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- <text id=94TT1450>
- <title>
- Oct. 24, 1994: Cults:Remains of the Day
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Oct. 24, 1994 Boom for Whom?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- CULTS, Page 42
- Remains of the Day
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> The leaders of the Solar Temple are among the dead in the mass
- murder-suicide, but many mysteries linger
- </p>
- <p>By Michael S. Serrill--Reported by Bruce Crumley/Paris, Robert Kroon/Geneva and Gavin
- Scott/Ottawa
- </p>
- <p> Allegations of gunrunning in Australia and money laundering
- in Canada and Europe. A suicide note addressed to the French
- Interior Minister. Two more booby-trapped houses, primed to
- erupt in flames at a telephone call.
- </p>
- <p> Those were some of the mysteries that tantalized investigators
- on three continents last week as they continued to probe the
- deaths of 53 members of the Order of the Solar Temple, an apocalyptic
- religious cult, in Switzerland and Canada two weeks ago. One
- question was answered: Luc Jouret, 46, the spiritual leader
- of the cult, was among those whose bodies were found in three
- burned ski chalets in Granges-sur-Salvan, east of Geneva. Jouret's
- charred remains, along with those of co-leader Joseph di Mambro,
- 70, were identified from dental records. The finding ended an
- international manhunt for the two men and left police to pull
- together from other sources basic facts about the Solar Temple,
- an organization that apparently milked followers of their money
- before taking their lives.
- </p>
- <p> At least five children were among the 53 who died in what Swiss
- and Canadian officials believe was mass murder followed by mass
- suicide. Jouret, a Belgian born in Zaire, and Di Mambro, a French
- Canadian, apparently were among the suicides. Twenty-five people
- died at Granges-sur-Salvan, 23 in a barn in the village of Cheiry
- and five in a chalet north of Montreal. The sites were set on
- fire with devices made from canisters of gasoline and butane
- and a phone-activated detonator.
- </p>
- <p> According to the evidence uncovered last week, most of the victims
- at Cheiry were shot, and the killer or killers then drove to
- Granges-sur-Salvan. "Some of the victims at Cheiry had as many
- as eight bullet wounds in the head," said a forensic expert
- at the University of Lausanne's Institute for Legal Medicine,
- which handled the autopsies. "That hardly suggests suicide."
- Police found 52 spent shells scattered at the Cheiry death site
- and later discovered at Granges-sur-Salvan the 22-cal. pistol
- from which they had been fired. Canadian police said three of
- the five Quebec victims, who died about five days before the
- Swiss killings, were repeatedly stabbed; their suspected killers
- were believed to be among the suicides at Granges-sur-Salvan.
- </p>
- <p> Why the mass deaths occurred remained unclear. The French daily
- Le Monde reported that the passports of Di Mambro and his French-born
- wife Jocelyne had been sent to Interior Minister Charles Pasqua
- only days before their deaths. A copy of a letter that began
- "Dear Charlie" was sent to the newspaper, claiming that the
- French embassy in Ottawa had been instructed by Paris not to
- renew Jocelyne's passport last year, at a time when the couple
- were still living in Canada. It was Pasqua's "desire to destroy"
- the Solar Temple through "unsupportable harassment," the Di
- Mambros' letter said, that had led them to "decide to leave
- this terrestrial plane."
- </p>
- <p> Some 300 officials and organizations worldwide received packets
- from the Solar Temple, all mailed by cult member Patrick Vuarnet,
- the son of one of France's best-known skiers, on instructions
- from Jouret. Vuarnet, now in Swiss custody, was one of several
- well-connected converts to the Solar Temple, many of whom signed
- over their assets. Investigators suggested that the cult may
- have amassed as much as $93 million and that part of the money
- was used to support a posh life-style for Jouret and Di Mambro
- and to buy houses in Western Europe and Canada. Last week at
- least five more Temple properties were discovered. Two of them--an apartment near Montreux, Switzerland, and a villa near
- Avignon, France--had been rigged to explode in flames.
- </p>
- <p> Swiss, French and Canadian officials also probed the possibility
- that Jouret and Di Mambro had been involved in gunrunning or
- money-laundering schemes. Jouret had publicly urged followers
- to stockpile weapons to prepare for the end of the world and
- last year pleaded guilty in Canada to illegal arms possession.
- Canadian officials confirmed they were pursuing specific information
- implicating Di Mambro in money laundering, but they expressed
- skepticism at a report that Solar Temple leaders had purchased
- guns and other military equipment in Australia and resold the
- materiel in the Third World.
- </p>
- <p> While Australian federal police found no such link, they discovered
- Jouret and Di Mambro had repeatedly visited the country beginning
- in the mid-1980s. People who met Jouret say he was fascinated
- by Ayers Rock, the huge monolith sacred to the Aborigines that
- rises from the desert floor in Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park.
- He apparently told acquaintances that the rock's "mystic appeal"
- had drawn him to Australia and that he had applied to hold a
- religious service there. The Aborigines, who control access
- to Ayers Rock, turned him down.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-