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Monday, January 4, 2010

Sweat Lodge Fire Tenders Tell a Fishy Tale

The Verde News today, revealed that "Fire tender" Ted Mercer claims there was no safety in James Arthur Ray’s Plan. Well, that raises a whole lot of questions in my mind about why the Mercer's decided to take James Arthur Ray's money this year. I know we're in a depression, but there's a lot of ways to make money in Sedona that don't involve risking innocent folks lives.

First let me tell you a bit about myself. I’m a Jesus freak and something of an old style hippy, but I have lots of friends who sweat by sweat lodges for detoxifying and bringing them closer to nature and I don’t’ begrudge them their spiritual longings. Personally, I believe it’s easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter heaven that it’s our obligation to be Good Samaritans to each other and the only he who is without sin should cast the first stone. That having been said, I also don’t believe in judging other folks religious beliefs, but there’s something about what went on at Angel Valley that’s starting to really bother me.

The more I hear about the tragedy at Angel Valley, the more confused I get. Everyone wants to place the blame squarely on James Arthur Ray’s shoulders, and I’m not saying his bizarre beliefs, a whole lot of greed and ambition and maybe his steroid habit didn’t lead him to make some poor decisions where the welfare of his followers were concerned, but why isn’t anyone looking at Ted and Debra Mercer when assigning blame? These are two grown folks who claim to know a lot about conducting sweat lodges safely. So why did they continue to do sweat lodges for James Arthur Ray for three years after they say people getting “medically distressed” and after they already had doubts about the safety of James Arthur Ray’s retreats?


Does anybody even know who Ted Mercer is? Is he local? I googgled him and I couldn’t even find a website. Do Native folks think this guy should be leading sweats? The blog-o-sphere has been silent on this guy. Mercer’s behavior is pretty fishy to me. He claims to know all about how to conduct a sweat lodge safely, but there’s no evidence in today’s Verde News that he did anything pro-active to see that everyone at Angel Valley had a safe experience. And after all, he was supposedly the expert on site.

Here are a few things that don’t ring true to me:

In the article, Ted Mercer claimed the “normal” number of people in a sweat lodge was 15, yet he willingly consented to conduct a sweat lodge intended for much more than 15 people. Well, why did he build a sweat lodge that would accommodate so many people? Why didn’t he just refuse to build such a big lodge and look for some other way to make a living this year? Why didn't he build a smaller lodge and insist that the 50 go in shifts? The Mercer's seem to be trying to blame James Arthur Ray for the whole tragedy, but what happened to their common sense? What happened to heir accountability to other people and their ability to say, “No! I can’t be a part of this, it isn’t safe.”?

Now, the article does mention that the Mercer’s were not allowed inside the sweat lodge, which is strange. Yet, they themselves say that they could hear what was going on inside the lodge. They could count. They knew how many rocks they were passing to James Arthur Ray and the probable effect of the heat from all those rocks. Debra Mercer claimed to have heard someone inside tell James Arthur Ray that some of the people in the sweat lodge were unconscious, between the seventh and eighth rounds of new stones. She said that James Arthur Ray did not seem concerned and heard him say, "they will be OK. there is only one more round." Well, Mrs. Mercer knew that James Arthur Ray wasn’t a medical doctor. She said there was supposed to be a nurse there, why didn’t she run and get the nurse. Wouldn’t any decent person with any sense do at least that?

Instead of listening to someone who thinks he’s god tell you that dragging people out of a hot tent is “sacrilege” why didn’t she call 9-11 immediately. We hear that she even took photos of unconscious folks in 2008. Well in my mind, that makes her even more responsible because she knew what could happen in one of these Spiritual Warrior sweat lodges. Someone who knows that something bad can happen, and doesn’t act pro-actively, to my mind, is more guilty than some fool with a bizarre religious belief.

The thing that really disturbs me is the account of the Mercer’s 17 year old daughter, Sarah. The way Debra Mercer tells it, there were folks left unconscious in the lodge and she and her 17 year old daughter dragged them out. Now that’s mighty fishy to me also. If my 17 year old child is around an area where folks may be dying, the first thing I’m going to do it to get her out of there. I’m going to tell to run and call 9-11 and make sure that she doesn’t see anyone dead. That’s what loving parents do and think of when their child is around an emergency scene – protect the child from trauma. The next thing I’m going to do is to get my husband, the big strong man (I assume) to help me drag folks out. I’m not going to have a 17 year old girl do the dragging. It just seems incredible to me that a mother would let a 17 year old girl see a man with purple lips and blue and face who might possibly be dead. Decent parents protect their children from seeing such things.

There’s just a lot of fishy things that don’t add up about this whole thing. I’ll leave it for a jury of 12 to decide what really happened that day and whether James Arthur Ray bears any responsibility for the death of 3 people, but I need to see Debra and Ted Mercer right up there next to James Arthur Ray.

I’ve always been gung ho for the first amendment and freedom of religion. I’m not a fundamentalist, literalist Christian, but when people start dying, we need to think about what is our responsibility as members of the Sedona community to protect the people who come to visit this beautiful land. I know the chamber of commerce gets a kick out of promoting the vortexes and the alleged visits from space aliens as a tourist attraction and just harmless fun, but is it? When folks start dying because of the far-out beliefs that some folks are selling to tourists here, what is our responsibility to the public to protect them from harm? I’d like to see all the retreats start self-policing and really thinking about who they allow to lead spiritual retreats in our area.

In hindsight, I think that the extreme beliefs that this group was starting to manifest may have played a role in the death of 3 people. Maybe we need to come together as a community and decide where to draw the line. What kinds of education do we need to implement to stop another guy with offbeat beliefs from endangering lives? If we could just educate folks how to deal with hyperthermia, heat exhaustion and heat stroke in a sensible, accepted manner that would be going a long way. Living in Sedona, I know there are more folks who distrust “Western Medicine” and practice holistic or ayurvedic medicine. That's their right, as long as no one gets hurt, but somebody got hurt by some folks who claimed to have a nurse in their midst and that nurse didn't know what to do with a heat stroke victim.


How are you going to break through spiritual and political convictions and educate folks about what needs to be done when someone is suffering from Sweat Lodge syndrome. What do you say to someone who channels angels and honestly believes that these folks just stepped out of their bodies for a lark?

These are all questions we need to come together as a community and deal with honestly, before the government gets involved and starts telling us what to do. I feel the most important question the people of Sedona need answered is, if Ted Mercer knew how to conduct a safe sweat, why didn’t he?

For folks who can't get it online,

The Verde News


[http://verdenews.com/main.asp?SectionID=1&SubSectionID=1&ArticleID=34308]


Witnesses give account: sweat lodge experiences

Monday, January 04, 2010

SEDONA -- Documents released this week of the sweat lodge deaths investigation in October are very telling about the conditions beneath that super-heated tent.

The event proved to be a fatal outcome of James Arthur Ray's Spiritual Warrior retreat at Angel Valley south of Sedona.

The Yavapai Sheriff's Office spoke to participants and witnesses Oct. 8. Participants sought enlightenment and financial reward from Ray's teachings and the two-hour sweat lodge experience that culminated the retreat.





Witnesses said the event was "so hot they could not breathe." Officers were told that James Arthur Ray advised them they would feel like they were going to die, but they would not die. Ray told participants to push themselves and would only allow participants to leave when the flap was up. Ray controlled when the flap would open.

According to documents released by court order this week by the Yavapai County Sheriff's Office, Ted and Debra Mercer constructed the sweat lodge, one of many they have built. Ted was the "fire tender," responsible for heating the rocks and bringing them to the door of the tent. Debra would use a pitch fork to pass the rocks into the tent. Inside, someone would take the pitch fork, deposit the rock in the center of the tent, and then return the pitch fork. Debra and Ted were not allowed inside the lodge and could only see inside when the door flap was open between rounds.

Ted Mercer told investigators there have been problems on only three occasions with his sweat lodges. All three times he was working with James Ray, he said.

Ted Mercer said the number of rocks requested by James Ray would determine how hot the sweat lodge would get. This year's sweat lodge consisted of eight rounds. During the past two years, people would exit the sweat lodge in medical distress. He said that Ray's sweat lodges are much hotter, more intense and longer lasting than the other sweat lodges he has assisted with.

The normal number of people for a sweat lodge is 15 people, according to Mercer, but James Ray always has large groups of people. He said he didn't plan to help Ray with the sweat lodge this year but that he has been out of work and needed the money and James Ray had a nurse on staff that he believed would assist if there were problems.

Mercer said people did not have to stay in the lodge the whole time, but were encouraged to do so to bring them to the next level of consciousness. Participants fasted for two days prior to the sweat lodge and didn't drink enough water. He said there was not a safety plan for the event.

According to the sheriff's investigative report, Mercer's wife, Debra, was advised by participants that two people inside the sweat lodge were unconscious, between the seventh and eighth rounds of new stones. She heard it from outside the lodge but Ray did not seem concerned. She said that Ray's response was that "they would be OK and there is only one more round."

After the fourth round, two people had to be dragged out of the tent, Debra Mercer told the investigators. She explained that participants in medical distress would be dragged to the door of the tent. Others would then drag them the rest of the way out. Debra Mercer said that one of the people who emerged from the tent believed he was having a heart attack and thought he was going to die. He kept saying, "I don't want to die, I don't want to die."

Debra Mercer told investigators that there were problems with the sweat lodge the prior two years. She took pictures in 2008 and gave them to investigators. Some participants in the pictures seemed to be in distress and possibly unconscious.

Debra said the rest of the occupants left the tent after the eighth round, but she remained concerned about the comments that there were two people passed out after the seventh round. She said James Ray was now sitting in a chair in the shade. Debra looked inside the tent and saw three people near the back. She was able to drag one of the women out. That was possibly Liz Neuman, who died later in the hospital of injuries. Two others were still inside, James Shore and Kirby Brown.

According to the investigative report, when Debra Mercer told Ray she needed to open up the back of the tent, James Ray told her it would be "sacrilegious" and she could only do it if it was necessary. Someone eventually held open the tent and she dragged Kirby Brown out. The woman wasn't breathing.

Debra got more assistance and was able to drag out James Shore. A woman Debra thought was the nurse employed by James Ray was next to Kirby. The "nurse" told her Kirby wasn't breathing and asked Debra what to do.

Investigators also interviewed the Mercer's 17-year-old daughter, Sarah. She was outside of the sweat lodge, assisting people as they came out by putting cool water on them and giving them drinking water and electrolytes. She said toward the end of the ceremony, someone had said that there were people unconscious in the lodge.

Once everyone was out, her mother looked into the lodge and saw three people still inside who appeared unconscious but no one would help. Sarah and her mother went to the back of the sweat lodge, pulled up the back and pulled the people out.

Sarah stated that there were three people inside, one was a "real big guy" whose lips were purple and blue and face was purple and blue.

Sarah stated that there was a girl sitting next to the big guy and they were holding hands, but she was face down in the dirt. Sarah said she had to walk away after that.

CPR was initiated on Kirby Brown and James Shore, who were pronounced dead on arrival or shortly after arriving at Verde Valley Medical Center. Information from Verde Valley Medical Center was that they ruled out carbon monoxide as a contributor to the death or illnesses of the people being brought in from this event.

Sidney Spencer was transported to Flagstaff Medical Center by helicopter. Spencer of Patagonia, Ariz., was hospitalized with kidney and liver failure and respiratory arrest after collapsing.

A wrongful death suit has been filed by the family of 49-year-old Lizbeth Neuman of Prior Lake, Mich.

She died in the hospital a week after the event.


As usual, I welcome constructive comments.


FAIR USE NOTICE:

This site contains copyrighted material the use of which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. It is being made available in an effort to advance the understanding of environmental, political, human rights, economic, democracy, scientific, and social justice issues, and so on. It is believed that this constitutes a 'fair use' of any such copyrighted material as provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the material on this site is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond 'fair use', you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.


DISCLAIMER:


The material in this site is provided for educational and informational purposes only, and is not intended to be a substitute for doing your own research on this issue and making up your own mind. A lot of these bloggers are friends and family of people killed and injured at Angel Valley. A lot of the critics are also competitors of James Ray Industries. A lot of the supporters have financial relationships with James Arthur Ray and his associates. Please conduct your own research and form your own opinions or recommendations with respect to your own personal value system. The information on this site does not constitute legal or technical advice. No one mentioned on this site has given me any financial compensation.

Wednesday, December 30, 2009

Opinions on the Sedona Sweat Lodge are like belly buttons - everybody's got one

Well folks, the Yavapai County sherrif’s office isn’t commenting about the Sweat Lodge that killed 3 people out at Angle Valley, but the blogosphere sure is! Gawker’s blog seems to be the most controversial and the harderst to access online today. Some say Oprah’s Dangerous, some say she’s just a reflection of her audience. This blog isn’t available to all the folks in Arizona, so I’m putting it up for them. I don’t know if it’s because Oprah doesn’t fancy being associated with James Ray anymore or if the prosecutor wants to have a jury that doesn’t know anything about the sweat lodge that killed 3 people just outside of Sedona. There’s also an association with Scientology here, and you know how them folks are about criticism. Read it for yourself and decide who sounds credible and who doesn’t.




KPHO in Phoenix released a lot of pictures and copies of some of the documents taken in evidence.

http://www.kpho.com/news/22075834/detail.html



Here’s the newstory that was on CBS the other day

http://www.kpho.com/video/22076046/index.html

Here’s what Casandra Yorgey has to say about the new evidence

http://www.examiner.com/x-11245-Philadelphia-Speculative-Fiction-Examiner~y2009m12d29-Breaking-news-new-police-info-released-on-James-Ray-death-lodge



Terry Hall has a comment about James Ray’s law of gender

http://bizsayer.com/2009/12/03/james-arthur-ray-gender-crazy/





The search warrants and related info is on the Salty Droid blog:

http://saltydroid.info/wp-content/uploads/2009/12/Search-Me.pdf





The 3 day schedule for the Spiritual Warrior Retreat is enlarged here:

http://img685.imageshack.us/img685/9829/scheduley.jpg

Here’s the Spiritual Warrior manual. The wavier enclosed has some of the strictest terms I’ve ever heard of:

http://img685.imageshack.us/img685/9829/scheduley.jpg





Here’s Gawker’s blog post today:

Oprah Guru to Dying Sweat Lodge Victims: 'It's a Good Day to Die'

Before three people died in his sweat lodge of horror, James Arthur Ray told them to "surrender to death to survive it." The police report is out, and it's thirty-three pages of insanity, chronicling Ray's sordid career and stanky retreat.

We begin with the scene of the crime: The tarp-covered sweat lodge where participants were to experience "rebirth." As participants began to drop, Ray kept asking for more "grandfathers" (heated rocks) and cut a cool, careless figure amid pandemonium:

This participant believed he was having a heart attack and believed he was going to die. He kept saying “I don’t’ want to die, I don’t’ want to die.” Instead of summoning medical aid, James Ray stated, “It’s a good day to die.”

“During the sweat lodge, Beverly remembers hearing someone say, “I can’t get her to move, I can’t get her to wake up.” James Ray replied, “Leave her alone, she’ll be death with in the next round.” This confirms the statements made by the Mercers.

A doctor who was participating in the ceremony, advised James Arthur Ray that one participant who had almost consciousness stumbled into the heated rocks and a severe burn on his arm. James Arthur Ray’s response was, “He is fine.”





The "let yourself die" theme grazes the aesthetics of cult suicide, which could add a whole new dimension to this already tawdry case, though I suspect Ray wasn't murderous in a premeditated way. He just had his head so far up his own butt he either didn't notice or care that people were perishing left and right. As stunning as this apparent callousness is, however, Ray's followers' continued to adore him. Stockholm syndrome?

Caci said that he observed what he called a large woman unconscious and advised Ray and nothing was done. Caci stated that he and another person at the end of the last round pulled this woman from the Lodge. Caci advised Surak that he felt James Ray could have conducted the sweat lodge better than he did and that there should have been doctors and nurses on the scene to assist in case of emergencies. Lou Caci also attended James Ray’s “Modern Magick” program in March of 2008. Caci was instructed to break a brick with his hand. Caci broke the brick but also broke his hand. Caci described breaking the brick and his hand as an “amazing experience.”

Another participant says she and her husband both broke bones there, along with sixteen Modern Magick participants who ended up in a Hawaiian emergency room. The police report establishes a pattern of physically distressed "vision quest" participants dating back to 2005:

Mickey told Detective Poling he was sitting outside the sweat house while the final session was being held and heard participants inside the lodge “screaming” to get out. Mickey heard James Ray tell the participants, “No!

The 33-page police report is equal parts thriller novel and parody. The detectives exchange emails with message board commenters, one of whom punctuates his murder accusations with a frowny face. We learn about Ray's "wealth society" (Ponzi-ish or Scientology-ish?) and the mysterious suicide of Colleen Conaway, a Ray follower who leapt to her death during a retreat in San Diego. He is motivated, it seems, by some sort of megalomaniacal power fetish:

In one of the events James Ray played the role of “God” and when anyone did anything he didn’t like James would point to them and say “You’re dead.” The participant would then have to play dead until James Ray decided they could live again.

Ray's inestimably irksome righteousness in the sweat lodge of horror aftermath—promoting the notion that the dead people weren't manslaughter victims, just freed of their corporeal beings and in a more spiritually enlightened place—seems to confirm the "megalomaniacal jackass" gloss. [NYT] [Gawker]



To comment on the above post, you can send an email to Azaria Jagger, the author of this post, at azaria@gawker.com or

moc.rekwag@airaza.



FAIR USE NOTICE:

This site contains copyrighted material the use of which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. It is being made available in an effort to advance the understanding of environmental, political, human rights, economic, democracy, scientific, and social justice issues, and so on. It is believed that this constitutes a 'fair use' of any such copyrighted material as provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the material on this site is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond 'fair use', you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.

The material in this site is provided for educational and informational purposes only, and is not intended to be a substitute for doing your own research on this issue and making up your own mind. A lot of these bloggers are friends and family of people killed and injured at Angel Valley. A lot of the critics are also competitors of James Ray Industries. A lot of the supporters have financial relationships with James Arthur Ray and his associates. Please conduct your own research and form your own opinions or recommendations with respect to your own personal value system. The information on this site does not constitute legal or technical advice. No one mentioned on this site has given me any financial compensation.

Sunday, December 27, 2009

Camp Verde Bugle and Verde Independent Sweat Lodge search warrant opened

Folks in Tucson are telling me that they can't get access to our online news in Yavapai County, so I'm posting this for their benefit.

This story comes from the Verde News




Saturday, December 26, 2009



CAMP VERDE -- Yavapai Superior Court Judge Micheal Bluff Wednesday raised his closure order on the first evidence from the case of James Ray's Spiritual Warrior Sweat Lodge deaths and illnesses at a retreat south of Sedona.



In a 40-minute proceeding in the final hours before the Christmas break, Bluff vacated his own order that sealed the documents related to a search warrant at the sweat lodge site at the Angel Valley Retreat.



Representing KPNX in Phoenix, David Bodney of Steptoe and Johnson, asked the court, "How does public access rights trump indefinite secrecy?"











In addition to the search warrant that Bluff had ordered sealed Oct. 12, Bodney also wondered what other documents may have been kept from public view by the County Attorney's "perpetual closure." Bluff, who had just given the attorneys copies of an earlier order allowing crime scene photos to finally be released, re-focused the proceeding exclusively on the closed search warrant.



Both Bodney and Deputy County Attorney Bill Hughes for the State, argued case law to open or keep the documents closed from public inspection.



Hughes said some interviews remain and the autopsy reports are not complete and that the investigation should be concluded by mid-January.



Bodney argued that much information about the case is already in public circulation after nearly three months.



"Witnesses have been talking to one another and the media. Civil lawsuits have been filed. What is the probability of harm? The County Attorney should not be allowed to operate in a vacuum," he argued.



Bodney concluded that the State has not met the burden of demonstrating how the release will harm their case or show an exception to public access.



In his order, Judge Bluff said, "The search warrant was already out there, because it was served and left with someone on the property. It seems to me that the 'return' document is also, at least the inventory is public information because it was left at the site. During the break I looked at the affidavit again. I issued the form, so I read everything. So it seems to me that the only document I have to look at again, is the affidavit. The State has not persuaded me to rebut the presumption of openness."



Outside the courtroom, Bodney told the Verde Independent, "We believe that the public has the right to inspect these search warrant records. They are fundamental documents pertaining to homicides that occurred more than two months ago, the circumstances of which are generally known and there is no legal justification for keeping them under seal until the county attorney feels she has interviewed every last witness and locked down all their statements."



"And if the County Attorney didn't objected to releasing more of these records I would have like to have been in a position to see them today as well. But, we are making progress."



Lizbeth Neuman, 49, of Michigan, 38-year old Kirby Brown of New York and 40-year old James Shore of Wisconsin died and 18 others were treated for illness suffered after the sweat lodge event for participants who paid nearly $10,000 for James Ray's Spiritual Warrior Retreat teachings.





Here's another story from the Camp Verde Bugle Online

from Saturday, December 26, 2009







CAMP VERDE -- Yavapai Superior Court Judge Micheal Bluff Wednesday raised his closure order on the first evidence from the case of James Ray's Spiritual Warrior Sweat Lodge deaths and illnesses at a retreat south of Sedona.



In a 40-minute proceeding in the final hours before the Christmas break, Bluff vacated his own order that sealed the documents related to a search warrant at the sweat lodge site at the Angel Valley Retreat.



Representing KPNX in Phoenix, David Bodney of Steptoe and Johnson, asked the court, "How does public access rights trump indefinite secrecy?"

In addition to the search warrant that Bluff had ordered sealed Oct. 12, Bodney also wondered what other documents may have been kept from public view by the County Attorney's "perpetual closure." Bluff, who had just given the attorneys copies of an earlier order allowing crime scene photos to finally be released, re-focused the proceeding exclusively on the closed search warrant.



Both Bodney and Deputy County Attorney Bill Hughes for the State, argued case law to open or keep the documents closed from public inspection.



Hughes said some interviews remain and the autopsy reports are not complete and that the investigation should be concluded by mid-January.



Bodney argued that much information about the case is already in public circulation after nearly three months.



"Witnesses have been talking to one another and the media. Civil lawsuits have been filed. What is the probability of harm? The County Attorney should not be allowed to operate in a vacuum," he argued.



Bodney concluded that the State has not met the burden of demonstrating how the release will harm their case or show an exception to public access.



In his order, Judge Bluff said, "The search warrant was already out there, because it was served and left with someone on the property. It seems to me that the 'return' document is also, at least the inventory is public information because it was left at the site. During the break I looked at the affidavit again. I issued the form, so I read everything. So it seems to me that the only document I have to look at again, is the affidavit. The State has not persuaded me to rebut the presumption of openness."



Outside the courtroom, Bodney told the Verde Independent, "We believe that the public has the right to inspect these search warrant records. They are fundamental documents pertaining to homicides that occurred more than two months ago, the circumstances of which are generally known and there is no legal justification for keeping them under seal until the county attorney feels she has interviewed every last witness and locked down all their statements."



"And if the County Attorney didn't objected to releasing more of these records I would have like to have been in a position to see them today as well. But, we are making progress."



Lizbeth Neuman, 49, of Michigan, 38-year old Kirby Brown of New York and 40-year old James Shore of Wisconsin died and 18 others were treated for illness suffered after the sweat lodge event for participants who paid nearly $10,000 for James Ray's Spiritual Warrior Retreat teachings.


Just in the interest of full disclosure, I sell my artwork in the Sedona area, but I don't get any monetary compensation from anybody mentioned in any of my posts.

The more I read about this terrible tragedy, the more I think that the government may need to step in and engage in some kind of regulation of these seminars. They seem to be getting out of hand. Ever since the late 1990s, I've heard about people being taken to the hospital at these retreats. A retreat is supposed to recharge you and make you feel rested and more balanced. This stuff seems to have gotten so out of balance that maybe we need to have some local hearings about putting some regulations on it. There at least should be trained medical staff on hand because you never know what medical conditions folks have. Some folks can have conditions they're not even aware of and they come from all over the world to see our beautiful landscapes.  Some folks can't handle the altitude, and a lot of folks lead pretty sedintary lifestyles.  It just seems like the humane thing to do to make sure nobody else gets sick or dies trying to connect with the spirits around here.

News From the Daily Courier - Sweat Lodge Search Warrents Soon to Be Opened to the Public

http://www.dcourier.com/

Saturday, December 26, 2009



Yavapai Superior Court Judge Michael Bluff rescinded Wednesday his earlier order to seal search warrants and crime scene photos of the sweat lodge site at Angel Valley Retreat where three people died and 18 were injured on Oct. 8.



The sweat lodge ceremony led by author and motivational speaker James Arthur Ray culminated his five-day Spiritual Warrior Retreat that participants paid as much as $9,000 to attend at the resort south of Sedona.



On Oct. 15, Yavapai County Sheriff Steve Waugh said the deaths - of Lizbeth Neuman, 49, of Michigan, Kirby Brown, 38, of New York, and James Shore, 40, of Wisconsin - are homicides, and Ray remains the primary focus of their investigation.





Sunday, December 27, 2009

2009 IN REVIEW: #6 - Self-help guru's retreat culminates in grueling sweat lodge ritual - and 3 deaths

Yavapai Superior Court Judge Michael Bluff rescinded Wednesday his earlier order to seal search warrants and crime scene photos of the sweat lodge site at Angel Valley Retreat where three people died and 18 were injured on Oct. 8.

So what do folks think about this?  Why were the details of the search warrant sealed in the first place and what arguments did the Phoenix attorney make to get them unsealed. I personally feel that sunlight always makes the best disinfectant and as long as this won't traumatize the surviving family and loved ones, I think everything should be out in the open. What do other folks think?  Have we heard too much about this tragedy, or is this just the beginning?  Does the public have a right to know what goes on in these self-help seminars so they can protect themselves against injury and possibly even death?  What does James Ray and associates have to hide?

Howdy Folks!

I’m writing this blog so that folks in the Sedona area and keep themselves informed about the incident that happened out at Angel Valley last October. I’ve been noticing that we’re not getting much news on the incident anymore and most of the people speaking now are small business owners who want to put the tragedy behind them. It’s always important to get the perspectives of as many people as possible. The most active group of bloggers I’ve found are Cassandra Yorgey with the examiner, The Salty Droid http://saltydroid.info/category/james-arthur-ray/>Terry Hall with Biz Sayer Duff McDuffee’s blog, Beyond Growth and of course Cosmic Connie’s Whirled Musings. There’s also been a lot of discussion in a forum for Native Americans called New Age Frauds, Plastic Shamans newagefraud.org Go to their forum, click the fraud category and read about what real Native Americans think about Angel Valley.

Anti-cult activists have a lot to say about the techniques that were used on folks at Angel Valley. There’s an interesting thread here.

Rick Ross’s Anti-cult Forum

I personally am reserving judgment until all the facts are in, but I also feel it’s important to get all the news that’s available. Some folks are telling me that they can’t get the Daily Courier online or the Camp Verde Bugle. I’ve taken the liberty of putting up the latest articles. It seems that sometime tomorrow, the public is going to have access to the details of the search warrant that was issued for James Ray International headquarters and to the photos of the crime scene. Things should heat up around here on Monday, so stay tuned for my updates. Another way to keep up is to join twitter http://www.twitter.com/ and do a search in the box at the right with the little magnifying glass - just type in #jamesray or #deathlodge and you can find out new things everyday. We all know what the channelers and the New Age business owners are saying, but it’s an eye opening experience to see what other folks think of us. I welcome comments about this issue.

Happy hunting folks!