:1985 Rajneeshee assassination plot
{{Short description|Assassination plot in Portland, Oregon}}
{{Good article}}
{{Use American English|date=July 2022}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=February 2012}}
{{Infobox civilian attack
| title = 1985 Rajneeshee assassination plot
| image = Gus Solomon Federal Courthouse.jpg
| caption = Gus J. Solomon United States Courthouse in Portland
| location = Portland, Oregon, U.S.
| coordinates = {{Coord|45|30|57|N|122|40|35|W|display=inline,title}}
| target = Charles H. Turner, United States Attorney for the District of Oregon
| date = 1985
| type = Conspiracy to commit assassination
| perps = Rajneesh Movement
| assailants = Ma Anand Sheela, Alma Potter, Sally-Anne Croft, Susan Hagan, Ann Phyllis McCarthy, Jane Stork, Richard Kevin Langford, Carol Matthews, Phyllis Caldwell and Ava Avalos; an additional unindicted member of Rajneesh commune
| susperps =
| weapons = Pistols, handguns
| fatalities = 0
| injuries = 0
}}
In 1985, a group of high-ranking Rajneeshees, followers of the Indian mystic Shree Rajneesh (later known as Osho), conspired to assassinate Charles Turner, the then-United States Attorney for the District of Oregon. Rajneesh's personal secretary and second-in-command, Ma Anand Sheela (Sheela Silverman), assembled the group after Turner was appointed to investigate illegal activity at the followers' community, Rajneeshpuram. Turner investigated charges of immigration fraud and sham marriages, and later headed the federal prosecution of the 1984 Rajneeshee bioterror attack in The Dalles, Oregon.
The conspirators included Sheela; Sally-Anne Croft, chief financial officer of Rajneeshpuram; Susan Hagan, head of security at Rajneeshpuram; Catherine Jane Stork, who bought weapons and suppressors and volunteered to be the actual murderer; Ann Phyllis McCarthy, fourth-in-command of Rajneeshpuram; and co-conspirators Alma Potter, Carol Matthews, Phyllis Caldwell, and Richard Kevin Langford. Two of the conspirators obtained false identification to purchase handguns out-of-state, stalked Turner, and planned to murder him near his workplace in Portland, Oregon. The assassination plot was never carried out and was only discovered later, as a result of the investigation by federal law enforcement into the bioterror attack in The Dalles and other illegal acts by the Rajneeshpuram leadership.
Prosecution of the conspirators began in 1990, when a federal grand jury brought indictments against several of the key players. Some had fled the country, and extradition proceedings against the perpetrators and subsequent prosecution and conviction was not completed for sixteen years. The final conspirator was convicted in 2006, when Catherine Jane Stork agreed to return to the United States from Germany in order to be allowed to visit her terminally ill son in Australia. Eight perpetrators received sentences ranging from five years' probation to five years in federal prison and an additional member of the Rajneesh commune pleaded guilty to murder conspiracy. Rajneesh was never prosecuted in relation to the conspiracy, and left the United States after pleading guilty to immigration fraud and agreeing not to reenter the country without permission from the U.S. Attorney General.
Planning
=Hit list=
Seven followers (called Rajneeshees) of charismatic leader Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh (now known as Osho), were convicted of a 1985 conspiracy to assassinate Charles Turner,{{cite news | author =| title =Good riddance to Rajneeshpuram | work =Yakima Herald-Republic | date =September 30, 2005 }}{{cite news | last =McKenna | first =Michael | title =Mercy for expat in US kill plot | work =The Australian | date =February 2, 2006 }} and an additional unindicted eighth member of the Rajneesh commune pleaded guilty to murder conspiracy. The perpetrators were high-ranking followers within the Rajneeshee organization.{{cite news | agency =Associated Press | title =Ex-Cult Members Plead To Charges | work =The Columbian | page =C5 | publisher =The Columbian Publishing Co. | date =December 17, 2000 |quote=By pleading guilty Friday, Sally-Anne Croft and Susan Hagan canceled international warrants for their arrest that effectively confined them to Great Britain. ... U.S. District Judge Malcolm F. Marsh gave the women both previously high-ranking cult officials suspended probationary sentences Friday. Marsh said the women had led meaningful lives since they were released from federal prison in April 1998 after serving time for conspiring to kill the former U.S. attorney for Oregon, Charles Turner. }}{{cite news | last =Painter Jr. | first =John | title =Years Later, Wasco Still Sees Red | work =The Oregonian | page =A1 | publisher = Oregonian Publishing Co. | date =July 29, 1994 | quote = The 'they' Morgan refers to are Sally Ann Croft, 44, and Susan Hagan, 46, two former high-ranking disciples of the late Indian guru. They arrived Thursday morning in Portland to face a federal conspiracy charge that they schemed to kill the U.S. attorney in Portland almost a decade ago. }}{{cite news | author = |agency=Religious News Service | title =Guru's Ranch To Be Sold At Auction | work =The Dallas Morning News | page =42A | publisher =The Dallas Morning News Company | date =November 12, 1988 | quote = The controversial commune collapsed in late 1985 amid revelations that the guru and some high-ranking disciples were involved in criminal acts, including attempted murder and arson. Rajneesh was subsequently deported, and several members of his inner circle were convicted and sent to prison. }}{{cite news | last =Hogan | first =Dave | title =Follower Testifies She Would Do Anything For Rajneesh | work =The Oregonian | page =B03 | publisher =Oregonian Publishing Co. | date =July 11, 1995 | quote = Ava Avalos was willing to do anything for Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh. Anything included plotting to kill people, she testified Monday. Avalos told a federal court jury that she was part of a hit team that was assigned to kill then-U.S. Attorney Charles Turner in 1985. ...She testified all day Monday during the trial of Sally-Anne Croft and Susan Hagan, two high-ranking Rajneeshee followers charged with conspiring to kill Turner. }}{{cite book | last =Crutchfield | first =James A. | title =It Happened in Oregon: From the birth of Crater Lake to the gruesome Kalawatset massacre, thirty-four events that shaped the history of the Beaver State | publisher =Globe Pequot | year =2007 | page =113 | isbn =978-0-7627-4481-7|quote=...high-ranking Rajneeshee officials were also indicted on various charges including attempted murder.}}{{cite news | author = | title =Rajneeshees' Plot To Kill Detailed | work =The Spokesman-Review | page =B3 | date =July 11, 1995 | quote = Two former high-ranking Rajneeshees, Sally-Anne Croft and Susan Hagan, are on trial in U.S. District Court on charges of conspiring to kill Turner. }} Prosecutors in the case stated that the perpetrators had planned to murder Turner after he was appointed to head an investigation into the group's activities in Rajneeshpuram, Oregon.{{cite news | author =| title =FED: Perth-born Orange follower avoids jail over US kill plot | work =AAP General News | agency =Australian Associated Press | date = February 2, 2006 }} Turner's investigation focused on sham marriages organized by the group, as well as other illegal activities including immigration fraud, and he later headed the federal prosecution relating to the 1984 Rajneeshee bioterror attack in The Dalles, Oregon.{{cite news | agency=United Press International | title =Guru's Ex-Aid Indicted in Poisoning Plot | work =The Philadelphia Inquirer | page =C11 | date =March 21, 1986 }} Oregon Attorney General Dave Frohnmayer was also involved in investigations of the group, working alongside Turner.{{cite news | last =Morell | first =Ricki |author2=Tex O'Neill |author3=Jim Walser |author4=Linda Brown | title =U.S. Seeks Detention of Guru: Prosecutors Request No Bond Before Trial | work =The Charlotte Observer | page =1A | date =November 1, 1985 }}
In May 1985, Rajneesh's personal secretary and second-in-command,{{cite news | last =Oregon Historical Society | title =Ma Anand Sheela (b. 1950) | work =The Oregon History Project | year =2002 | url =http://oregonhistoryproject.org/articles/historical-records/ma-anand-sheela-b-1950/ | access-date =June 17, 2016 | archive-date =August 27, 2016 | archive-url =https://web.archive.org/web/20160827135140/https://oregonhistoryproject.org/articles/historical-records/ma-anand-sheela-b-1950/ | url-status =live }} Sheela Silverman (Ma Anand Sheela), gathered the leader's key followers and formed a group of conspirators in order to consider what to do with the growing concern of Turner's continuous involvement with the Ranch. Sheela stated that Turner's grand jury investigation "threatened the existence of the commune", and exposed Rajneesh and several of his disciples to criminal prosecution. Sheela hoped that by removing Turner's influence they would be able to thwart the federal immigration investigation which could have resulted in deportation of Rajneeshee leaders.{{cite news | last =Long | first =James | title =The Rise and Fall of Rancho Rajneesh | work =The Oregonian | page =C10 | publisher =Oregonian Publishing Co. | date =July 29, 1994 }} Three former leaders of the commune including Ma Anand Sheela, Dianne Yvonne Onang (Ma Anand Puja), a registered nurse from the Philippines who managed the Rajneeshee medical corporation, and former treasurer of Rajneesh Foundation International and Catherine Jane Stork (Ma Shanti Bhadra) of Australia, put together a hit list which included U.S. Attorney Charles Turner and Oregon Attorney General David Frohnmayer.
Susan Hagan (Ma Anand Su), a top official in the Rajneeshpuram hierarchy, was also a participant in the assassination conspiracy. Hagan was in charge of the security force at Rajneeshpuram, ran the Rajneesh Investment Corporation, and supervised construction on the commune.{{cite news | last =Usborne | first =David | title =Target of sect plot accuses Britain of bias |work=The Independent |location=UK | date =July 30, 1995 }}U.S. v. Croft, 124 F.3d 1109 (C.A.9 (Or.), 1997), United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, Decided September 5, 1997 Other conspirators in the assassination plot included Ann Phyllis McCarthy (Ma Yoga Vidya), president of the Rajneesh commune, and Alma Potter (Ma Dhyan Yogini), Ma Anand Sheela's bodyguard and traveling companion. Potter was manager of the Hotel Rajneesh in Portland, Oregon, and a member of the commune's security force. The Oregonian reported that nine people were on the hit list, including: Turner, Frohnmayer, former assistant attorney general Karen H. Green, Wasco County planning director Daniel C. Durow, Wasco County commissioner James L. Comini, investigative journalist for The Oregonian Leslie L. Zaitz, former member Helen C. Byron (Ma Idam Shunyo), who had been awarded US$1.7 million in a lawsuit against Rajneesh Foundation International, her daughter Barbara J. Byron (Makima),{{cite news | author = | title =Assassination Plot By Ex-Rajneeshees Reported – Portland Paper Says 9 on 'Hit List,' Including 5 Officials | work =The Seattle Times | page =E8 | date =November 3, 1985 }} and Rajneesh's former secretary Laxmi Thakarsi Kuruwa (Ma Yoga Laxmi).{{cite news|work=The Oregonian|date=December 30, 1985|url=http://www.oregonlive.com/rajneesh/index.ssf/1985/12/special_unit_of_rajneeshees_de.html|title=Special unit of Rajneeshees dedicated to 'dirty tricks'|publisher=Oregon Live|access-date=July 8, 2011|archive-date=October 14, 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121014103122/http://www.oregonlive.com/rajneesh/index.ssf/1985/12/special_unit_of_rajneeshees_de.html|url-status=live}}
=Weapons=
Catherine Jane Stork volunteered to be the follower who would carry out the assassination, and bought guns and suppressors. Stork was known to fellow followers as Ma Shanti Bhadra, and was also one of the three "Big Mammas" in Rajneeshpuram.{{cite news | last =Pais | first =Arthur J. | title =Rajneesh acolyte pleads guilty to murder conspiracy charge | work =India Abroad | date =October 7, 2005 }} Sally-Anne Croft (known by followers as Ma Prem Savita), an accountant and the group's Chief Financial Officer, provided money for the purchase of weapons related to the plot. Phyllis Caldwell (Ma Deva Ritka) described in a federal affidavit how members of the murder conspiracy obtained handguns, referring to Catherine Jane Stork and Sally-Anne Croft: "Shanti B went down to Jesus Grove, and Savita gave us several thousand dollars to use to buy guns." Jesus Grove referred to a group of trailers where all the leaders of the Rajneesh commune resided, except for Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh.
Ma Anand Sheela and three other Rajneesh followers traveled to New York in the spring of 1985 to acquire false identification. According to a federal indictment, the perpetrators of the assassination plot used a false birth certificate to purchase guns.{{cite news | last =| title =Former guru lieutenant charged in murder plot | work =Evening Tribune|publisher=Union-Tribune Publishing Co. | page =A-25 | date =November 2, 1990 }} Two members of the group then traveled to Texas to purchase handguns.{{cite book | last =Tucker | first =Jonathan B. | author-link =Jonathan B. Tucker | title =Toxic Terror: Assessing Terrorist Use of Chemical and Biological Weapons | publisher =MIT Press | year =2000 | page = 136 | isbn = 0-262-70071-9}} Caldwell stated she and Catherine Jane Stork flew to Texas to purchase guns there. They purchased five guns in Texas,{{cite news | agency =Associated Press | title =Rajneesh held without bail; paper details murder plot |work=Houston Chronicle | page =2 | date =November 3, 1985}} but encountered difficulty purchasing handguns in Texas with out-of-state identification and traveled to New Mexico instead. Caldwell said they called back to the commune but the women were instructed "not to come back without the guns".
In New Mexico, they obtained false identification, and purchased several pistols. Their intention was to purchase guns which were difficult to trace. Caldwell said it was easy to obtain guns in New Mexico: "we found it was pretty easy to buy guns. All you had to do was show some identification and it was easy to get." Caldwell said she and Stork went to a university library to find the identity "of someone dying very young", next went "to public records and asked for a copy of a birth certificate" and described how "we got a rent receipt book and just made up a rent receipt". "And then we were able to go to several different gun shops in Albuquerque with those two bits of identification and buy five different guns and bullets," said Caldwell. They were able to obtain one Colt .38-caliber revolver, and four Ruger .357-caliber Security-Six Magnum revolvers. The conspirators smuggled the guns into Oregon by packing them in luggage and putting the luggage on a Greyhound Lines bus.{{cite news | last=Painter | first=John Jr. | title =2 Rajneeshees Expected In Court | work =The Oregonian | page =C08 | publisher =Oregonian Publishing Co. | date =April 11, 1991 }} Caldwell said that she and Stork traveled by bus back to the Rajneesh commune so as to avoid airport metal detectors.
=Surveillance=
After obtaining guns the conspirators returned to Portland, Oregon. They rented out an apartment in Portland to serve as their base of operations for the assassination of Turner. Rajneesh follower Carol Matthews (Ma Prem Samadhi) attempted to obtain the home address of Charles Turner, as she was doing research on him and his work in order to find another way of relating to his animosity toward the commune.{{cite news | last =Painter Jr. | first =John | title =Former Bhagwan Follower Convicted | work =The Oregonian | page =B01 | date =July 16, 1991 }} According to federal prosecutors Matthews obtained a college yearbook of Turner's, and learned his car's license plate number and his parking location. Court records state that Matthews and an unindicted co-conspirator told officials they were conducting "a voter survey", in order to obtain Turner's route number and post office box number. The two tried repeating the story with members of the U.S. Postal Service, but the postal officials did not give them Turner's address. They then drove around Turner's neighborhood and were able to find his home by locating a sign in front of his residence that said "Turner". Matthews had pictures of Turner's residence developed; these were later obtained by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) during an investigation of the Rajneesh commune, and verified after being shown to Turner. The whole process was done in order to try and meet with him to interview and determine what his concerns were, as he refused to meet with anyone at his office.
With this information, however, several members of the group of conspirators watched Turner's office, home and car, and discussed methods to assassinate him, hoping that his death would hinder the efforts of the federal investigation into Rajneeshpuram.{{cite news | last =Larabee | first =Mark | title =Two Rajneeshee members plead guilty: Sally-Anne Croft and Susan Hagan return to the United States to face 15-year-old wiretapping charges | work =The Oregonian | date =December 16, 2000 }} Their plan was to shoot Turner in the garage of the federal office building where he worked, in Portland, Oregon,{{cite news | last =| title =Assassination Plot Detailed | work =St. Paul Pioneer Press | page = 2A | date =July 1, 1991 }} but the conspirators also debated whether to murder Turner in downtown Portland or closer to his home. After spending multiple nights watching Turner's house, the conspirators decided on the parking garage because they felt it would be too risky to murder him on the drive to or from work, or in front of his home. Turner had a reserved parking spot in a federal garage underneath Terry Schrunk Plaza in Portland, Oregon. In an affidavit given to the FBI, conspirator Alma Peralta described how the perpetrators decided on the federal parking garage as the location: "Shanti Bhadra [Catherine Jane Stork] said this seems like a good place to bump this fellow off."
The conspirators practiced different ways of murdering Turner.{{cite news | agency =Associated Press | title =Followers of Rajneesh Indicted in Alleged Plot to Kill U.S. Attorney | work =Tulsa World | page =A25 | publisher =World Publishing Co. | date =November 2, 1990 }} According to informant statements to law enforcement, one of the conspirators was to pretend there was car trouble, and the others would then approach Turner with their guns. Informants later told law enforcement officials that the conspirators intended to hide out at an international network of Rajneesh communes if the plan was successful. According to The Oregonian the assassinations were not carried out because Ma Anand Sheela became distracted by political power plays within the Rajneesh commune and other members of the organization who were trying to remove her from her position within the group.{{cite news | last =Long | first =James | title =Investigators Locate, Ask Ex-Rajneeshee About Suspected Plot | work =The Oregonian | page =C05 | date =June 28, 1990 }} According to witness information, Ma Anand Sheela was persuaded not to carry out this action through conversations with Carol Matthews, who stated to her that this was not a solution in any way and would be a horrendous action.{{Citation needed|date=July 2022}}
Prosecutions
=Investigation=
On February 28, 1985, Congressman James H. Weaver gave a speech in the United States House of Representatives in which he asserted that the Rajneeshees were involved in the bioterror attack in Oregon.{{cite news | last =Weaver | first =James | title =Slow Medical Sleuthing | work =The New York Times | date =April 24, 2001 | url =https://www.nytimes.com/2001/04/24/science/l-slow-medical-sleuthing-003751.html | access-date =November 23, 2007 | archive-date =March 9, 2020 | archive-url =https://web.archive.org/web/20200309153007/https://www.nytimes.com/2001/04/24/science/l-slow-medical-sleuthing-003751.html | url-status =live }} At a series of press conferences in September 1985, Rajneesh accused several of his recently departed lieutenants of involvement in this and other crimes, including the poisoning of Mike Sullivan, a Jefferson County district attorney, and asked state and federal authorities to investigate his allegations.{{cite book | last =Gordon | first =James S. | title =The Golden Guru – The Strange Journey of Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh | publisher =The Stephen Greene Press | year =1987 | pages =[https://archive.org/details/goldengurustrang0000gord/page/181 181–182, 209–210] | isbn =0-8289-0630-0 | url =https://archive.org/details/goldengurustrang0000gord/page/181 }} The assassination plot was uncovered by federal law enforcement as a result of the ensuing investigation into activities at Rajneeshpuram.{{cite book | last1 =Carter | first1 =Lewis F. | first2=Ernest Q. |last2=Campbell | title =Charisma and Control in Rajneeshpuram | publisher =Cambridge University Press | year =1990 | pages =202–257 | isbn = 0-521-38554-7}} Turner was never physically harmed, and had retired by 1995.
The Oregonian was informed in October 1985 by federal law enforcement officials that Leslie L. Zaitz, an investigative journalist who had written a 20-part series on the Rajneesh movement in Oregon, was on a "hit list" which also included Turner and Oregon Attorney General David Frohnmayer. Assistant U.S. Attorney Robert Weaver prosecuted the case; the charges were first detailed at an October 1985 bond hearing in North Carolina after Rajneesh and his followers were arrested at an airport in Charlotte.{{cite news | agency =Reuters | title =Court Told Rajneeshis Plotted Assassinations | url =https://www.newspapers.com/article/philadelphia-daily-news-plotted-assassin/128883211/ | work =Philadelphia Daily News | page =44 | date =November 1, 1985 | access-date =July 27, 2023 | archive-date =September 4, 2023 | archive-url =https://web.archive.org/web/20230904222346/https://www.newspapers.com/article/philadelphia-daily-news-plotted-assassin/128883211/ | url-status =live }} Weaver said in court that followers of Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh had plotted to assassinate Turner and Frohnmayer. He said these allegations were reasons why releasing Rajneesh and his followers from jail would be "a clear and present danger to public officials". The guns purchased by the Rajneesh followers for the assassination plot had reportedly been dumped in a lake at Rancho Rajneesh; the lake was searched by U.S. Navy divers.{{cite news | last =Hidlay | first =Skip | title =3 Allegedly Planned Hit List, Paper Reports | work =The Charlotte Observer | page =17A | date =November 2, 1985 }} Scuba divers searched the lake for two days but did not find the guns.
Joseph Greene, a U.S. immigration agent, testified in court that FBI agents had learned of the assassination plot from a member of the organization who was in a witness protection program. Greene said that members involved in the assassination plot included Ma Anand Sheela, Dianne Yvonne Onang, and Alma Peralta.{{cite news | agency =United Press International | title =Guru's camp seen plotting assassination |work=Houston Chronicle | page =9 | date =November 1, 1985 }} The assassination plot was investigated by the FBI and the Oregon State Police.{{cite news | last =Long | first =James | title =New Case Readied Against Sheela | work =The Oregonian | page =B1 | date =June 26, 1990 }} Informants told law enforcement that, prior to her decision not to carry out the action, Ma Anand Sheela hoped Turner's death would prevent an Immigration and Naturalization Service investigation which she thought could lead to Rajneesh's arrest and deportation from the United States. Weaver stated "These attempts to assassinate public officials were because they were presenting an immigration case that might result in imprisonment" of Rajneesh.{{cite news | last = | title =Guru's Clan Planned Assassinations, INS Says | work =The Miami Herald | page =14A | date =November 1, 1985 }} "There were not simply plans, but at least one (assassination) attempt," said Weaver at the hearing.{{cite news | last =Morell | first =Ricki |author2=Tex O'Neill |author3=Jim Walser | title =Killings Plotted, U.S. Says: 2 Officials Probed Guru's Commune | work =The Charlotte Observer | page =1A | date =November 1, 1985 }}
A grand jury investigation led by Turner brought charges of "widespread immigration fraud" against members of Rajneeshpuram. Wiretapping crimes were discovered after Ma Anand Sheela had fled the commune in September 1985.{{cite news | agency =United Press International | title =AROUND THE NATION; 21 Followers of Guru Face Conpiracy Charges | work =The New York Times | date =December 21, 1985 | url =https://www.nytimes.com/1985/12/21/us/around-the-nation-21-followers-of-guru-face-conpiracy-charges.html | access-date =April 2, 2009 | archive-date =April 23, 2009 | archive-url =https://web.archive.org/web/20090423023928/http://www.nytimes.com/1985/12/21/us/around-the-nation-21-followers-of-guru-face-conpiracy-charges.html | url-status =live }} In December 1985, twenty-one followers of Rajneesh were indicted on wiretapping charges.{{cite news | last =| title =21 Disciples of Guru Indicted On Wiretaps |work=Boston Globe | date =December 21, 1985 }}
=Arrests and convictions=
Chief criminal assistant U.S. attorney Baron C. Sheldahl was assigned to prosecute the charges of federal wiretapping, and a special team from the United States Department of Justice Criminal Division was tasked with prosecuting the murder conspiracy charges. Four of the perpetrators were arrested in September 1990.{{cite news | last =| title =Guru's Disciples Charged |newspaper=The Washington Post | date = September 16, 1990 }} Catherine Jane Stork and Richard Kevin Langford were arrested in West Germany, Ann Phyllis McCarthy was arrested in South Africa, and Susan Hagan was arrested in England.{{cite news | last =Laatz | first =Joan | title =Rajneeshee Under Arrest In Conspiracy To Kill Official | work =The Oregonian | page =C01 | publisher =Oregonian Publishing Co. | date =October 6, 1990 }} In September 1990, Alma Peralta pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit murder. Peralta, who had served as Ma Anand Sheela's bodyguard and confidante, agreed to testify against the other defendants in the murder conspiracy. Under the terms of Peralta's plea agreement she received a sentence of two years in federal prison. Carol Matthews was arrested in Baden-Baden, Germany in October 1990 on charges of wiretapping and conspiracy to murder Turner, where she was held along with three other Rajneeshees.{{cite news | last =| title =Bhagwan Follower Held In Plot To Kill | work =The Seattle Times | page =A6 | date =October 6, 1990}}{{cite news | last =| title =Guru Follower Arrested In Plot To Kill Prosecutor | work =Seattle Post-Intelligencer | page =A2 | date =October 6, 1990}}{{cite news | title=Rajneesh Follower Freed Pending Trial | work =The Oregonian | page =D03 | publisher =Oregonian Publishing Co. | date = April 27, 1991}} Indictments were brought against Ma Anand Sheela and six other co-conspirators by a federal grand jury in November 1990.{{cite news | last=Painter | first=John Jr. | title =Indictment Outlines Plot to Murder U.S. Attorney | work =The Oregonian | pages =Page A01 | date =November 2, 1990 }}
In April 1991, Carol Matthews and Richard Kevin Langford (Swami Anugiten) were extradited from Germany to the United States in order to appear in federal court in Portland, Oregon. Law enforcement officials from the United States Marshals Service traveled to Frankfurt, Germany, and took custody of the Matthews and Langford at Rhine Main Airport. On April 15, 1991, Matthews and Langford appeared in federal court in Oregon, and both pleaded innocent to charges of conspiracy to commit murder and carrying out wiretapping.{{cite news | last =Painter | first =John Jr. | title =2 Rajneeshees Deny Murder Plot | work =The Oregonian | page =B01 | publisher =Oregonian Publishing Co. | date =April 16, 1991}} On April 25, 1991, Richard Kevin Langford pleaded guilty in federal court to participating in the murder conspiracy plot against Turner, and in exchange he received a sentence of five years in federal prison and the dismissal of other charges against him relating to firearms and wiretapping.{{cite news | last=Painter | first=John Jr. | title = Former Rajneeshee Pleads Guilty To Assassination Plot | work = The Oregonian | page = A01 | publisher = Oregonian Publishing Co. | date = April 26, 1991 }} Langford agreed to testify against the other members of the murder conspiracy. Langford wrote on his plea agreement form: "In 1985, meetings were held at the Rancho Rajneesh ... at which time the possible killing of the United States Attorney for Oregon was discussed. I participated in a number of these meetings and agreed with others to work toward that object." Prosecutor Timothy J. Reardon III stated that Langford had been a member of the Rajneesh commune in Oregon since it began in 1981, and that the government was able to prove he joined the murder conspiracy at a point in time after May 25, 1985. Reardon said that Langford was a member of a group called the "Circle of 38", which was the personal security force that guarded Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh, and that he had served as a weapons instructor and policeman at the commune. Langford told U.S. District Judge Malcolm F. Marsh that he had suggested that guns for the murder conspiracy could be bought in Texas, instructed the conspirators about suppressors, took responsibility for the weapons while they were in the commune, and disposed of them when members of the murder conspiracy decided to flee the U.S. for Europe. In July 1991, Carol Matthews, who did not offer any evidence against the others, entered an Alford plea indicating exactly what she did with her research, including dissuading Sheela, and was given a five-year sentence in federal court. She was the only one to serve a complete sentence and spent the longest amount of time in prison.
Catherine Jane Stork was convicted of the attempted murder of Rajneesh's physician Dr. George Meredith (Swami Devaraj) in 1986, and served almost three years in jail. After her release, agents from the FBI uncovered the plot to assassinate Turner, but Stork had already fled to Germany. She was indicted by a federal grand jury in 1990.{{cite news | last =| title =Cult member admits murder plot | work =SBS Australia | date =September 27, 2005 }} In 1991, the German government refused to extradite Stork back to the United States. In June 1991, U.S. prosecutors filed affidavits in the murder conspiracy case with the Higher Regional Court in Karlsruhe, Germany, as part of an attempt to extradite Catherine Jane Stork from Germany to the U.S.{{cite news | agency = Associated Press | title =Guru Followers' Plot To Kill Is Detailed – Documents Say U.S. Attorney Was The Target | work =The Seattle Times | page =B3 | date =June 30, 1991 }} The affidavits stated that all of the members in the murder conspiracy plot also belonged to a group of Rajneesh followers at the Oregon commune known as "the 38", and were trained in "commando tactics using Uzi semiautomatic rifles and handguns". David Berry Knapp (known to Rajneesh followers as Swami Krishna Deva) stated in an FBI affidavit that the murder conspiracy was motivated by Ma Anand Sheela's "tremendous anger" towards Turner.
Ma Anand Sheela served 29 months in a minimum-security federal prison for charges related to assault, attempted murder, arson, wiretapping and the 1984 bioterror attack in The Dalles, and moved to Switzerland after her release from prison in 1988. The assassination conspiracy was discovered after Sheela had left the United States, and as of 1999 she was still wanted by federal law enforcement for her role in the plot, and risked extradition if she crossed the Swiss border. Switzerland declined an extradition request from the United States, and instead tried her in a Swiss court. Sheela was found guilty of "criminal acts preparatory to the commission of murder" in 1999, and sentenced to time already served.{{cite news | last = | title =Catherine Jane Stubbs Pleads Guilty to Conspiring to Kill U.S. Attorney in Oregon in 1985 | work =United States Department of Justice | pages =#05–502 | date =September 26, 2005 | url =http://www.usdoj.gov/opa/pr/2005/September/05_crm_502.html | access-date =January 7, 2008 | archive-date =March 7, 2008 | archive-url =https://web.archive.org/web/20080307064858/http://www.usdoj.gov/opa/pr/2005/September/05_crm_502.html | url-status =live }}
Sally-Anne Croft and Susan Hagan were extradited from Britain in 1994, and were convicted by a jury decision on July 28, 1995, for their roles in the assassination plot.{{cite news | last =Senior | first =Jeanie | title = Anand Sheela tends patients in Switzerland: The former spokeswoman for Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh works in two private nursing homes | work = The Oregonian | date =December 26, 1999 }}{{cite news | last =Hogan | first =Dave | title =Jury Convicts Ex-Rajneeshees In Murder Plot | work =The Oregonian | page =A01 | publisher = Oregonian Publishing Co. | date =July 29, 1995 }} They had unsuccessfully attempted to appeal their extradition from Britain to Home Secretary Michael Howard.{{cite news | last =|agency=Reuters | title =Britain Rejects Bid To Avoid Extradition | work =Rocky Mountain News | date =April 1, 1994 }} During their trial the prosecution presented twenty-nine witnesses, including former followers of Rajneesh who placed both women in planning meetings where they discussed murdering Turner.{{cite news | last = | title =2 Ex-Cultists Guilty in Plot on U.S. Official | work =The New York Times | date =July 29, 1995 | url =https://www.nytimes.com/1995/07/29/us/2-ex-cultists-guilty-in-plot-on-us-official.html | access-date =January 7, 2008 | archive-date =January 10, 2014 | archive-url =https://web.archive.org/web/20140110015445/http://www.nytimes.com/1995/07/29/us/2-ex-cultists-guilty-in-plot-on-us-official.html | url-status =live }} David Berry Knapp, the former mayor of Rajneeshpuram, testified for the government in the case and implicated Croft and Hagan in the assassination conspiracy.{{cite news | last =|agency=Reuters | title =Ex-Cult Town Mayor Tells of Murder Plot: Two Rajneesh Followers Implicated In Alleged Plan to Kill Federal Prosecutor | work =Rocky Mountain News | date =July 7, 1995 }} Ava Kay Avalos (Ma Ava), a Rajneesh disciple, testified in the Croft case and stated that she had been part of the conspirators that plotted to assassinate Turner.{{cite news | last =| title =Rajneeshees' Plot to Kill Detailed | work =Spokane Spokesman-Review | date =July 11, 1995 }} In addition to Knapp and Avalos, co-conspirators Richard Kevin Langford, Phyllis Caldwell, and Alma Peralta testified in the case pursuant to conditional plea or immunity agreements. Both women were sentenced to five years in prison.{{cite news | last = | agency =Reuters | title =Two Former Rajineesh Followers Get Five Years for Conspiracy | work =The New York Times | date =December 3, 1995 | url =https://www.nytimes.com/1995/12/03/us/two-former-rajineesh-followers-get-five-years-for-conspiracy.html | access-date =January 7, 2008 | archive-date =November 3, 2012 | archive-url =https://web.archive.org/web/20121103161426/http://www.nytimes.com/1995/12/03/us/two-former-rajineesh-followers-get-five-years-for-conspiracy.html | url-status =live }}{{cite news | last =| title =Guru's Followers Get 5 Years In Plot to Kill U.S. Attorney |newspaper=The Washington Post | date =December 2, 1995 }} Croft and Hagan did not testify during their trial. "We hashed over everything—evidence, notes, evidence, notes. I think we did an absolutely fabulous job," said one of the jurors. At the sentencing for Croft and Hagan, the federal Judge Malcolm Marsh described them as "people of obvious goodwill who had committed an extremely serious offense against the criminal justice system." Prosecutor Tim Reardon called the conspiracy to commit assassination "a deadly serious crime aimed at the heart of the criminal justice system." Croft and Hagan were released from imprisonment at FCI Dublin, California, in April 1998, and returned to Britain.{{cite news | last =| title =Two Rajneesh Followers Released From Prison and May Be Deported | work = Seattle Post-Intelligencer | date = May 1, 1998
}}
In December 2002, Ann Phyllis McCarthy pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit murder, and was sentenced to one year in jail and a fine of US$10,000.{{cite news|agency=Associated Press |title=Last fugitive in case against Oregon cult members appears in court: A cult leader of the defunct Rajneesh Ranch in central Oregon pleaded guilty to a charge of conspiracy to murder a U.S. Attorney and was sentenced to a year in jail and a $10,000 fine. |publisher=CNN |date=December 21, 2002 |url=http://archives.cnn.com/2002/US/West/12/21/cult.plea.ap/index.html |access-date=January 7, 2008 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071115201908/http://archives.cnn.com/2002/US/West/12/21/cult.plea.ap/index.html |archive-date=November 15, 2007 |url-status=live |df=mdy }}{{cite news | last = | title =Former Rajneesh cult leader receives prison sentence | work =Consumer Health Digest | pages =#02–53 | publisher =National Council Against Health Fraud | date =December 31, 2002 | url =http://ncahf.net/digest02/02-53.html | access-date =January 7, 2008 | archive-url =https://web.archive.org/web/20090106103919/http://www.ncahf.net/digest02/02-53.html | archive-date =January 6, 2009 | url-status =dead }}{{cite news | last =Suo | first =Steve |author2=Alex Pulaski |title =Ex-Rajneeshee pleads guilty in conspiracy: But Turner, the intended victim, was not so satisfied when contacted about the plea | work =The Oregonian|publisher=Oregonian Publishing Co.|page=A01 | date =December 21, 2002|quote=McCarthy, once known as Ma Yoga Vidya, was fourth in command at what locals called "Rancho Rajneesh." }} McCarthy had served as fourth-in-command of Rajneeshpuram, and was known by Rajneesh's followers as Ma Yoga Vidya. Turner called the one-year prison sentence "laughable." In court statements, McCarthy stated "I cannot forgive myself for not being tougher at the time," and called her time with the group "psychological torture."
In February 2006, Stork became the last perpetrator sentenced in the political assassination plot, after ten months of negotiations with Oregon prosecutors. Stork offered to turn herself in and return to the United States after learning of her son's terminal brain tumor. Prior to sentencing, the court allowed her to travel to Australia to visit her son.{{cite news | last =Callimachi | first =Rukmini | title =Last of the Rajneeshees pleads guilty |agency=Associated Press | date =September 27, 2005 | url =http://www.newsreview.info/article/20050927/NEWS/50927003 | access-date =January 7, 2008}} In addition to charges of conspiracy to commit murder, Stork also pleaded guilty to the purchase of weapons in violation of federal firearms law. An Oregon judge sentenced her to five years' probation, and three months' time already served in a German jail.{{cite news | last1 =Parker | first1 =Jim | first2=Pat|last2=Dooris|agency=Associated Press | title =Final Rajneeshee sentenced in murder plot | work =Northwest NewsChannel 8 | publisher =KGW | date =January 30, 2006}}{{cite news | last = | title =Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh disciple gets probation in murder plot | work =The Seattle Times | date =January 31, 2006 | url =http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2002773871_webbhagwan31.html | access-date =January 7, 2008 | archive-date =July 26, 2009 | archive-url =https://web.archive.org/web/20090726083836/http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2002773871_webbhagwan31.html | url-status =live }} Turner thought she should have received a harsher sentence, and commented "This was a lying-in-wait conspiracy to murder me, a presidential appointee, and for a long time I slept with a loaded gun beside my bed." Though Stork could have faced life in prison, U.S. District Judge Judge Malcolm F. Marsh thought she had "seen the error of her ways." A federal prosecutor in the case described Stork as the "MVP" of the conspiracy, and said she was the designated assassin that was set to murder Turner. After her sentencing, Stork stated: "I actually conspired to kill Mr. Turner, it is up to me alone to face this terrible truth ... No person has the right to do what I did. I'm truly sorry." Stork returned to Germany after her sentencing.
In an affidavit, Timothy J. Reardon III, lead prosecutor for the United States Department of Justice in the case, stated Ma Anand Sheela had told members of the murder conspiracy that Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh had personally authorized the "necessary" murder of specific enemies of the Rajneesh commune. Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh paid a fine of US$400,000, agreed to plead guilty to immigration fraud, and was deported from the United States.{{cite news | last = | title =Disciples to Sell Guru's Rolls-Royces |newspaper=The Washington Post | page =A6 | date = November 16, 1985 | quote = Rajneesh, 53, left the United States early yesterday after pleading guilty to two of 35 federal immigration-fraud charges and agreeing to leave the country immediately.}}{{cite news | last = Zielenziger | first =Michael | title =Bhagwan Pleads Guilty, Leaves U.S. | work =San Jose Mercury News | page =1A | date =November 15, 1985 |quote=Indian guru Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh hastily abandoned the United States on Thursday night after pleading guilty to federal charges of immigration fraud. Rajneesh was fined $400,000, including $140,000 in court costs, and was given a 10-year suspended sentence after admitting he falsified his own immigration forms and conspired to arrange "sham marriages" to allow his disciples to stay in the United States.}}{{cite news | last = | title = Bhagwan Changes His Plea To Guilty | work =The Seattle Times | page =A1 | date =November 14, 1985 |quote=Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh, 53-year-old spiritual leader, has changed his plea to guilty on charges of immigration fraud, the U.S. attorney's office in Portland announced today. The guru may be allowed to leave the country.}}{{cite book | last =Lattin | first =Don | title =Following Our Bliss: How the Spiritual Ideals of the Sixties Shape Our Lives Today | publisher =HarperCollins | year =2004 | page =[https://archive.org/details/followingourblis00donl/page/102 102] | isbn =0-06-073063-3 | quote =In the end, Rajneesh pleaded guilty to immigration fraud and was deported. | url =https://archive.org/details/followingourblis00donl/page/102 }}{{cite book | last =Doniger | first =Wendy | title =Britannica Encyclopedia of World Religions | publisher =Encyclopædia Britannica | year =2006 | page =902 | isbn = 1-59339-491-8 | quote =In 1985 Rajneesh pleaded guilty to immigration fraud and was deported from the United States.}} He agreed to leave the United States and not return unless given permission first from the United States Attorney General.{{cite book | last =McCann | first =Joseph T. | title =Terrorism on American Soil: A Concise History of Plots and Perpetrators from the Famous to the Forgotten | publisher =Sentient Publications | year =2006 | page =[https://archive.org/details/terrorismonameri00jose/page/157 157] | isbn =1-59181-049-3 | quote =Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh ultimately pleaded guilty to immigration fraud and agreed to pay a $400,000 fine. He left the United States and agreed not to re-enter the country without the permission of the U.S. Attorney General. For a period of time after leaving the United States, the Bhagwan had considerable difficulty finding a country that would accept him. Nevertheless, he was never prosecuted for any of the more serious crimes perpetrated by cult members, including the salmonella poisoning. | url =https://archive.org/details/terrorismonameri00jose/page/157 }} Joseph T. McCann writes in Terrorism on American Soil "Nevertheless, he was never prosecuted for any of the more serious crimes perpetrated by cult members, including the salmonella poisoning."
= Sentences =
;Conspiracy to assassinate a United States Attorney
;Wiretapping, and other charges, testified in assassination case
class="wikitable" | ||
Perpetrator
! Conviction ! Sentence | ||
---|---|---|
Ava Kay Avalos (a.k.a. Ma Ava) | Complete immunity from prosecution, May 1990 | Required to testify in U.S. v. Croft, on condition that false testimony would result in rescinding the immunity agreement. |
David Berry Knapp (a.k.a. Swami Krishna Deva) | Plea deal in 1990, in exchange for testimony in U.S. v. Croft | Received two years in prison for making false statements. |
Phyllis Caldwell (a.k.a. Ma Deva Ritka){{cite news
| last=Painter | first=John Jr. | title =Death-Plot Facts Come To Light | work =The Oregonian | page =C01 | publisher =Oregonian Publishing Co. | date =June 30, 1991}} | Plea deal in 1990, in exchange for testimony in U.S. v Croft | Five years' probation following guilty plea to wiretapping. |
See also
{{Portal|1980s|Law}}
References
{{Reflist}}
Further reading
- U.S. v. Croft, 124 F.3d 1109 (C.A.9 (Or.), 1997), United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, Decided September 5, 1997
External links
{{Commons category|Rajneesh movement}}
{{Commons category|Federal Bureau of Investigation audio files on Rajneesh movement}}
{{wikisource|U.S. v. Croft 124 F.3d 1109 C.A.9 (Or.), 1997}}
{{wikisource|Catherine Jane Stubbs Pleads Guilty to Conspiring to Kill U.S. Attorney in Oregon in 1985}}
- [https://www.oregonhistoryproject.org/articles/biographies/ma-anand-sheela-biography/ Oregon History Project Biography of Ma Anand Sheela]
{{Osho movement}}
{{Oregon Modern History}}
{{Portal bar|Law|Oregon|Politics|1980s}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Rajneeshee Assassination Plot, 1985}}
Category:Failed assassination attempts in the United States
Category:Religiously motivated violence in the United States
Category:Terrorist incidents in Oregon
Category:Terrorist incidents in the United States in 1985
Category:20th-century American trials
Category:United States District Court for the District of Oregon cases