Defending their Honor
Shawangunk Journal
Brian Rubin
Local Resort's Parent Company Sued, Alleged to be 'Cult'
January 14, 2010
ELLENVILLE – The parent company that owns the Honor's
Haven Resort and Spa, BR Consulting, Inc., is being sued by a number of people
who are alleging fraud, and that the company's Dahn Yoga program is actually a
cult — allegations that are being roundly rejected by the defendants.
"Their complaint is full of false statements and
distortion," said Joseph Alexander, the Vice President of communications
for Dahn Yoga. "Obviously these claims are very sensational and very
interesting to anyone…but if you look at it more closely, they don't
really have any substance. There's no facts, there's no substance, and it can't
stand up to regular scrutiny. I'm very confident that we're going to win in
court."
The civil suit was initially filed in May of 2009 in Arizona,
and 27 plaintiffs allege that the Dahn Yoga corporation, a subsidiary of BR
Consulting, uses practices to fleece people out of their money and to make them
break ties with their families and their former lives. One plaintiff even
alleges that the company's founder and leader, Dr. Ilchi Lee, sexually
assaulted her while she was working with him in Korea.
"At these Dahn Yoga retreats, there're these extended
periods where they're subjected to thought-reform practices, and basically
they're brainwashed," says Ryan Kent, a California-based attorney who is
representing the plaintiffs who brought the lawsuit. The suit cites the
statement of Cathleen Mann, a professor of psychology, who was retained as a
consultant to the case because of her expertise and experience in researching
"high demand, totalistic, authoritarian groups," which the case uses
as a definition for cults.
"She [Cathleen Mann] found that it was a cult group, and
that they practiced fraudulent and deceptive recruiting, and subjected them to
these thought-reform programs, and they basically took all of their money. When
the kids didn't have money because they're students, they would coerce them and
induce them to go take out student loans. And often time the Dahn instructor
would cosign the student loans, or they'd find other young Dahn members to
cosign student loans.
"Every single one of them ended up taking out loans,
maxing out credit cards, opening up credit card accounts, and all of the money
went to their Dahn yoga training. And then once they were employed by the
organization as Dahn masters, working in these Dahn yoga centers, they were
induced to donate their own money to the organization — not to purchase
any classes or programs, but just to give it, so that they could 'make the
vision.' "
The company on the receiving end of the lawsuit has been quick
to react to the allegations, categorically denying them.
"It's a lie," said Alexander. "Calling this
organization a cult is like calling your local karate studio a cult, or calling
a gym a cult."
The defendants assert that, in actuality, the suit has been
orchestrated by one of the plaintiffs, Lucie Vogel, a former employee who
coerced many of the other plaintiffs to join the suit when a money-making
scheme she perpetrated while employed with the organization fell through.
"A lot of this trouble started when Lucie Vogel was
employed by Dahn Yoga and came up with a scheme to become number one manager in
the country in sales and membership, and also to make her region number
one," wrote Alexander in an e-mail. "Most of the plaintiffs worked
under her and were victims or participants in her scheme. By the time the scam
was discovered, many people had lost money or gotten into debt and the company
had to refund more than two hundred thousand dollars to members and
employees."
In December, after Dahn Yoga moved to have the suit dropped,
the case's judge dismissed all of the case's allegations except for the sexual
abuse charge, the court ruling that the "Plaintiffs have failed to
adequately plead [their] claims." This has prompted the plaintiffs to
resubmit their allegations in far greater detail, generating a second amended
claim document that comes in at 314 pages. Dahn Yoga then filed to have that
amended claim dismissed, and Kent has until January 25 to oppose that motion,
after which the judge will issue another order regarding what allegations will
or will not be dismissed.
Honor's Haven, is owned by Ellenville Real Estate, LLC, a
subsidiary of Ilchi Lee's BR Consulting. It is managed by Fallsview Hotel, LLC,
a company owned by Jorung Sook "Jane" Lee, Ilchi Lee's wife. The
Lees' son, Julian, is both the general manager and director of operations for
the resort.
One of the plaintiffs, Chun Hwa Ha, who worked at the Honor's
Haven from January through August in 2007 as Mrs. Lee's assistant, also claims
that the resort employs illegal immigrants and pays them "under the
table." Once workers attained legal working status, accounts were opened
in their names to pay more illegal workers, the lawsuit alleges.
"The allegations regarding Mrs. Lee are that she was
involved in the whole recruitment and indoctrination of people, and also
involved in the visa and immigration and payroll violations," adds Kent.
The attorney for the plaintiffs also alleges that the Honor's Haven
is "one of their compounds," saying that the site is used to
"recruit and indoctrinate more members."
Dahn Yoga's Joseph Alexander, however, finds this assertion
laughable.
"That's so ridiculous," he said, referring to
previous times Journal reporters have visited the resort. "Where did you
see a compound for recruitment? You know how many rooms we have there —
we can't hide anything. Anything that we do there is going to be wide open. At
times, the room space that we have at Honor's Haven is so limited that
sometimes we have to shift staff quarters so that we can have room for guests.
So where are we going to keep recruiting people? Where are we going to have a
compound?
"Has Ryan Kent ever been to Honor's Haven? I don't think
so," he added. "Again — speculation and distortion."
Alexander said that while Dahn Yoga may share core
philosophies with the resort, the yoga company has always rented space at the
resort like any other company scheduling a retreat.
Information regarding whether or not Julian Lee and Byun Gun
Oh, the resort's assistant general manager, are practitioners of Dahn yoga was
unclear as of press time. However, Alexander did confirm that Dahn yoga classes
and workshops are made available to all staff of the resort. The resort also
offers classes and membership to its wellness centers to members of the local
community.
"The plaintiffs' attorney is trying the case in the
media. He doesn't have any intention of winning in court," said Alexander.
And the case has certainly received its fair share of media
attention recently. In December, an in-depth article was published in Glamour
magazine, in which the plaintiffs' allegations of the Dahn Yoga organization's
dangers are explored — and it should be mentioned that the article relies
more heavily on the allegations of the plaintiffs in the case, lacking
substantial comment from the defendants. The allegations were also the subject
of segments on CNN's Campbell Brown show every day throughout last week, and
another article in Rolling Stone is forthcoming.
The Dahn Yoga organization, however, is hitting back through
the media as well, taking to the internet to defend their case through the
website www.dahnyogavoice.com.
The organization has written responses to CNN's coverage, and has even created
a video attacking the claims of Jessica "Jade" Harrelson, who made
the allegations of sexual abuse while in Korea.
"They want to use the media pressure to get us to settle.
This is what they threatened in the beginning," said Alexander. "They
said, 'If you don't pay us, we'll take this to the media. And we said 'no.'
"
http://www.shawangunkjournal.com/2010/01/14/news/1001144.html