International Cultic Studies Association
 Department: Group Report - Hare Krishna

Vol. 1, No. 1, 2001

_______________________________________________
Featured Group Report

Hare Krishna: news articles 1986

 
ISKCON in the News Articles from the Cult Observer 1984-1999 

1986   

January/February

Krishna Adopt-a-Cow Program (p. 12) In an appeal modeled after charities that help impoverished children, a central Pennsylvania dairy farm run by the Hare Krishnas is developing a program of cow care that is expected to attract funds from Hindus, vegetarians, and animal lovers.

The program is called Adopt-a-Cow. Contributions are tax-deductible and credit cards are accepted.  The program has three options, as described in ads in newspapers for ethnic Indians and in solicitation letters sent to 15,000 Hindus across the country.

The $30-a-month package buys an 8-by-10 color photo of the cow, sweets made from its milk, newsletters on its birthday and on other occasions such as pregnancy, and a weekend "vacation" at the Juniata County cow farm. From The Denver Post Dec. 15, 1985  

Krishna Allegedly Attacks Leader to "Cleanse" Group (p. 12) Hare Krishna leaders from around the world gathered at New Vrindaban's Palace of Gold [near Moundsville, WVA) for a vigil as the "dean of the faith," Kirtanananda Bhaktipada, remained unconscious and in critical condition yesterday. 

Bhaktipada was hospitalized with severe head wounds after he was attacked with an iron bar. Marshall County Sheriff Donald Bordenkircher said Hare Krishna member Mike Stockman, 28, was arrested. Stockman told officers he had acted to "cleanse the church," the Sheriff said. 

Bhaktipada, 48, is credited with building the Palace of Gold, an ornate temple that attracts thousands of tourists and devotees to New Vrindaban each year. About 600 people live in the religious community. From the AP and USA Today Oct 31 and Nov. 1, 1985

March/April

Krishna Protest vs. Soviet (p. 31) The occasion of the recent Geneva Summit conference was used for a protest march along Lake Geneva by Krishna devotees, according to the Daily Telegraph of Nov. 30, 1985 They handed out cards stating that Krishnas are at present being held in Soviet prisons, labor camps, and psychiatric hospitals. Russian trials of Krishna devotees have been reported from as far apart as Siberia and Armenia. ISKCON in Russia exists in underground fashion, in secret private meetings. According to their statement in Geneva, there are 200 initiated members in the USSR plus 10,000 Soviet citizens who practice Krishna consciousness. 

Krishnas. Try Comeback (p. 5) On its twentieth anniversary in America, the followers of the Hare Krishna movement are diminished in number, less publicly visible, divided by quarreling leaders, and dependent on part-time devotees who wear conventional dress at outside jobs. But the movement seems to be surviving. 

The decline of the counter-culture, which fed recruitment and financed the once-lucrative incense business was a difficulty faced in the late 1970s, according to E. Burke Rochford, Jr., a Tulsa University sociologist and author of the recently published book, "Hare Krishna in America." The death of founder Swami Prabhupada in 1977 and the division of the mission field among 11 contentious gurus paralleled the decline in membership from 10,000 to 2,000. But the shift from full to part-time commitment, and the welcoming of Indian Hindus, has helped says, Rochford.   

Minnesota sociologist Thomas Robbins agrees with Rochford and the Krishnas themselves that the leadership split has hurt. "Some of the gurus let power and authority go to their head [sic]," creating disillusionment and cynicism, said the movements national director of interreligious affairs. All three agree that the "guru issue," which failed to resolve itself at a worldwide leadership meeting in West Virginia last summer, is the movement's biggest problem. From the Seattle Post Intelligencer Feb. 8, 1986

May/June

Ex-Krishna Charged in Krishna Death (p. 28) Thomas Drescher, formerly a member of the Hare Krishna group, was charged in Moundsville, WVA yesterday with the May 22 shooting death of Stephen Bryant, a Hare Krishna devotee who was a persistent critic of the organization. Drescher was also arraigned on charges of criminal homicide in connection with the June 1983 shooting of Charles SL Dennis near the Krishna's New Vrindaban, WVA community.

Bryant's parents said that their son left New Vrindaban after a dispute with its founder, whom he tried to discredit, along with the Krishna religion itself Authorities said that Drescher and St. Denis, who both lived near New Vrindaban at the time using spiritual names, had been at odds over the sale of a house. From the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette June 6, 1986   

September

Ex-Krishna Abuser Gets 50 Years (p. 8) Former Hare Krishna member Kenneth Capoferri, 39, was given a maximum 50-year sentence yesterday for molesting four children at a West Los Angeles child-care center run by the sect where he worked from 1982-84. An attorney for the Hare Krishnas urged the maximum sentence "to purge our community of the feelings of outrage, pain, anxiety, and confusion" caused by the molestations, which are said to have created serious psychological problems for at least one of the affected children. From the Los Angeles Times July 17, 1986

Killing Sparks Probe of Krishna Sect (pp. 4-7)  The recent slaying of a disenchanted Hare Krishna devotee who persistently alleged wrongdoing and deceit in the movement has sent new ripples through the divided Krishna community.   

Since the fatal shooting May 22 in Los Angels or Steve Bryant, 33, and the arrest of a Krishna follower in the murder, plans for a broad investigation by a federal grand jury have been announced. Even the sect itself had decided to conduct an internal probe of possible wrong doing by Krishna members.

Both Bryant's death and his allegations of wrong doing by Krishna  leaders will be examined by a federal grand jury in Moundsville, W. Va. That is the city nearest the 600-member commune and Indian-Style palace that is a showcase settlement for the 21year-old International Society for Krishna Consciousness.

The Hindu sect, which drew on young Americans' fascination for Eastern meditation and chanting in the late 1960s, attracted between 5 000 and 10,000 followers in the first dozen years. But the movement has also been embroiled in legal battles over airport soliciting and parental charges of kidnapping vulnerable youth into the order.   

Authority Questioned  

Internal conflict surfaced after the 1977 death of the sect's 82-year-old founder from India, A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada, when 11 gurus carved out areas of dominance.

Since then, members of a growing, internal reform movement - estimated to number about 300 Krishna believers -have questioned the authority of the leadership and accused some leaders of condoning or participating in immoral practices and physical intimidation of followers. Most of the self-styled reformers - which included Bryant - are initiates from the days of Prabhupada; Bryant was easily the most vocal among them. 

He had joined the street-chanting, saffron-robed sect in Detroit when he was 21. As. his disenchantment with the movement grew after Prabhupada's death, he began writing a book he called "The Guru Business," and he hoped to expose alleged wrongdoings by leaving hefty packets of photo copied "evidence" with law enforcement officials and newspapers across the country. 

Family Breakup  Bryant's crusade initially stemmed, by his own account, from the breakup of his family at the Krishnas' 4,000 acre New Vrindaban settlement - largest in the Krishna movement - which lies perched in the hills of West Virginia about 70 miles south of Pittsburgh, Pa. He attempted to prove that the guru-founder of New Vrindaban, Kirtananda Swami Bhaktipada (formerly Keith Ham), lured Bryant's wife into becoming a devotee several years ago, then helped her get a divorce and prevented Bryant's access to his two sons. Spokesmen for the community countered that Mrs. Bryant left her husband because she wanted to.  Bryant progressively broadened his attack by collecting interviews from others who charged that some among the movement's almost three dozen gurus manipulated devotees, broke up marriages, and allowed child abuse and drug trafficking - claims which the dissidents said went unacknowledged or were denied by the movement's various leaders. Bryant also challenged the legitimacy of the 11 gurus who immediately succeeded the founder. 

In the year before his death, Bryant tried to drum up support for his claims by traveling to West Virginia and California. Convinced that he was a marked man, he was constantly on the move, living out of his van and disguising his appearance. 

Krishna spokesmen denied Bryant's  accusations. An internal review by a special society committee last year concluded that his claims of wrongdoing were largely unfounded. And a New Vrindaban spokesman this month claimed that Bryant and like-minded supporters were not true devotees, that in fact Bryant "had not followed our religious practices for at least the last seven years." 

But Bryant's fellow dissidents continue to maintain that critics of the sect are in danger. Several followers said in interviews that they have been threatened themselves or have heard certain sect leaders mention violence as a way to deal with internal critics. 

According to a California member, who insisted on anonymity, when Bryant's name come up during a gathering of Krishna leaders in September at New Vrindaban, he heard a ranking commune member allegedly say: "That guy should be afraid. There are 250 residents here looking to blow his head off." 

And officials of the reform-oriented Berkeley temple announced early this month that they had received anonymous threats warning them to drop their attempt through federal court to gain control of the temple's assets. 

For the most part, dissidents interviewed gave information only on the condition that they not be identified by name, profession, or city of residence for fear of reprisals, they said, to themselves or their families. 

Spokesmen in the West Virginia Krishna community and a Los Angeles based guru all denied knowing of any threats to followers or non-members and, by contrast, insisted that nonviolence - even to the point of not killing animals or harming insects is an inviolable tenet of their faith. 

Nevertheless, Marshall County Assessor Alfred (Pinky) Clark, who is attempting to levy heavier taxes on the commercial aspects of New Vrindaban, said he obtained a gun permit and a revolver after hearing of Bryant's slaying. Clark, who lives within three miles of the commune, said he had received threats in the months before Bryant's death, and that a day laborer at the commune's farm told him after Bryant's death that "the talk was going around to 'get Clark! " 

"We're being very watchful and cautious, although things have quieted down since the announcement of a federal grand jury investigation," Clark said. 

Problem of Violence Over the years, gurus and violence have presented a problem for some Krishna communities, although possession of the weapons has been defended by Krishna leaders as a defensive need.

Law enforcement authorities in 1980 found a variety of weapons at the Krishna farm of Berkeley guru Hansadutta (Hans Kary), and later confiscated an illegal submachine gun found in the trunk of a car used by the guru. Kary lost his position in 1984 after, a conviction on gunfire and felony vandalism charges for shooting up a storefront and car dealership. He has been living at New Vrindaban since then. 

Bhaktipada, when told by a Times -reporter in 1981 that one of his New Vrindaban devotees had recently bought a large number of weapons at local shops, said: "I have no objection to a certain number of persons in the community having weapons for self-protection. But they should be in the hands of cool, level-headed Krishnaconscious persons . . . If there is a need for violence, we can become violent." Several weeks later, Bhaktipada said the young man agreed to sell the guns "at my suggestion." 

Last October, the West 'Virginia guru was bludgeoned into a coma and hospitalized for 36 days by a former devotee, Michael C. Shockman, who is serving a 15-mondi prison term after pleading guilty to malicious wounding charges. 

Statements to Reporters Only two months later, Bryant himself sent to reporters statements saying that death was scripturally justified for gurus guilty of the crimes he had been alleging. However, he disavowed any personal intent to carry out that threat or to conspire to kill anyone himself.

Bryant's own vocal belligerency and illegal possession of a gun landed him in the Moundsville jail in February. He staged a three-week hunger strike, writing to a Times reporter from jail on Feb. 15: "I've pretty much reached my rope's end in combating this domestic cult on my own and so I've decided to fast to death if I don't get some Gov't help." 

Bryant's lawyer on Moundsville, David R. Gold, later said: "I thought he was realistically hopeful that he would single-handedly be able to mobilize public opinion against the [New Vrindaban] community." Bryant was convicted for carrying an unregistered gun, which Gold said Bryant got for defensive purposes, then was released pending an appeal and returned to California. 

In the early morning hours of May 22, Bryant left a friend’s home in the Palms section of Los Angeles' Westside, telling him he was going to park his van down the block so as not to bring trouble to his friend's doorstep. "I try not to be paranoid, but it’s the least precaution I can take," his friend quoted Bryant as saying. Not long afterward, the friend said he heard two shots and ran outside to look, but then dismissed his fears that something had happened to Bryant. 

Later that morning, Bryant, known as Solucana to other devotees, was found shot twice in the head and slumped over the steering wheel of his parked car and locked van, according to authorities. 

Some of his friends told Los Angeles police to look for a man named Tirtha, the Krishna name for Thomas Arthur Drescher, 37, a onetime follower at New Vrindaban with a reputation for violent behavior. 

Five days later, Drescher was arrested in Kent, Ohio. The warrant for his arrest, however, was issued by West Virginia authorities in connection with the unsolved disappearance in 1983 of another former Krishna devotee, Charles St. Denis, from the New Vrindaban area. 

(Drescher was indicted earlier this month in Moundsville along with Krishna devotee Daniel Reid, 31, who is lodged in a Los Angeles jail, on first-degree murder charges based in witnesses' accounts of St. Denis' fate. The principal witness, Randol Gorby, was seriously injured in an explosion at his home the day after Drescher was apprehended in Ohio, authorities said. A number of commune members, according to their attorney, James B. Lees, have quietly cooperated with authorities since 1984 in the investigation of the St. Denis disappearance.) 

'Surveillance Notes' Kent Police Detective Ronald Piatt and his partner said that when they arrested Drescher, they found on him 11 surveillance notes" describing Bryant's van, his physical appearance and his movements in Los Angeles. Drescher also carried $4,000 in cash.

With Drescher when he was arrested, said Piatt, was a Krishna priest from Cleveland who had clippings from three newspapers about the death of Bryant and written instructions of unknown origin saying that if Drescher were ever wanted by the police, he should be sent to a temple in New York, then flown to India. At the time of his arrest, Drescher's car was packed with clothing and other goods, and his rented mobile home was found nearly empty, Piatt said. 

"We think he was in the process of activating those plans [to leave the country]" Piatt said. 

The Krishna priest, Terry Shelden, was held for three days on a charge of carrying a concealed weapon - a hooked-blade utility knife - but the charged was dismissed. He has since disappeared from the Cleveland Temple and his whereabouts are unknown, Piatt said. 

The detective added that a fire of undetermined origin burned Drescher's mobile home July 5. 

Drescher is now in custody in West Virginia. The Los Angeles County district attorney's office is seeking to extradite him to California to stand trial for Bryant's murder. 

New Vrindaban officials have denied any connection with Bryant's death and characterized Drescher as a follower who fell from favor with the community three years ago. After living on his own property near New Vrindaban for several years, Drescher moved to northeast Ohio late last year. 

Apology From Jail Swami Bhakdpada said Drescher wrote him from jail to apologize if he had caused the commune any difficulty. The guru said he responded with a short note advising Drescher "to chant the name of God and to depend on God's help and mercy."

New Vrindaban spokesman Dick Dezio said he welcomed the announced plans of U.S. Atty. William Kolibash to have a federal grand jury in Moundsville examine the murder of Bryant and the dissident's charges of illicit activity at New Vrindaban. 

Bhaktipada declared earlier that the investigation will show "we are religious people who have no other business but to worship God." 

Dezio accused Bryant of some of the same charges Bryant had leveled against the West Virginia commune - drug use, "a fetish for guns," child abuse, and threats of violence. 

"We have heard a lot of stories and a lot of claims, but no one has ever come forth with any evidence [about our community]," Dezio said. Regarding interviewed dissidents who declined to reveal their identities in print for fear of reprisals, Dezio said, "I don't know anyone within the movement who has to be feared." 

Charges by dissidents that a climate of fear prevails were also rejected by Los Angeles-based guru Ramesvara (Robert Grant), 35, who said that, other than Bryant's death, there has been "no incidents of violence against a disgruntled person" in his jurisdiction. Ramesvara, who is one of the original 11 successors to the society founder, supervises Southern California, parts of the Midwest, the New York area, Hawaii and Japan. 

"As far as I know, Steve Bryant didn't have any bad feelings toward myself and, similarly, I had no bad feeling toward him," Ramesvara said. "He wasn't disturbing us. He came and went very secretly. A number of our core members attended his funeral in Los Angeles; they wanted to show their sympathy and outrage." 

At the Berkeley temple, where another of Steve Bryant’s vehicles still sits in the parking lot, Jagat Guru (Jack Hebner), the reform-minded temple president, said: "I can't bring myself to believe, though some do, that Bryant's death would be ordered. 

"I feel his assassins are fringe members who took it upon themselves to do it. But whatever the truth is we do not want it to be hidden," Jagat Guru said.  Krishna followers interested in reform have grown steadily to about half of the leadership ranks, most of them longtime followers initiated by the sect’s founder, Jagat Guru said. 

"There is no room and no tolerance of riffraff in the garb of a preacher who is interested in simply taking church money for liquor, drugs, women, or whatever else he might enjoy," he said. 

Murky Authority  The society has an international Governing Body Commission, but William Ogle, a Knoxville, Tenn., lawyer, who acts as its general counsel, conceded in an interview that the administrative authority of the commission in relation to the gurus is still murky. "It is no secret we are going through a serious developmental state in the aftermath of the founder's departure," Ogle said. 

On July 11, the commission's executive committee announced that it had started its own investigation into Bryant’s death. "We want to find out if anyone in our group was involved and if so, to what extent. We would take disciplinary action irrespective of what position the person held in the society," said Michael Grant, public affairs director for the Los Angeles temple, who said he spoke on behalf of the executive committee. 

When Ogle served as commission chairman in 1985, he directed a special committee to look into Bryant's allegations. 

The committee concluded that it was an "injudicious mistake" for New Vrindaban to initiate Bryant's wife as a devotee of the guru without his knowledge. (Bryant said he was in India on a business trip at the time.) At the same time, the committee noted that Bryant's "unsubstantiated allegations" against the West Virginia guru were "blasphemous" to the highest degree. 

Disagreements Not Allowed One longtime Krishna follower, who said he had been "roughed up" by disciples because of his open disagreements with the new gurus, said serious criticism of the leadership is interpreted by loyal followers as "blasphemy against their spiritual master, [meaning] you can take action against [the offenders]."

Yet another dissident in California agreed: "No one is supposed to question these guys. You worship them as perfect or you are in trouble." 

With the matter of authority in the movement still unresolved, the number of gurus has grown from about 20 last year to nearly three dozen. 

"There has been a lot of negotiation and infighting in the society recently, but I think the political situation can be rectified," said Nalini Kanta. (Tom Hopke), a Los Angeles devotee. He said he is the Peace and Freedom Party candidate for Congress in the 23rd District this year and an astrologer for the Krishna movement. 

"I've been vocally opposed [to abuses], but I'm not fearful for my own life," Nalini Kanta said, indicating that he is not at all as "vociferous, so radical," as Bryant was. 

Dictatorial Rule He said a big group of one-time disciples of the founder "think [the movement] is run in a very authoritarian way and that it should be done in a more cooperative way. I am against the philosophy that one particular guru should have dictatorial rule in his area. Prabhupada could do that because of his purity."

Former Berkeley temple official Paramahansa Swami said the root of the dispute is really spiritual authority. The reform influence at Berkeley and the conservative ideology at New Vrindaban "are exactly at the opposite ends of the spiritual movement," Nalini Kanta said. 

"In the last three years in that temple, 10 different people have 10 different philosophies," said Paramahansa, who maintained that the unquestioned authority of a spiritually qualified master is necessary to avoid religious "anarchy."  By John Dart The Los Angeles Times April 21, 1986 Copyright Los Angeles Times Reprinted by Permission  

October  

Krishna Urged to Settle Conflict (p. 4) A U.S. district court judge in San Francisco has urged Berkeley Hare Krishna members to reach an out-of-court settlement in their suit accusing West Virginia members of trying to take over the Berkeley Temple. The leader of the West Virginia group and the ousted head of the Berkeley group are also alleged in the suit to have raided $1 million in assets of two California Krishna groups. A trial is set for September of next year. The West Virginia group is being investigated by a federal grand jury in connection with the murder of an ex-member. From the Los Angeles Times August 9, 1986

Krishnas Protest Soviets (p. 14)   Members of the Hare Krishna group demonstrated yesterday outside the Soviet Consulate in Woollahra protesting against religious persecution in the Soviet Union. The protest, during which 80 Krishnas released 25 doves, coincided with the publication of a report - authenticated by non-Krishna sources - of civil rights abuses affecting the Krishnas and other minority religions. 

Official Soviet publications have listed Krishna Consciousness as the third greatest threat to modem Russia, after Western imperialism and rock and roll music. From the Sydney [Australia] Morning Herald, May 6, 1986  

November

Security Tighter at Krishna Commune (p. 14)   Security at the Hare Krishna commune of New Vrindaban in West Virginia has been increased in the wake of a grand jury probe into the death of a Krishna dissident who had accused Krishna leaders of allowing child abuse and drug trafficking.

The 650 member commune, about 10 miles west of Moundsville, has tightened security, and 10 armed disciples patrol the grounds of the Palace of Gold, the elaborate and glittering Krishna temple, which has become a regional tourist attraction. 

Commune leader Kirtinananda Swami Bhaktipada, badly beaten in November by a disgruntled member, has moved to a more isolated area and is rarely without a German shepherd attack dog.   

A Charleston tour director says that the controversy has not kept tourists away, although he did cancel spring and summer bus tours after a typhoid and hepatitis outbreak at New Vrindaban. "I think the intrigue of what's going on would bring even more tourists," he said.  From the Dayton [OH] Journal September 5, 1986  

 

 
       
_____________________________________________ ^
 

International Cultic Studies Association
 Department: Group Report - Hare Krishna

Vol. 1, No. 1, 2001

_______________________________________________
Featured Group Report

Hare Krishna: news articles 1986

 
ISKCON in the News Articles from the Cult Observer 1984-1999 

1986   

January/February

Krishna Adopt-a-Cow Program (p. 12) In an appeal modeled after charities that help impoverished children, a central Pennsylvania dairy farm run by the Hare Krishnas is developing a program of cow care that is expected to attract funds from Hindus, vegetarians, and animal lovers.

The program is called Adopt-a-Cow. Contributions are tax-deductible and credit cards are accepted.  The program has three options, as described in ads in newspapers for ethnic Indians and in solicitation letters sent to 15,000 Hindus across the country.

The $30-a-month package buys an 8-by-10 color photo of the cow, sweets made from its milk, newsletters on its birthday and on other occasions such as pregnancy, and a weekend "vacation" at the Juniata County cow farm. From The Denver Post Dec. 15, 1985  

Krishna Allegedly Attacks Leader to "Cleanse" Group (p. 12) Hare Krishna leaders from around the world gathered at New Vrindaban's Palace of Gold [near Moundsville, WVA) for a vigil as the "dean of the faith," Kirtanananda Bhaktipada, remained unconscious and in critical condition yesterday. 

Bhaktipada was hospitalized with severe head wounds after he was attacked with an iron bar. Marshall County Sheriff Donald Bordenkircher said Hare Krishna member Mike Stockman, 28, was arrested. Stockman told officers he had acted to "cleanse the church," the Sheriff said. 

Bhaktipada, 48, is credited with building the Palace of Gold, an ornate temple that attracts thousands of tourists and devotees to New Vrindaban each year. About 600 people live in the religious community. From the AP and USA Today Oct 31 and Nov. 1, 1985

March/April

Krishna Protest vs. Soviet (p. 31) The occasion of the recent Geneva Summit conference was used for a protest march along Lake Geneva by Krishna devotees, according to the Daily Telegraph of Nov. 30, 1985 They handed out cards stating that Krishnas are at present being held in Soviet prisons, labor camps, and psychiatric hospitals. Russian trials of Krishna devotees have been reported from as far apart as Siberia and Armenia. ISKCON in Russia exists in underground fashion, in secret private meetings. According to their statement in Geneva, there are 200 initiated members in the USSR plus 10,000 Soviet citizens who practice Krishna consciousness. 

Krishnas. Try Comeback (p. 5) On its twentieth anniversary in America, the followers of the Hare Krishna movement are diminished in number, less publicly visible, divided by quarreling leaders, and dependent on part-time devotees who wear conventional dress at outside jobs. But the movement seems to be surviving. 

The decline of the counter-culture, which fed recruitment and financed the once-lucrative incense business was a difficulty faced in the late 1970s, according to E. Burke Rochford, Jr., a Tulsa University sociologist and author of the recently published book, "Hare Krishna in America." The death of founder Swami Prabhupada in 1977 and the division of the mission field among 11 contentious gurus paralleled the decline in membership from 10,000 to 2,000. But the shift from full to part-time commitment, and the welcoming of Indian Hindus, has helped says, Rochford.   

Minnesota sociologist Thomas Robbins agrees with Rochford and the Krishnas themselves that the leadership split has hurt. "Some of the gurus let power and authority go to their head [sic]," creating disillusionment and cynicism, said the movements national director of interreligious affairs. All three agree that the "guru issue," which failed to resolve itself at a worldwide leadership meeting in West Virginia last summer, is the movement's biggest problem. From the Seattle Post Intelligencer Feb. 8, 1986

May/June

Ex-Krishna Charged in Krishna Death (p. 28) Thomas Drescher, formerly a member of the Hare Krishna group, was charged in Moundsville, WVA yesterday with the May 22 shooting death of Stephen Bryant, a Hare Krishna devotee who was a persistent critic of the organization. Drescher was also arraigned on charges of criminal homicide in connection with the June 1983 shooting of Charles SL Dennis near the Krishna's New Vrindaban, WVA community.

Bryant's parents said that their son left New Vrindaban after a dispute with its founder, whom he tried to discredit, along with the Krishna religion itself Authorities said that Drescher and St. Denis, who both lived near New Vrindaban at the time using spiritual names, had been at odds over the sale of a house. From the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette June 6, 1986   

September

Ex-Krishna Abuser Gets 50 Years (p. 8) Former Hare Krishna member Kenneth Capoferri, 39, was given a maximum 50-year sentence yesterday for molesting four children at a West Los Angeles child-care center run by the sect where he worked from 1982-84. An attorney for the Hare Krishnas urged the maximum sentence "to purge our community of the feelings of outrage, pain, anxiety, and confusion" caused by the molestations, which are said to have created serious psychological problems for at least one of the affected children. From the Los Angeles Times July 17, 1986

Killing Sparks Probe of Krishna Sect (pp. 4-7)  The recent slaying of a disenchanted Hare Krishna devotee who persistently alleged wrongdoing and deceit in the movement has sent new ripples through the divided Krishna community.   

Since the fatal shooting May 22 in Los Angels or Steve Bryant, 33, and the arrest of a Krishna follower in the murder, plans for a broad investigation by a federal grand jury have been announced. Even the sect itself had decided to conduct an internal probe of possible wrong doing by Krishna members.

Both Bryant's death and his allegations of wrong doing by Krishna  leaders will be examined by a federal grand jury in Moundsville, W. Va. That is the city nearest the 600-member commune and Indian-Style palace that is a showcase settlement for the 21year-old International Society for Krishna Consciousness.

The Hindu sect, which drew on young Americans' fascination for Eastern meditation and chanting in the late 1960s, attracted between 5 000 and 10,000 followers in the first dozen years. But the movement has also been embroiled in legal battles over airport soliciting and parental charges of kidnapping vulnerable youth into the order.   

Authority Questioned  

Internal conflict surfaced after the 1977 death of the sect's 82-year-old founder from India, A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada, when 11 gurus carved out areas of dominance.

Since then, members of a growing, internal reform movement - estimated to number about 300 Krishna believers -have questioned the authority of the leadership and accused some leaders of condoning or participating in immoral practices and physical intimidation of followers. Most of the self-styled reformers - which included Bryant - are initiates from the days of Prabhupada; Bryant was easily the most vocal among them. 

He had joined the street-chanting, saffron-robed sect in Detroit when he was 21. As. his disenchantment with the movement grew after Prabhupada's death, he began writing a book he called "The Guru Business," and he hoped to expose alleged wrongdoings by leaving hefty packets of photo copied "evidence" with law enforcement officials and newspapers across the country. 

Family Breakup  Bryant's crusade initially stemmed, by his own account, from the breakup of his family at the Krishnas' 4,000 acre New Vrindaban settlement - largest in the Krishna movement - which lies perched in the hills of West Virginia about 70 miles south of Pittsburgh, Pa. He attempted to prove that the guru-founder of New Vrindaban, Kirtananda Swami Bhaktipada (formerly Keith Ham), lured Bryant's wife into becoming a devotee several years ago, then helped her get a divorce and prevented Bryant's access to his two sons. Spokesmen for the community countered that Mrs. Bryant left her husband because she wanted to.  Bryant progressively broadened his attack by collecting interviews from others who charged that some among the movement's almost three dozen gurus manipulated devotees, broke up marriages, and allowed child abuse and drug trafficking - claims which the dissidents said went unacknowledged or were denied by the movement's various leaders. Bryant also challenged the legitimacy of the 11 gurus who immediately succeeded the founder. 

In the year before his death, Bryant tried to drum up support for his claims by traveling to West Virginia and California. Convinced that he was a marked man, he was constantly on the move, living out of his van and disguising his appearance. 

Krishna spokesmen denied Bryant's  accusations. An internal review by a special society committee last year concluded that his claims of wrongdoing were largely unfounded. And a New Vrindaban spokesman this month claimed that Bryant and like-minded supporters were not true devotees, that in fact Bryant "had not followed our religious practices for at least the last seven years." 

But Bryant's fellow dissidents continue to maintain that critics of the sect are in danger. Several followers said in interviews that they have been threatened themselves or have heard certain sect leaders mention violence as a way to deal with internal critics. 

According to a California member, who insisted on anonymity, when Bryant's name come up during a gathering of Krishna leaders in September at New Vrindaban, he heard a ranking commune member allegedly say: "That guy should be afraid. There are 250 residents here looking to blow his head off." 

And officials of the reform-oriented Berkeley temple announced early this month that they had received anonymous threats warning them to drop their attempt through federal court to gain control of the temple's assets. 

For the most part, dissidents interviewed gave information only on the condition that they not be identified by name, profession, or city of residence for fear of reprisals, they said, to themselves or their families. 

Spokesmen in the West Virginia Krishna community and a Los Angeles based guru all denied knowing of any threats to followers or non-members and, by contrast, insisted that nonviolence - even to the point of not killing animals or harming insects is an inviolable tenet of their faith. 

Nevertheless, Marshall County Assessor Alfred (Pinky) Clark, who is attempting to levy heavier taxes on the commercial aspects of New Vrindaban, said he obtained a gun permit and a revolver after hearing of Bryant's slaying. Clark, who lives within three miles of the commune, said he had received threats in the months before Bryant's death, and that a day laborer at the commune's farm told him after Bryant's death that "the talk was going around to 'get Clark! " 

"We're being very watchful and cautious, although things have quieted down since the announcement of a federal grand jury investigation," Clark said. 

Problem of Violence Over the years, gurus and violence have presented a problem for some Krishna communities, although possession of the weapons has been defended by Krishna leaders as a defensive need.

Law enforcement authorities in 1980 found a variety of weapons at the Krishna farm of Berkeley guru Hansadutta (Hans Kary), and later confiscated an illegal submachine gun found in the trunk of a car used by the guru. Kary lost his position in 1984 after, a conviction on gunfire and felony vandalism charges for shooting up a storefront and car dealership. He has been living at New Vrindaban since then. 

Bhaktipada, when told by a Times -reporter in 1981 that one of his New Vrindaban devotees had recently bought a large number of weapons at local shops, said: "I have no objection to a certain number of persons in the community having weapons for self-protection. But they should be in the hands of cool, level-headed Krishnaconscious persons . . . If there is a need for violence, we can become violent." Several weeks later, Bhaktipada said the young man agreed to sell the guns "at my suggestion." 

Last October, the West 'Virginia guru was bludgeoned into a coma and hospitalized for 36 days by a former devotee, Michael C. Shockman, who is serving a 15-mondi prison term after pleading guilty to malicious wounding charges. 

Statements to Reporters Only two months later, Bryant himself sent to reporters statements saying that death was scripturally justified for gurus guilty of the crimes he had been alleging. However, he disavowed any personal intent to carry out that threat or to conspire to kill anyone himself.

Bryant's own vocal belligerency and illegal possession of a gun landed him in the Moundsville jail in February. He staged a three-week hunger strike, writing to a Times reporter from jail on Feb. 15: "I've pretty much reached my rope's end in combating this domestic cult on my own and so I've decided to fast to death if I don't get some Gov't help." 

Bryant's lawyer on Moundsville, David R. Gold, later said: "I thought he was realistically hopeful that he would single-handedly be able to mobilize public opinion against the [New Vrindaban] community." Bryant was convicted for carrying an unregistered gun, which Gold said Bryant got for defensive purposes, then was released pending an appeal and returned to California. 

In the early morning hours of May 22, Bryant left a friend’s home in the Palms section of Los Angeles' Westside, telling him he was going to park his van down the block so as not to bring trouble to his friend's doorstep. "I try not to be paranoid, but it’s the least precaution I can take," his friend quoted Bryant as saying. Not long afterward, the friend said he heard two shots and ran outside to look, but then dismissed his fears that something had happened to Bryant. 

Later that morning, Bryant, known as Solucana to other devotees, was found shot twice in the head and slumped over the steering wheel of his parked car and locked van, according to authorities. 

Some of his friends told Los Angeles police to look for a man named Tirtha, the Krishna name for Thomas Arthur Drescher, 37, a onetime follower at New Vrindaban with a reputation for violent behavior. 

Five days later, Drescher was arrested in Kent, Ohio. The warrant for his arrest, however, was issued by West Virginia authorities in connection with the unsolved disappearance in 1983 of another former Krishna devotee, Charles St. Denis, from the New Vrindaban area. 

(Drescher was indicted earlier this month in Moundsville along with Krishna devotee Daniel Reid, 31, who is lodged in a Los Angeles jail, on first-degree murder charges based in witnesses' accounts of St. Denis' fate. The principal witness, Randol Gorby, was seriously injured in an explosion at his home the day after Drescher was apprehended in Ohio, authorities said. A number of commune members, according to their attorney, James B. Lees, have quietly cooperated with authorities since 1984 in the investigation of the St. Denis disappearance.) 

'Surveillance Notes' Kent Police Detective Ronald Piatt and his partner said that when they arrested Drescher, they found on him 11 surveillance notes" describing Bryant's van, his physical appearance and his movements in Los Angeles. Drescher also carried $4,000 in cash.

With Drescher when he was arrested, said Piatt, was a Krishna priest from Cleveland who had clippings from three newspapers about the death of Bryant and written instructions of unknown origin saying that if Drescher were ever wanted by the police, he should be sent to a temple in New York, then flown to India. At the time of his arrest, Drescher's car was packed with clothing and other goods, and his rented mobile home was found nearly empty, Piatt said. 

"We think he was in the process of activating those plans [to leave the country]" Piatt said. 

The Krishna priest, Terry Shelden, was held for three days on a charge of carrying a concealed weapon - a hooked-blade utility knife - but the charged was dismissed. He has since disappeared from the Cleveland Temple and his whereabouts are unknown, Piatt said. 

The detective added that a fire of undetermined origin burned Drescher's mobile home July 5. 

Drescher is now in custody in West Virginia. The Los Angeles County district attorney's office is seeking to extradite him to California to stand trial for Bryant's murder. 

New Vrindaban officials have denied any connection with Bryant's death and characterized Drescher as a follower who fell from favor with the community three years ago. After living on his own property near New Vrindaban for several years, Drescher moved to northeast Ohio late last year. 

Apology From Jail Swami Bhakdpada said Drescher wrote him from jail to apologize if he had caused the commune any difficulty. The guru said he responded with a short note advising Drescher "to chant the name of God and to depend on God's help and mercy."

New Vrindaban spokesman Dick Dezio said he welcomed the announced plans of U.S. Atty. William Kolibash to have a federal grand jury in Moundsville examine the murder of Bryant and the dissident's charges of illicit activity at New Vrindaban. 

Bhaktipada declared earlier that the investigation will show "we are religious people who have no other business but to worship God." 

Dezio accused Bryant of some of the same charges Bryant had leveled against the West Virginia commune - drug use, "a fetish for guns," child abuse, and threats of violence. 

"We have heard a lot of stories and a lot of claims, but no one has ever come forth with any evidence [about our community]," Dezio said. Regarding interviewed dissidents who declined to reveal their identities in print for fear of reprisals, Dezio said, "I don't know anyone within the movement who has to be feared." 

Charges by dissidents that a climate of fear prevails were also rejected by Los Angeles-based guru Ramesvara (Robert Grant), 35, who said that, other than Bryant's death, there has been "no incidents of violence against a disgruntled person" in his jurisdiction. Ramesvara, who is one of the original 11 successors to the society founder, supervises Southern California, parts of the Midwest, the New York area, Hawaii and Japan. 

"As far as I know, Steve Bryant didn't have any bad feelings toward myself and, similarly, I had no bad feeling toward him," Ramesvara said. "He wasn't disturbing us. He came and went very secretly. A number of our core members attended his funeral in Los Angeles; they wanted to show their sympathy and outrage." 

At the Berkeley temple, where another of Steve Bryant’s vehicles still sits in the parking lot, Jagat Guru (Jack Hebner), the reform-minded temple president, said: "I can't bring myself to believe, though some do, that Bryant's death would be ordered. 

"I feel his assassins are fringe members who took it upon themselves to do it. But whatever the truth is we do not want it to be hidden," Jagat Guru said.  Krishna followers interested in reform have grown steadily to about half of the leadership ranks, most of them longtime followers initiated by the sect’s founder, Jagat Guru said. 

"There is no room and no tolerance of riffraff in the garb of a preacher who is interested in simply taking church money for liquor, drugs, women, or whatever else he might enjoy," he said. 

Murky Authority  The society has an international Governing Body Commission, but William Ogle, a Knoxville, Tenn., lawyer, who acts as its general counsel, conceded in an interview that the administrative authority of the commission in relation to the gurus is still murky. "It is no secret we are going through a serious developmental state in the aftermath of the founder's departure," Ogle said. 

On July 11, the commission's executive committee announced that it had started its own investigation into Bryant’s death. "We want to find out if anyone in our group was involved and if so, to what extent. We would take disciplinary action irrespective of what position the person held in the society," said Michael Grant, public affairs director for the Los Angeles temple, who said he spoke on behalf of the executive committee. 

When Ogle served as commission chairman in 1985, he directed a special committee to look into Bryant's allegations. 

The committee concluded that it was an "injudicious mistake" for New Vrindaban to initiate Bryant's wife as a devotee of the guru without his knowledge. (Bryant said he was in India on a business trip at the time.) At the same time, the committee noted that Bryant's "unsubstantiated allegations" against the West Virginia guru were "blasphemous" to the highest degree. 

Disagreements Not Allowed One longtime Krishna follower, who said he had been "roughed up" by disciples because of his open disagreements with the new gurus, said serious criticism of the leadership is interpreted by loyal followers as "blasphemy against their spiritual master, [meaning] you can take action against [the offenders]."

Yet another dissident in California agreed: "No one is supposed to question these guys. You worship them as perfect or you are in trouble." 

With the matter of authority in the movement still unresolved, the number of gurus has grown from about 20 last year to nearly three dozen. 

"There has been a lot of negotiation and infighting in the society recently, but I think the political situation can be rectified," said Nalini Kanta. (Tom Hopke), a Los Angeles devotee. He said he is the Peace and Freedom Party candidate for Congress in the 23rd District this year and an astrologer for the Krishna movement. 

"I've been vocally opposed [to abuses], but I'm not fearful for my own life," Nalini Kanta said, indicating that he is not at all as "vociferous, so radical," as Bryant was. 

Dictatorial Rule He said a big group of one-time disciples of the founder "think [the movement] is run in a very authoritarian way and that it should be done in a more cooperative way. I am against the philosophy that one particular guru should have dictatorial rule in his area. Prabhupada could do that because of his purity."

Former Berkeley temple official Paramahansa Swami said the root of the dispute is really spiritual authority. The reform influence at Berkeley and the conservative ideology at New Vrindaban "are exactly at the opposite ends of the spiritual movement," Nalini Kanta said. 

"In the last three years in that temple, 10 different people have 10 different philosophies," said Paramahansa, who maintained that the unquestioned authority of a spiritually qualified master is necessary to avoid religious "anarchy."  By John Dart The Los Angeles Times April 21, 1986 Copyright Los Angeles Times Reprinted by Permission  

October  

Krishna Urged to Settle Conflict (p. 4) A U.S. district court judge in San Francisco has urged Berkeley Hare Krishna members to reach an out-of-court settlement in their suit accusing West Virginia members of trying to take over the Berkeley Temple. The leader of the West Virginia group and the ousted head of the Berkeley group are also alleged in the suit to have raided $1 million in assets of two California Krishna groups. A trial is set for September of next year. The West Virginia group is being investigated by a federal grand jury in connection with the murder of an ex-member. From the Los Angeles Times August 9, 1986

Krishnas Protest Soviets (p. 14)   Members of the Hare Krishna group demonstrated yesterday outside the Soviet Consulate in Woollahra protesting against religious persecution in the Soviet Union. The protest, during which 80 Krishnas released 25 doves, coincided with the publication of a report - authenticated by non-Krishna sources - of civil rights abuses affecting the Krishnas and other minority religions. 

Official Soviet publications have listed Krishna Consciousness as the third greatest threat to modem Russia, after Western imperialism and rock and roll music. From the Sydney [Australia] Morning Herald, May 6, 1986  

November

Security Tighter at Krishna Commune (p. 14)   Security at the Hare Krishna commune of New Vrindaban in West Virginia has been increased in the wake of a grand jury probe into the death of a Krishna dissident who had accused Krishna leaders of allowing child abuse and drug trafficking.

The 650 member commune, about 10 miles west of Moundsville, has tightened security, and 10 armed disciples patrol the grounds of the Palace of Gold, the elaborate and glittering Krishna temple, which has become a regional tourist attraction. 

Commune leader Kirtinananda Swami Bhaktipada, badly beaten in November by a disgruntled member, has moved to a more isolated area and is rarely without a German shepherd attack dog.   

A Charleston tour director says that the controversy has not kept tourists away, although he did cancel spring and summer bus tours after a typhoid and hepatitis outbreak at New Vrindaban. "I think the intrigue of what's going on would bring even more tourists," he said.  From the Dayton [OH] Journal September 5, 1986  

 

 
       
_____________________________________________ ^
 

International Cultic Studies Association
 Department: Group Report - Hare Krishna

Vol. 1, No. 1, 2001

_______________________________________________
Featured Group Report

Hare Krishna: news articles 1986

 
ISKCON in the News Articles from the Cult Observer 1984-1999 

1986   

January/February

Krishna Adopt-a-Cow Program (p. 12) In an appeal modeled after charities that help impoverished children, a central Pennsylvania dairy farm run by the Hare Krishnas is developing a program of cow care that is expected to attract funds from Hindus, vegetarians, and animal lovers.

The program is called Adopt-a-Cow. Contributions are tax-deductible and credit cards are accepted.  The program has three options, as described in ads in newspapers for ethnic Indians and in solicitation letters sent to 15,000 Hindus across the country.

The $30-a-month package buys an 8-by-10 color photo of the cow, sweets made from its milk, newsletters on its birthday and on other occasions such as pregnancy, and a weekend "vacation" at the Juniata County cow farm. From The Denver Post Dec. 15, 1985  

Krishna Allegedly Attacks Leader to "Cleanse" Group (p. 12) Hare Krishna leaders from around the world gathered at New Vrindaban's Palace of Gold [near Moundsville, WVA) for a vigil as the "dean of the faith," Kirtanananda Bhaktipada, remained unconscious and in critical condition yesterday. 

Bhaktipada was hospitalized with severe head wounds after he was attacked with an iron bar. Marshall County Sheriff Donald Bordenkircher said Hare Krishna member Mike Stockman, 28, was arrested. Stockman told officers he had acted to "cleanse the church," the Sheriff said. 

Bhaktipada, 48, is credited with building the Palace of Gold, an ornate temple that attracts thousands of tourists and devotees to New Vrindaban each year. About 600 people live in the religious community. From the AP and USA Today Oct 31 and Nov. 1, 1985

March/April

Krishna Protest vs. Soviet (p. 31) The occasion of the recent Geneva Summit conference was used for a protest march along Lake Geneva by Krishna devotees, according to the Daily Telegraph of Nov. 30, 1985 They handed out cards stating that Krishnas are at present being held in Soviet prisons, labor camps, and psychiatric hospitals. Russian trials of Krishna devotees have been reported from as far apart as Siberia and Armenia. ISKCON in Russia exists in underground fashion, in secret private meetings. According to their statement in Geneva, there are 200 initiated members in the USSR plus 10,000 Soviet citizens who practice Krishna consciousness. 

Krishnas. Try Comeback (p. 5) On its twentieth anniversary in America, the followers of the Hare Krishna movement are diminished in number, less publicly visible, divided by quarreling leaders, and dependent on part-time devotees who wear conventional dress at outside jobs. But the movement seems to be surviving. 

The decline of the counter-culture, which fed recruitment and financed the once-lucrative incense business was a difficulty faced in the late 1970s, according to E. Burke Rochford, Jr., a Tulsa University sociologist and author of the recently published book, "Hare Krishna in America." The death of founder Swami Prabhupada in 1977 and the division of the mission field among 11 contentious gurus paralleled the decline in membership from 10,000 to 2,000. But the shift from full to part-time commitment, and the welcoming of Indian Hindus, has helped says, Rochford.   

Minnesota sociologist Thomas Robbins agrees with Rochford and the Krishnas themselves that the leadership split has hurt. "Some of the gurus let power and authority go to their head [sic]," creating disillusionment and cynicism, said the movements national director of interreligious affairs. All three agree that the "guru issue," which failed to resolve itself at a worldwide leadership meeting in West Virginia last summer, is the movement's biggest problem. From the Seattle Post Intelligencer Feb. 8, 1986

May/June

Ex-Krishna Charged in Krishna Death (p. 28) Thomas Drescher, formerly a member of the Hare Krishna group, was charged in Moundsville, WVA yesterday with the May 22 shooting death of Stephen Bryant, a Hare Krishna devotee who was a persistent critic of the organization. Drescher was also arraigned on charges of criminal homicide in connection with the June 1983 shooting of Charles SL Dennis near the Krishna's New Vrindaban, WVA community.

Bryant's parents said that their son left New Vrindaban after a dispute with its founder, whom he tried to discredit, along with the Krishna religion itself Authorities said that Drescher and St. Denis, who both lived near New Vrindaban at the time using spiritual names, had been at odds over the sale of a house. From the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette June 6, 1986   

September

Ex-Krishna Abuser Gets 50 Years (p. 8) Former Hare Krishna member Kenneth Capoferri, 39, was given a maximum 50-year sentence yesterday for molesting four children at a West Los Angeles child-care center run by the sect where he worked from 1982-84. An attorney for the Hare Krishnas urged the maximum sentence "to purge our community of the feelings of outrage, pain, anxiety, and confusion" caused by the molestations, which are said to have created serious psychological problems for at least one of the affected children. From the Los Angeles Times July 17, 1986

Killing Sparks Probe of Krishna Sect (pp. 4-7)  The recent slaying of a disenchanted Hare Krishna devotee who persistently alleged wrongdoing and deceit in the movement has sent new ripples through the divided Krishna community.   

Since the fatal shooting May 22 in Los Angels or Steve Bryant, 33, and the arrest of a Krishna follower in the murder, plans for a broad investigation by a federal grand jury have been announced. Even the sect itself had decided to conduct an internal probe of possible wrong doing by Krishna members.

Both Bryant's death and his allegations of wrong doing by Krishna  leaders will be examined by a federal grand jury in Moundsville, W. Va. That is the city nearest the 600-member commune and Indian-Style palace that is a showcase settlement for the 21year-old International Society for Krishna Consciousness.

The Hindu sect, which drew on young Americans' fascination for Eastern meditation and chanting in the late 1960s, attracted between 5 000 and 10,000 followers in the first dozen years. But the movement has also been embroiled in legal battles over airport soliciting and parental charges of kidnapping vulnerable youth into the order.   

Authority Questioned  

Internal conflict surfaced after the 1977 death of the sect's 82-year-old founder from India, A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada, when 11 gurus carved out areas of dominance.

Since then, members of a growing, internal reform movement - estimated to number about 300 Krishna believers -have questioned the authority of the leadership and accused some leaders of condoning or participating in immoral practices and physical intimidation of followers. Most of the self-styled reformers - which included Bryant - are initiates from the d