Many people in pursuit of Maharishi’s vision of peace, bliss and enlightenment have felt shame when dealing with mental and physical problems.
Aug 19, 2025
Suicide in Fairfield: Iowa town struggles with mental health awareness
Aug 8, 2025
When Maharishi Came to Town"
Jun 30, 2025
I'm not mad at them...but the Transcendental Meditation leadership is either ignorant or lying. Either way, they should probably stop.
Feb 23, 2025
CultNEWS101 Articles: 2/21/2025 (Andrew Cohen, Shunning, Maharishi U., Book, Legal, CVLT)
Brittany Nichols, former marketing manager for the Little Rock Parks and Recreation Department, has accepted a job with Metroplan.
This tidbit of news flew under our radar when the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette first published it last week, but we bring it up now as Nichols' role at the department informs our ongoing, if sporadic, coverage of a strange quote attributed to a cult leader on a piece of public art in Little Rock.
The quote is attributed to a man named Andrew Cohen, and it is engraved on a basalt column that stands in Inspiration Plaza, the newest piece of public art installed in Riverfront Park in downtown Little Rock.
Learn more here about Cohen's sinister activities leading a cult called EnlightenNext, and read a statement from Nichols assuring us that Cohen's name would be replaced with "Anonymous."
A lot has changed since we pressed the department for comment on the bizarre quote in July. Donald Trump began his second presidential term. David Lynch is gone. Nichols works at Metroplan.
Andrew Cohen's name, though, has been a rock-solid constant through a period of intense and rapid change.
Will it outlast the parks department's next marketing manager? Time will tell.
When we last checked in with the parks department in December, staff were still looking for a contractor that could work on basalt and did not have a timeline for replacing Cohen's name.
Little Rock Communications Director Aaron Sadler confirmed yesterday that the city's plan is still to remove Cohen's name and added that it had been covered "until such time as it can be removed."
Because Inspiration Plaza is a short walk from the Arkansas Times' office, we've periodically checked in on the status of the quote since our first story ran last summer. In December, after we asked the city when it planned to address the matter, we discovered Cohen's name had been covered with a piece of tape. The tape disappeared shortly afterwards. Following our recent conversation with Sadler, the name was re-covered with tape.
"A sicko from New Jersey allegedly took part in a neo-Nazi child-porn ring whose members groomed children online and exhorted them to send self-produced, sexually-explicit videos, federal authorities said.
Colin John Thomas Walker, 23, of Bridgeton, about 50 miles west of Atlantic City, was a member of CVLT, an online cabal of like-minded creeps who worked as a team "to entice and coerce children to self-produce child pornography on servers associated with and run by" the group, investigators said.
Walker, who has been charged with engaging in a child exploitation enterprise, could face life in prison if convicted.Walker — who used handles including "CVLLEN," "ghoblins," and "WRATH" — coerced his victims into engaging in increasingly demeaning acts online, "including cutting and eating their own hair, drinking their urine, punching themselves, calling themselves racial slurs, and using razor blades to carve CVLT members' names into their skin," according to court documents.The self-made kiddie porn "sometimes included use of pets or other children, or insertion of foreign objects like knives or cacti into their genitals."
They also sent their victims violent video footage of animals being tortured to death and women being raped, the indictment alleged.
During the grooming, the men used "Nazi symbols and language" and shared bondage, S&M and "gore child pornography" with their young victims.
'The large golden domes of the Maharishi University are an incongruous landmark for a sleepy Midwestern town close to the Mississippi river.
Even more unlikely are the scenes that take place beneath them as students from across the globe gather twice a day to meditate and send out cosmic vibes of spiritual energy that they believe can heal a stress-stricken world.
But now a murder and allegations of a cover-up have shattered the tranquillity of the college and of the town of Fairfield, Iowa.
The killing of one student by another has threatened the future of not only what Maharishi disciples call 'a safe, harmonious campus', but also undermines the credibility of the one-time guru of the Beatles and spiritual leader to Hollywood celebrities including film-maker David Lynch and actress Heather Graham.Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, the bearded purveyor of world peace, heads a movement of tens of thousands of people who believe their brew of transcendental meditation and yogic flying - a kind of bouncing which devotees claim is akin to levitation - sends out powerful vibes of harmony that can end conflict across the planet.
In the east-facing buildings of the 272-acre Maharishi University, some 800 students mix a traditional undergraduate education with a heavy dose of meditation and yogic flying.
But in the early evening of Monday 1 March an incident occurred which critics allege makes nonsense of the notion that meditation can bring world peace.
At 7pm Shuvender Sem, a 24-year-old from Pennsylvania, sat down in the university dining hall with fellow students to eat his organic vegetarian dinner. Suddenly Sem stood up, took a knife from his pocket and plunged it into the heart of 19-year-old Levi Butler.
In the ensuing melee, Sem stabbed Butler at least three more times before he was restrained. The police were called and Sem, said to be extremely calm, gave himself up. Butler was taken to Jefferson County Hospital, where the first-year student from California was pronounced dead.
The death left many in the college in a state of shock - if yogic flying brings harmony how could one of their own kill in their midst? And as further details of that day emerge, more serious questions are being raised about the Maharishi's theories.
The knife Sem used belonged to the dean, Joel Wysong. Earlier that day, in a class called Teaching for Enlightenment, Sem attacked another student, John Killian, stabbing him in the face with a pen. Killian needed seven stitches. Sem was taken to the dean's apartment where he was supposed to be under supervision. But it was there that he stole the knife before going to the dining hall.
Sem has been charged with aggravated assault for the first attack and first-degree murder for the second. But because the university authorities did not report the earlier crime, this has led to the allegation that they intended to cover up the violence.
Critics of the Maharishi - including former students and staff and Fairfield residents - have been inundating the local newspaper with calls and emails. They allege that the movement strives to prevent negative publicity that might halt donations from its wealthy alumni. Some claim incidents have been hushed up in the past, although no hard evidence has emerged.
The university defended itself by saying it was not its role to bring criminal charges and that this is the first such tragedy to happen on a campus claiming to be the most crime-free in America.
Some members of Butler's family are now considering suing the university, which could have devastating repercussions for its international reputation.
Butler's uncle, Benjamin Howard, posted an email which said: 'I am terribly angry that this organisation places its public appearance above the safety of its students. The earlier link "Safe Harmonious Campus" from the [university] web page reveals one major selling point for the university. Of course an administrator wouldn't wish to call police when something violent happens on campus. It would ruin that unblemished record of 30 years with no crime. If a lawsuit is necessary to teach this campus a lesson, then so be it.'
The Maharishi himself is reported to have blamed the violence on US foreign policy. Dr Craig Pearson, executive vice-president of Maharishi University, said: 'Maharishi Mahesh Yogi has made one comment regarding this event. He said that this is an aspect of the violence we see throughout society, including the violence that our country is perpetrating in other countries.'
But the most serious criticism levelled against the movement is that transcendental meditation may exacerbate existing psychological problems in students.
Dr Kai Druhl taught physics at the university for 13 years. He has since left to teach at a college 20 miles away after becoming disenchanted with the movement."
"A settlement was expected Thursday in the federal lawsuit over the stabbing death of a student at the hands of a former Landisville man at a meditation-based school in Iowa.
Shuvender Sem, a 1997 Lancaster Country Day School graduate, stabbed to death Levi Butler in the dining hall of Maharishi University of Management in Fairfield, Iowa, on March 1, 2004.
Sem, who had stabbed another student earlier the same day, was later found not guilty by reason of insanity.
The federal lawsuit filed in February 2006 on behalf of Butler's estate accused the school, founded by Indian guru Maharishi Mahesh Yogi and requiring twice-daily transcendental meditation, of gross negligence for not preventing the student's death.
Steve Eckley, an attorney representing the estate, said Butler's family is satisfied with the terms of the confidential settlement, which were reached late Wednesday night. The terms still needed to be approved by one official with the university's insurance company.
Trial in the case had been scheduled to begin Monday in U.S. District Court in Des Moines.
In the lawsuit, Butler's estate said the 24-year-old Sem was a paranoid schizophrenic with a long history of violent assault. It noted that the same day Butler was killed, Sem attacked another student, John Killian, by stabbing him in the face with a ball-point pen.
"Had defendants followed their own stated policy of reporting all serious crime to local authorities, Shuvender Sem would have been arrested after the attack on John Killian, and Levi Butler would be alive today," the lawsuit said.
After the attack on Killian, the lawsuit said Sem was placed in the custody of Joel Wysong, the school's dean of men.
The suit claimed, though, that Wysong left Sem alone for a time and reported hearing Sem rummaging through kitchen drawers. That's where Sem was believed to have found the knife used to kill Butler, of Riverside County, Calif.
In 2004, Sem's father, Surinder Kumar Sem, also of Landisville, said his son is a diagnosed schizophrenic in denial about his illness and not regularly taking his medication."
New Autobiography Gives Insight into Maharishi Murder
It is a story that could only be written by one person. A compelling autobiography that not only pushes the boundaries of sanity, it takes readers on a frightening voyage to meet it face-to-face. "Murder and Misunderstanding; One Man's Escape from Insanity" (ISBN-13: 978-1479256969) is the story of Shuvender Sem, who on March 1, 2004 became known as "The Maharishi Murderer."
The murder took place in Fairfield, Iowa, on the campus of a university that prided itself on non-violence. The Maharishi University of Management used a variety of techniques towards its non-violent goals including twice-daily use of Transcendental Meditation. It was to no small degree that this setting put the murder in the national spotlight.
In one moment Sem was a college student. In the next he was "The Maharishi Murderer." Shuvender killed freshman Levi Butler without provocation on the campus by stabbing him four times in the chest with a paring knife. The murder took place following an incident earlier in the day when Sem stabbed a student with a pen. That previous incident led to the student getting seven stitches to his face.
Deemed competent to stand trial, the judge ruled he was "not guilty by reason of insanity" at the request of both the defense and the prosecution. Against popular belief, NGRI is an extremely rare plea, used in less than one percent of criminal cases. A not guilty result is even more uncommon, occurring just one-quarter of one percent of the time.
Now, after years of psychotropic medications and intense therapy, Shuvender is telling his story of schizophrenia in his autobiography, "Murder and Misunderstanding; One Man's Escape from Insanity." It is not only an extremely rare look into the mind of a killer from his own perspective, but it is also a deeply personal story that explores the darkest, most grim places of the mind.
"Our mental health system is broken. We need to fix this before more crimes are committed," says Sem.
In his book, Shuvender tells of his relationship with his father, and the events that led to that day on campus. He describes his struggle with, and eventual escape from this misunderstood illness. It is a story of recognition and realization. A story of redemption desired, and hope delivered. It is a book written to serve as a beacon for those with schizophrenia and their families, by a man who was held in its strongest grips, and managed to escape.
Shuvender Sem, or Shubi as he is known, now speaks publicly about his experience with schizophrenia in the hopes of helping others. He is available for presentations and Q&A sessions for law enforcement, mental health groups, attorney associations, academic institutions and others who may feel they can benefit from his story.
The self-told story of Shuvender Sem, "Murder and Misunderstanding; One Man's Escape from Insanity" is available at http://www.ShuvenderSem.com/ . The book is available in paperback; as well as Kindle, iPad and Nook digital editions.
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Jan 27, 2025
Sentencing of Jeremy Goodale upheld in appellate court
Jul 21, 2022
FAIRFIELD MAN SENTENCED FOR ROLE IN RUSSIAN ROULETTE DEATH
July 21, 2022
The Jefferson County Attorney’s Office states on November 7, 2021, law enforcement and emergency medical personnel responded to a home in Fairfield on a report that an individual had suffered a gunshot wound to the head. Twenty-one year-old Finnegan Edward Malloy reported that 19-year-old Caleb Heisel had shot himself in the head while playing “Russian Roulette.” Heisel was found dead upon the arrival of law enforcement and medical personnel. Officers located a revolver-style firearm with one spent cartridge at the scene, believed to belong to Malloy. Heisel’s body was sent to the State Medical Examiner’s office for autopsy. Malloy was arrested on November 24, 2021, by the Fairfield Police Department on one count of assisting suicide and one count of aiding and abetting reckless use of a firearm, both class C felonies.
Malloy took personal responsibility for his role in the offense, as well as his role in the theft at Maharishi International University Art Building of tools, supplies and equipment valued at greater than $10,000.00. The recovery of the stolen property at his home also uncovered controlled substances, including cocaine and MDMA, along with evidence of drug distribution.
Malloy was sentenced to indeterminate terms of incarceration not to exceed 10 years on each of those offenses, to run concurrently to each other and taken into custody.
https://www.kciiradio.com/2022/07/21/fairfield-man-sentenced-for-role-in-russian-roulette-death/
Apr 28, 2022
CultNEWS101 Articles: 4/28/2022 (Event, Urantia Book, Aravindan Balakrishnan, Obituary, Trigger Warnings, Maharishi University, Legal)
Maria Peregolise; Sunday, June 26, 2022; 1:00 PM-1:50 PMCulted Child is a memoir by the daughter of a Spiritual Prophet - a father who used the theology of The URANTIA Book as a framework for his secret conversations with her.
Belfast Telegraph: Cult leader's Belfast 'slave' defended evil rapist to the end
"In 2013, Ms Herivel called a charity to tell them that Balakrishnan's daughter was being held against her will, after which the sect was busted."
The Belfast woman who blew the lid off a Maoist cult that held her captive for 30 years was campaigning for its leader's release from prison until his death last week.
Ex-Methodist College pupil Josephine Herivel was one of several women brainwashed by Aravindan Balakrishnan in his south London commune.
Last week, the 81-year-old died in Dartmoor Prison, where he was serving a 23-year sentence for rape, false imprisonment, child cruelty and assault.
One-time violin prodigy Ms Herivel, the daughter of Bletchley Park code breaker John Herivel, came to regret alerting the authorities and campaigned for his convictions to be quashed.
A small online community still proclaims Balakrishnan's innocence, but Ms Herivel is the only one who has given interviews.
She fell under Balakrishnan's influence in 1978 while studying at the Royal College of Music after attending a communist lecture with her then boyfriend.
She joined Balakrishnan's Workers' Institute of Marxism–Leninism–Mao Zedong Thought, based in a terraced house in Brixton, where followers referred to him as 'Comrade Bala'."
PsyPost: Trigger warnings might prolong the aversive aspects of negative memories
"Trigger warning" is a phrase we hear a lot in daily life now, but how effective is providing a trigger warning in preventing distress? A study published in Memory suggests that trigger warnings could actually be counterproductive and prolong effects of recalling a negative memory.
Trigger warnings are warnings that material may contain sensitive or difficult information that could serve to distress people. Topics can include shootings, sexual violence, racism, classism, and more. These warnings are meant to be considerate, hoping to minimize any negative feelings people may have about what they are about to encounter. Despite the good intentions, there is a possibility that warnings could do the exact opposite and make memories seem more distressing than they are, due to the fact that expecting something negative can cause or worsen distress.
For their study, researchers Victoria M. E. Bridgland and Melanie K. T. Takarangi utilized 209 participants over two sessions. Participants were asked to recall a negative event that took place within the past two weeks. They were separated into two groups: one which were given a warning that this negative memory task would be distressing, and one which were not given a warning. In session two, participants were asked to recall the negative event again. All participants completed measures on positive and negative affect, state-trait anxiety, memory phenomenology coping skills, centrality of the negative event, and emotional impact of events.
Results showed that as predicted, the warning message had a negative anticipatory effect. Despite this, there was no evidence that the warning made the initial recall of the event any more distressing. The distress and negative effects faded over time, which is consistent with previous research, but results did show that participants who were given a warning in session one showed higher impact of the event still during session two. This suggests that the warning did, in fact, "hamper the healing nature of time" and that the warning effects were delayed."
" ... 'In summary, this study is the first to examine the effects of warning messages on the recall of personal memories (rather than novel stimuli) with two important findings: first, we found that warning messages seem capable of prolonging aversive aspects of a negative event," the researchers concluded. "Second, if we turn to what we did not find, warnings do not seem to diminish the distress associated with recalling a negative memory or increase the reported use of coping strategies. These data have important implications for renewed calls to use trigger warnings to improve mental health by adding to the growing body of evidence that trigger warnings at best may have trivial effects or at worst cause harm.'"
"In December 1984, Mary and Phillip Town gave a gift to Maharishi International University: 166,667 shares in their organic farming startup.
But, according to a lawsuit filed in federal court, officials at the Transcendental Meditation school in Fairfield, Iowa, preferred cash. So the Towns gave the school about $21,000 in exchange for the return of the shares, according to the lawsuit.
Mary Town said university officials never properly signed documents turning the shares back over, an issue that came to a head two years ago when an Austrian company bought the business that her husband and a business partner started.
Mary Town's lawyer estimated in a lawsuit filed against the university Thursday that it ultimately received about $500,000 because it was still the registered owner of those shares when the sale went through. She is demanding to be repaid the amount the school received.
"MIU's enrichment was at the expense of Town," her attorney, Jeff Stone of Cedar Rapids, wrote in the lawsuit.
Mark Zaiger, a Cedar Rapids lawyer representing the school, declined to address the details of the allegation.
'MIU does not respond outside of court regarding pending litigation matters," he said in an email to the Des Moines Register. "I can tell you, however, that MIU has a policy to seek resolution of disputes as they arise.'"
News, Education, Intervention, Recovery
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.
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Cults101.org resources about cults, cultic groups, abusive relationships, movements, religions, political organizations and related topics.
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 in order to promote dialogue.
Please forward articles that you think we should add to cultintervention@gmail.com.
Apr 19, 2022
Donor's wife sues Maharishi University in Fairfield over stock mixup, claiming she lost $500k
Mar 9, 2022
Maharishi University acquires building north of Fairfield
Feb 11, 2022
CultNEWS101 Articles: 2/11/2022 (Hillsong, Child Sexual Abuse, Australia, Legal, COVID-19, Maharishi U., Transcendental Meditation, Jehovah's Witnesses, Gaslighting)
"Brian Houston, co-founder of the Hillsong megachurch and media empire, announced that he is stepping aside as global senior pastor, telling worshippers via a pre-recorded video played during the Sunday morning service at Hillsong's Sydney, Australia, headquarters that he would be taking a leave of absence from the church until the end of this year.
Citing a decision by the Hillsong board and external legal counsel, Houston, standing with his wife and co-founder, Bobbie, said "best practice" dictates that he absent himself completely from church leadership as he faces trial for allegedly failing to report sexual abuse. The court proceedings, he said, are "likely to be drawn out and take up most of 2022."
"It's been an unexpected season, and we are thankful for you all and for the community we share," Houston said on the video streamed toward the end of the service. "I never get tired of the praise reports and miracles, especially those committing to Jesus."
Houston's leave of absence comes after more than a year of scandals that have rocked the church both in Australia and abroad and amid Houston's own legal troubles at home. Houston stepped down from the board of Hillsong in September.
"The result is that the Hillsong Global Board feel it is in my and the church's best interest for this to happen, so I have agreed to step aside from all ministry responsibilities until the end of the year," Houston said in the January 30 video announcement.
Houston, 67, was charged in August with concealing a serious indictable offense of another person. Police say his late father, Frank Houston, also a preacher, indecently assaulted a young male in 1970. Court documents allege Houston knew of his father's abuse as early as 1999 and "without reasonable excuse," failed to disclose that information to police."
"Thread on the intersection among TM institutions, lifelong TM meditators, and COVID-19 virus denial and anti-vaccination."
"COVID-19 shut down access to most U.S. prisons including the Arizona State Prison Complex in Yuma where Shannon Gunderman volunteers with a group of Jehovah's Witness ministers.
Without warning, inmates were cut off from a robust Bible education program that included weekly Bible-based discourses, audience discussions, individual Bible studies and video presentations.
Within weeks, Jehovah's Witnesses pivoted their in-person ministry and activities around the country to virtual meetings and preaching through letters, telephone calls and videoconferencing."
People with low power or high power experience more Gaslighting.
" ... Gaslighting is a psychological control strategy used to manipulate a person's sense of reality and make them doubt their own perceptions, memories, and judgment.
In the gaslighter's world, only one person's perspective matters. More importantly, only one individual's perspective can matter: the gaslighter's. The victim's views, as if the ramblings of a crazy person, are dismissed as not worthy of serious consideration. The gaslighter wants the victim to truly accept the gaslighter's judgment. Why?
So that, being riddled with self-doubt, the victim of gaslighting does not take himself or herself seriously enough to voice an opinion. And instead relies completely on the gaslighter's judgment.
To be clear, gaslighters do not necessarily have the long-term goal of making their romantic partner think themselves ill or crazy. However, because gaslighters cannot tolerate being challenged or thought wrong, their partner having a mind of his or her own is experienced as a major threat, one that must be destroyed.
We now turn to the study by Samp and Graves. These authors define gaslighting in terms of dependence power, or the "capacity to influence derived from relational partners' reliance on one another." Gaslighting generates dependence power because the victim of gaslighting gradually depends more and more on the gaslighter—not just forQ approval (or love, money, and so forth) but to know what is real."
News, Education, Intervention, Recovery
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.
Cults101.org resources about cults, cultic groups, abusive relationships, movements, religions, political organizations and related topics.
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 in order to promote dialogue.
Please forward articles that you think we should add to cultintervention@gmail.com.