M v. Movement Center, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, D. Oregon
DecidedOctober 30, 2024
Docket1:23-cv-00891
StatusUnknown

This text of M v. Movement Center, Inc. (M v. Movement Center, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
M v. Movement Center, Inc., (D. Or. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

FOR THE DISTRICT OF OREGON

D.T., and G.M., individuals, filing under fictitious names,

Plaintiffs, No. 1:23-cv-891-MC

v. OPINION AND ORDER

J. MICHAEL SHOEMAKER, an individual; THE MOVEMENT CENTER, INC., a Massachusetts non-profit corporation authorized to do business in Oregon; L’HERMITAGE, LLC., a Delaware limited liability company authorized to do business in Oregon; SHARON M. WARD; MONICA ONEAL; JEN WILHELM; ANDREW BONNER; and REBECCA REESE, individuals,

Defendants. _____________________________

MCSHANE, Judge: Plaintiffs G.M. and D.T.—former members of Defendant The Movement Center (the “Center”)—bring claims of sexual assault and sex trafficking against the Center and numerous Defendants associated with it. Defendants move to dismiss all of Plaintiffs’ claims. Most relevant here, Defendants argue Plaintiff D.T.’s claims are all barred by the relevant statutes of limitations. As discussed below, the Court agrees. BACKGROUND1 The Center is a Massachusetts nonprofit corporation centered around yoga, meditation, retreats, and associated trainings and educational opportunities. First Am. Compl. (“FAC”) ¶ 22; ECF No. 23. The Center was based in Multnomah County until 2019, when it moved to Gold Beach, Oregon. Defendant Michael Shoemaker, also known as “Swami Chetanananda,” “is the

founder, President, teacher, director, and leader of the Center. FAC ¶ 21. Defendant Sharon Ward, also known as “Sadhvi Parananda,” is the Managing Director, Registered Agent, and Secretary of the Center. FAC ¶¶ 22, 24. Defendants refer to the Center, Shoemaker, Ward, and L’Hermitage2 as “the Primary Defendants.” As alleged in the FAC: Defendants represented to the public including to Plaintiffs, that Defendant Shoemaker could heal, and in some cases cure, his students both physically and psychologically, as long as they unquestioningly obeyed his orders and expressed unconditional acceptance and loyalty to his decision-making and advice. Within the Center and Defendant Hermitage, members revered Defendant Shoemaker’s word as the highest authority, and the Center and Defendant Hermitage held itself out as a safe space to take classes and study Defendant Shoemaker’s teachings. Defendants led vulnerable young women, including Plaintiffs, to believe that if they cut ties from their teacher Defendant Shoemaker, they would be incarcerated, become mentally ill, driven to suicide, or experience serious harm in other ways physically, psychologically, and emotionally. FAC ¶¶ 6–7. Defendants refer to the remaining Defendants—Monica ONeal, Jen Wilhelm, Andrew Bonner, and Rebecca Reese—as the “Secondary Defendants.” The Secondary Defendants were “part of Defendant Shoemaker’s inner circle of employees” at the Center. FAC ¶ 5. These Secondary Defendants are alleged to have recruited women, including Plaintiffs, to be sex trafficked by Shoemaker. FAC ¶ 4. In addition to being members of the Center, Defendant

1 At the motion to dismiss stage, this Court takes all of Plaintiff’s allegations as true. See Burget v. Lokelani Bernice Pauahi Bishop Trust, 200 F.3d 661, 663 (9th Cir. 2000). 2 L’Hermitage, LLC was organized in 2018 and appears to be an alter ego of the Center organized as a Delaware LLC. Bonner and Defendant Reese are physicians who, while serving as doctors and employees of the Center, each “met with and treated female students, such as Plaintiff D.T., for physical and sexual harm inflicted by Defendant Shoemaker” and “observed the sexual injuries sustained by Plaintiff D.T.” FAC ¶¶ 27–28. In 1971, Shoemaker founded Nityananda Institute, which would later become the Center.

FAC ¶ 30. In 1973, Shoemaker allegedly raped a student at the Nityananda Institute.3 FAC ¶ 31. After allegations “that the Nityananda Institute engaged in cult-like behavior,” Shoemaker moved the Institute to Portland, Oregon in 1993. FAC ¶ 32. There, Shoemaker purchased a 3- acre, 62,000-square-foot estate that could house approximately 100 members. FAC ¶ 32. In 2001, the Oregonian published a five-part series on Shoemaker and the Institute titled In the Grip of the Guru. FAC ¶ 34. “The series contained allegations from dozens of former students claiming that Defendant Shoemaker exploited them financially, spiritually, and sexually.” FAC ¶ 34. Following 2018 allegations (on Facebook) from a member who claimed being sexually assaulted “at the hand or direction of Defendant Shoemaker,” Shoemaker sold the Portland estate and moved the

community to Gold Beach. FAC ¶ 36. D.T began researching meditation programs in approximately 1999. FAC ¶ 41. That year, then 23-year-old D.T. was diagnosed with Hodgkin’s Lymphoma. After a year of painful chemotherapy and radiotherapy, “D.T. was in remission, but she still felt lost and decided to seek guidance.” FAC ¶ 41. In the summer of 2000, D.T. visited a meditation retreat at an ashram in Australia led by Swami Shankarananda.” FAC ¶¶ 41–42. A few months later, D.T. moved into the ashram and worked full-time as that Swami’s personal assistant. In 2004, a group of gurus from the United States, including Shoemaker, travelled to Melbourne to visit the ashram. FAC ¶

3 Due to the seriousness of the allegations, the Court again notes that at this stage, it accepts each of the allegations as true. 43. During this time, D.T. developed Graves’ Disease and nearly lost her eyesight. FAC ¶ 46. “Shoemaker noticed D.T.’s vulnerability and gave her significantly more attention than the other students.” FAC ¶ 47. Shoemaker stayed in touch with D.T. and recommended she visit the Center. In late 2005, D.T. visited the Center for three months and received regular treatments from Defendants Bonner and Reese as well as “osteopathic treatments” from Shoemaker. FAC ¶

51. “During this period, D.T. was heavily medicated and could barely see at times due to symptoms from her Graves’ Disease and thyroid eye disease.” FAC ¶ 51. Shoemaker often invited D.T. to have lunch with him and his inner circle followed by tea with Shoemaker alone. FAC ¶ 52. During the last of the tea meetings, Shoemaker attempted to kiss D.T. without her consent, but she stopped him. She was uninterested in him romantically, but rather looked up to him as a teacher, a healer, and authority figure.” FAC ¶ 53 (emphasis added). After three months at the Center, D.T. returned to Australia in early 2006. In October 2006, Shoemaker paid for D.T. to travel from Australia to the Center. D.T. stayed at the center until January 2007. D.T. noticed members of the Center “venerated

Shoemaker as a supremely powerful man. Spending time with him, or even being near him, was considered a privilege. He required complete obedience from his students and instilled a fear of reprisal should anyone disobey him.” FAC ¶ 56. D.T. regularly attended classes led by Shoemaker. Attendees sat still and silently stared at Shoemaker, who stared back from a stage above the audience. “As an effect of these sessions, D.T. felt as though she had fallen into a trance.” FAC ¶ 57. “Shoemaker advised D.T. to open her heart completely to him, to honor and cultivate the connection between her as a student and him as her teacher, and to surrender to him by dissolving all personal boundaries.” FAC ¶ 58. Shoemaker began making more sexual advances towards D.T.; like forcing D.T. to sit on his lap. FAC ¶ 60. Shoemaker told D.T. that he knew what was best for her, that he had saved her from a miserable life in Australia, and that D.T. must do what he told her to do and “play the game by his rules.” “After this period of time in which Shoemaker assumed total control over D.T.’s behavior, thoughts, and emotions, he initiated a sexual relationship with her.” FAC ¶ 64. During this late 2006 visit: Shoemaker insisted that D.T. sleep with him.

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