

"At some point, the boy started drinking and watching videos with Andrew Tate. He dropped out of school, after being instilled with the idea that 'you don't need a regular university, you have nothing to learn there. I went to university and it's useless, we tell you what you need to be successful in life'. That's what the so-called 'life coaches' he was following told him," says Patrick. 

What's worse is that, from these videos, the young man learned that women are "bitches" and began to treat his mother in this way.

From their findings, people often join dangerous groups because the problems come from the family. And part of Joe and Patrick's work means therapy with families, which need to be transformed into safe environments where victims can return safely. 

"We need to create a stable environment, with access to help for mental health issues, a healthy place. Because otherwise, dangerous groups become more attractive, and victims return there."

"How is the extraction of the young man from under Tate's influence going at this moment?" I asked the interventionists.

Patrick says that the process is ongoing, but that the young man's environment is difficult: he dropped out of school, stays at home, dates many women whom he treats like "dolls." Just as he was taught in the online schools promoted by the Tate brothers. 

Joe believes that Andrew Tate's teachings are close to the idea of patriarchy, which can be found in the Old Testament or in fundamentalist Islam. 

"In their minds, liberal woke societies have created these women who have equal status to men, when, by nature, men are stronger and should be in control," Joe adds. 

But who are Joe and Patrick, and how did they get into the position of helping others break free from the control of certain leaders?  


The two people I met the other day at the ReAnimator coffee shop in Philadelphia were also involved in cults. Their story begins many years ago, when there was no internet and the influence of television was overwhelming. 

Both Joe and Patrick were part of the "Transcendental Meditation" group founded by an Indian guru, famous at the time, in the 1970s.

"In 1975, I was in high school, 17 years old, when I saw Maharishi Mahesh, known as the "guru of the Beatles ", on TV. He promoted the benefits of meditation, along with famous actors such as Burt Reynolds, Clint Eastwood and others. At that time, the TM ("Transcendental Meditation") Center, founded by Maharishi, was very successful in America. Adults of all professions, from lawyers, doctors, to housewives, went there to be taught how to meditate and bring world peace. Many came from the Woodstock area, hippies, etc.," Patrick recalls. 

The interventionist says his high school teacher encouraged him to take meditation classes, where he was taught by actress Mia Farrow's sister, Prudence . Prudence then referred him to Maharishi University, founded by the famous guru. 

Patrick now remembers that at university, for two months in a row he took regular classes with renowned professors, then for a month he had to dedicate himself exclusively to the Maharishi techniques which involved meditation and spending time alone, 7 days a week, 24 hours a day. 

People can fly or walk through walls

Things went crazy in 1977 when Maharishi announced that people could have supernatural powers: they could levitate, walk through walls, become invisible, etc. 

"There were famous people who supported this, including, for example, Brian Josephson who won the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1973," Patrick continues.

Obviously, no one managed to acquire those supernatural powers, but, the former member of Maharishi's cult now says, the system was such that it made you believe that it was only your fault if you failed to fly.  

"Friends of mine were sent to conflict zones like Mozambique, Lebanon, Somalia, to meditate and mentally stop the wars there. After that, Maharishi's people produced research that demonstrated that, indeed, wars stopped, crime decreased, the stock market increased, thanks to the meditation of these groups of people. So, here it is, the method works," Patrick says. 

The interventionist says he began to realize what was happening to him when his father asked him to help one of his sisters who, in turn, had joined a Christian cult called " The International Way " and had severed all ties with the family.

"I called a woman who had also been part of this group to talk to my sister and convince her that it was a scam. As she was talking to my sister, I thought, 'wow, that happened to me at Maharishi University when I came to believe that I was going to save the world by flying,'" Patrick explains.

I was curious what they thought was at stake in this cult and this university (which still exists today). Patrick and Joe say it's about power and money. 

"When he came to the US in 1958, Maharishi had no money, and when he died he had a fortune of over a billion dollars ." The Maharishi company also appeared in the Panama Papers revelations with money hidden offshore.

What exactly does a "cult intervention specialist" do?


Joe Kelly says he basically helps families develop strategies, along with psychiatrists, psychologists and other specialists, to communicate with loved ones who have become involved in these controversial groups. 

"It's not a standard procedure, it varies from case to case, but we ask about 85 questions to see if we're a good fit to help them. Then, if we conclude that we can get involved, we do an assessment, which takes about eight hours, like 'where are you from, what's your relationship with your family members, etc. We also interview your family members to see what the dynamics are between them,'" Joe explains how the first interactions with those who have been victims of an abusive cult go. 

Joe Kelly says he basically helps families develop strategies, along with psychiatrists, psychologists and other specialists, to communicate with loved ones who have become involved in these controversial groups. 

"It's not a standard procedure, it varies from case to case, but we ask about 85 questions to see if we're a good fit to help them. Then, if we conclude that we can get involved, we do an assessment, which takes about eight hours, like 'where are you from, what's your relationship with your family members, etc. We also interview your family members to see what the dynamics are between them,'" Joe explains how the first interactions with those who have been victims of an abusive cult go. 

The two say they turn to all kinds of specialists to help them in their endeavor because cults are also very different. For example, in cases of "sex cults", they turn to experts specializing in sex therapy. 

I'm curious if Joe and Patrick need a license for their work and how many people they've helped in their work. They tell me they don't need to get a license, as long as the specialized help provided to victims and their families comes from people with the necessary training. 

"The services we provide for the families who call on us are not cheap at all because the experts we call on are not cheap. In addition to this, we volunteer for non-profit organizations and also hold online workshops for families who cannot afford to pay these amounts," explains Patrick, who estimates that "hundreds of people a year" benefit in one form or another from their help. 

How they ended up working with QAnon members

Patrick says that in January 2020, he began receiving calls from families whose relatives had fallen into so-called " rabbit holes ," a term used to describe people who fall prey to conspiracy theories and isolate themselves from others, usually because they "don't understand." 

"For example, one of these people was a mother in her 50s, a doctor, who watched conspiracy videos, like " pizza gates " or other crazy ones that said that anyone wearing red shoes is connected to the Vatican or is controlled from another planet.

"The woman had entered a manic state, she no longer slept at night, she only watched videos and she even ended up writing to a local newspaper about these conspiracies," says Patrick.

QAnon has taken over mythologies, old conspiracy theories, such as the Protocols of the Elders of Zion , a hoax invented by the Russians of the Tsarist Empire Here to justify the killing of Jews, Patrick and Joe further explain.

Why do people get involved in cults?

I ask Patrick and Joe why they think people get involved in these cults. What needs do they have that they can't meet otherwise?

Patrick says that, in his experience, neither a person's wealth, education, or intelligence matters. 

"Generally, they are not satisfied with their lives and want a better one. They start reading about other people who have been helped by certain 'gurus', they go to seminars without knowing what the agenda of that seminar is. But many times, the problems are in the family," explains Patrick.

Regarding the differences between cults from the 80s, 90s, and today's, the two interventionists say that before the advent of the internet, the number of members of such a group was much higher, 10 million people, "like Scientologists, for example."

"Now the groups are much smaller, because people can Google and find out things about that group or leader: 'look, there's a problem here,'" says Patrick.

Joe believes that "aesthetic" is the word that best defines their work because what they do most is help families understand why some members value something that they cannot understand. Only in this way can they be convincing to those who have been seduced by a particular cult.  

"If you come to my house and see a painting on the wall and say, 'What an ugly painting,' then where do we end up? On the other hand, if you say, 'What an interesting composition, but I wonder why the artist wanted to do that?' then it's a completely different matter. We try to teach families to appreciate what their loved ones appreciate, and then they will have a chance of success," concludes Patrick. 

More information about the work of Joe Kelly and Patrick Ryan can be found on their websites, cultrecovery101.com , cultmediation.com , and cultnews101.com . 


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Intervention101.com to help families and friends understand and effectively respond to the complexity of a loved one's cult involvement.

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Dec 14, 2024

Tate's victims - two former members of the cult founded by the "Beatles guru" explain why the influencer investigated in Romania is dangerous

HotNews.ro
December 14, 2024

[Google Translation]

Patrick Ryan, left, and Joe Kelly. In the background, guru Maharishi Mahesh with Beatles members George Harrison, left, and John Lennon, in 1967. Photo: AP / Profimedia

After being part of a group in their youth that claimed people could levitate or bring about world peace through meditation, Joe Kelly and Patrick Ryan, from the US city of Philadelphia, now help others escape abusive cults. One of the cases they are working on is a 21-year-old from a wealthy family who is fascinated by Andrew Tate.

  • Together with psychologists, psychiatrists and other specialists, Patrick and Joe develop strategies for the families of people who have been brainwashed so that they can escape the influence of the leaders of controversial groups. 
  • These two spoke with the HotNews journalist in Philadelphia.

I met Joe Kelly (69) and Patrick Ryan (67) in a hipster coffee shop in the neighborhood where they live. Joe and Patrick are a couple who are what are called “ cult interventionists ” or “deprogrammers.” That is, they help people get out of abusive cults: they say they “deprogram” them, after they have been brainwashed by charismatic leaders who, most of the time, are nothing more than scammers. 

Patrick (left) and Joe, in Philadelphia. Photo: Gabriel Bejan / Hotnews
Patrick (left) and Joe, in Philadelphia. Photo: Gabriel Bejan / Hotnews

In most cases, Joe and Patrick are called to help by the families of those who fall under the influence of such a leader. According to some estimates from 2023, there would be over 10,000 cults active in the United States . But it's not just America on this map because the two have had cases from Europe to Australia. And in America, Joe and Patrick are not the only ones who are involved in this activity. 

Success as a cult interventionist is by no means guaranteed, however. Joe Kelly tells me that since he began rescuing people involved in cults in 1992, he has had a failure rate of about 40-50 percent. 

The Cult of Andrew Tate in America

Although when we talk about cults our mind automatically leads us to the idea of ​​religion, in reality things are much more complex. Andrew Tate, for example, is nothing more than the leader of such a cult, even if there is nothing religious in what he preaches, according to Joe Kelly. And he is not the only one.

Andrew Tate and brother Tristan at the Bucharest Court of Appeal, August 2024. Photo: Lucian Alecu / Alamy / Profimedia
Andrew Tate and brother Tristan at the Bucharest Court of Appeal, August 2024. Photo: Lucian Alecu / Alamy / Profimedia

Beyond the criminal charges brought against him by prosecutors in Romania, of trafficking minors, sexual exploitation of women, money laundering and others, Tate has a huge impact on young people, even across the ocean. Or especially here.

The Tate brothers have both American and British citizenship, but have moved to Romania, which they describe as "a country where corruption is accessible to all. "

The influence in the United States of leaders who preach extreme misogyny is no coincidence, says Patrick Ryan. 


Patrick Ryan, photo from personal archive.
Patrick Ryan, photo from personal archive.

"In the US, for example, there is the 'Sterling Institute of Relationships' where young men sign up to be taught to be 'real men'. And if they are real men, they can have sex with whoever they want. Because that's what men do. And women's role is to submit," Patrick Ryan explains to me.  

The two say that they are currently working with a young man from Philadelphia whose parents want to remove him from the influence of Andrew Tate and the internet groups that follow the teachings of the former kickboxer, who moved to Romania. 

The young man who started calling his own mother "unfortunate"

I asked Joe and Patrick to give me some details about the case they're working on.

It's about a young man from a wealthy family, with a father known in the U.S. The name and other identifying details are confidential, the two explain to me. 

The 21-year-old was sent to one of the good schools in the USA. 

"At some point, the boy started drinking and watching videos with Andrew Tate. He dropped out of school, after being instilled with the idea that 'you don't need a regular university, you have nothing to learn there. I went to university and it's useless, we tell you what you need to be successful in life'. That's what the so-called 'life coaches' he was following told him," says Patrick. 

What's worse is that, from these videos, the young man learned that women are "bitches" and began to treat his mother in this way.

From their findings, people often join dangerous groups because the problems come from the family. And part of Joe and Patrick's work means therapy with families, which need to be transformed into safe environments where victims can return safely. 

"We need to create a stable environment, with access to help for mental health issues, a healthy place. Because otherwise, dangerous groups become more attractive, and victims return there."

"How is the extraction of the young man from under Tate's influence going at this moment?" I asked the interventionists.

Patrick says that the process is ongoing, but that the young man's environment is difficult: he dropped out of school, stays at home, dates many women whom he treats like "dolls." Just as he was taught in the online schools promoted by the Tate brothers. 

Joe Kelly, photo from personal archive
Joe Kelly, photo from personal archive

Joe believes that Andrew Tate's teachings are close to the idea of ​​patriarchy, which can be found in the Old Testament or in fundamentalist Islam. 

"In their minds, liberal woke societies have created these women who have equal status to men, when, by nature, men are stronger and should be in control," Joe adds. 

But who are Joe and Patrick, and how did they get into the position of helping others break free from the control of certain leaders?  

Pat and Joe in a photo from their youth.
Pat and Joe in a photo from their youth.

The two people I met the other day at the ReAnimator coffee shop in Philadelphia were also involved in cults. Their story begins many years ago, when there was no internet and the influence of television was overwhelming. 

Both Joe and Patrick were part of the "Transcendental Meditation" group founded by an Indian guru, famous at the time, in the 1970s.

Maharishi Mahesh during a class with students at the Harvard Law School Forum in Cambridge, Massachusetts, January 1968. Photo: Bill Chaplis / AP / Profimedia
Maharishi Mahesh during a class with students at the Harvard Law School Forum in Cambridge, Massachusetts, January 1968. Photo: Bill Chaplis / AP / Profimedia

"In 1975, I was in high school, 17 years old, when I saw Maharishi Manesh, known as the "guru of the Beatles ", on TV. He promoted the benefits of meditation, along with famous actors such as Burt Reynolds, Clint Eastwood and others. At that time, the TM ("Transcendental Meditation") Center, founded by Maharishi, was very successful in America. Adults of all professions, from lawyers, doctors, to housewives, went there to be taught how to meditate and bring world peace. Many came from the Woodstock area, hippies, etc.," Patrick recalls. 

Maharishi with members of the Beatles: Paul McCartney, John Lennon, Ringo Starr and George Harrison at a meeting in London, September 1967. Photo: KEYSTONE Pictures USA / Zuma Press / Profimedia
Maharishi with members of the Beatles: Paul McCartney, John Lennon, Ringo Starr and George Harrison at a meeting in London, September 1967. Photo: KEYSTONE Pictures USA / Zuma Press / Profimedia

The interventionist says his high school teacher encouraged him to take meditation classes, where he was taught by actress Mia Farrow's sister, Prudence . Prudence then referred him to Maharishi University , founded by the famous guru. 

Patrick now remembers that at university, for two months in a row he took regular classes with renowned professors, then for a month he had to dedicate himself exclusively to the Maharishi techniques which involved meditation and spending time alone, 7 days a week, 24 hours a day. 

Patrick, while he was at Maharishi University.
Patrick, while he was at Maharishi European Research University (L)Maharishi International University (R).

People can fly or walk through walls

Things went crazy in 1977 when Maharishi announced that people could have supernatural powers: they could levitate, walk through walls, become invisible, etc. 

"There were famous people who supported this, including, for example, Brian Josephson who won the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1973," Patrick continues.

Obviously, no one managed to acquire those supernatural powers, but, the former member of Maharishi's cult now says, the system was such that it made you believe that it was only your fault if you failed to fly.  

"Friends of mine were sent to conflict zones like Mozambique, Lebanon, Somalia, to meditate and mentally stop the wars there. After that, Maharishi's people produced research that demonstrated that, indeed, wars stopped, crime decreased, the stock market increased, thanks to the meditation of these groups of people. So, here it is, the method works," Patrick says. 

The interventionist says he began to realize what was happening to him when his father asked him to help one of his sisters who, in turn, had joined a Christian cult called " The International Way " and had severed all ties with the family.

"I called a woman who had also been part of this group to talk to my sister and convince her that it was a scam. As she was talking to my sister, I thought, 'wow, that happened to me at Maharishi University when I came to believe that I was going to save the world by flying,'" Patrick explains.

I was curious what they thought was at stake in this cult and this university (which still exists today). Patrick and Joe say it's about power and money. 

"When he came to the US in 1958, Maharishi had no money, and when he died he had a fortune of over a billion dollars ." The Maharishi company also appeared in the Panama Papers revelations with money hidden offshore.

What exactly does a "cult intervention specialist" do?

Joe during a workshop
Joe during a workshop in Dallas, TX.

Joe Kelly says he basically helps families develop strategies, along with psychiatrists, psychologists and other specialists, to communicate with loved ones who have become involved in these controversial groups. 

"It's not a standard procedure, it varies from case to case, but we ask about 85 questions to see if we're a good fit to help them. Then, if we conclude that we can get involved, we do an assessment, which takes about eight hours, like 'where are you from, what's your relationship with your family members, etc. We also interview your family members to see what the dynamics are between them,'" Joe explains how the first interactions with those who have been victims of an abusive cult go. 

Patrick at a conference.
Patrick (M), Joe (R) at a international conference in Beijing, China.

The two say they turn to all kinds of specialists to help them in their endeavor because cults are also very different. For example, in cases of "sex cults", they turn to experts specializing in sex therapy. 

I'm curious if Joe and Patrick need a license for their work and how many people they've helped in their work. They tell me they don't need to get a license, as long as the specialized help provided to victims and their families comes from people with the necessary training. 

"The services we provide for the families who call on us are not cheap at all because the experts we call on are not cheap. In addition to this, we volunteer for non-profit organizations and also hold online workshops for families who cannot afford to pay these amounts," explains Patrick, who estimates that "hundreds of people a year" benefit in one form or another from their help. 

How they ended up working with QAnon members

Patrick says that in January 2020, he began receiving calls from families whose relatives had fallen into so-called " rabbit holes ," a term used to describe people who fall prey to conspiracy theories and isolate themselves from others, usually because they "don't understand." 

"For example, one of these people was a mother in her 50s, a doctor, who watched conspiracy videos, like " pizza gates " or other crazy ones that said that anyone wearing red shoes is connected to the Vatican or is controlled from another planet.

"The woman had entered a manic state, she no longer slept at night, she only watched videos and she even ended up writing to a local newspaper about these conspiracies," says Patrick.


QAnon has taken over mythologies, old conspiracy theories, such as the Protocols of the Elders of Zion , a hoax invented by the Russians of the Tsarist Empire to justify the killing of Jews, Patrick and Joe further explain.

Why do people get involved in cults?

Joe Kelly with cult leader Swami Prakashanand Saraswati in 1987. He was convicted of child sexual abuse but fled to Mexico. Image from Joe and Patrick's personal archive
Joe Kelly with cult leader Swami Prakashanand Saraswati in 1987. He was convicted of child sexual abuse but fled to Mexico. Image from Joe and Patrick's personal archive

I ask Patrick and Joe why they think people get involved in these cults. What needs do they have that they can't meet otherwise?

Patrick says that, in his experience, neither a person's wealth, education, or intelligence matters. 

"Generally, they are not satisfied with their lives and want a better one. They start reading about other people who have been helped by certain 'gurus', they go to seminars without knowing what the agenda of that seminar is. But many times, the problems are in the family," explains Patrick.

Regarding the differences between cults from the 80s, 90s, and today's, the two interventionists say that before the advent of the internet, the number of members of such a group was much higher, 10 million people, "like Scientologists, for example."

"Now the groups are much smaller, because people can Google and find out things about that group or leader: 'look, there's a problem here,'" says Patrick.

Joe believes that "aesthetic" is the word that best defines their work because what they do most is help families understand why some members value something that they cannot understand. Only in this way can they be convincing to those who have been seduced by a particular cult.  

"If you come to my house and see a painting on the wall and say, 'What an ugly painting,' then where do we end up? On the other hand, if you say, 'What an interesting composition, but I wonder why the artist wanted to do that?' then it's a completely different matter. We try to teach families to appreciate what their loved ones appreciate, and then they will have a chance of success," concludes Patrick. 

More information about the work of Joe Kelly and Patrick Ryan can be found on their websites, cultrecovery101.com , cultmediation.com , and cultnews101.com . 


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