James Arthur Ray, an Oprah-endorsed motivational speaker who spent two years in jail for manslaughter after the 2009 deaths of three individuals in a sweat lodge, the fruits of a three-day non secular program he ran within the Arizona desert, died on Jan. 3 in Henderson, Nev. He was 67.
His brother, Jon Ray, introduced the demise on social media. He didn’t say the place in Henderson Mr. Ray died or cite a trigger, however he did say the demise was sudden.
Mr. Ray was struggling to succeed as a motivational speaker when he appeared in “The Secret,” a 2006 documentary made by the Australian tv producer Rhonda Byrne. The “secret,” which Mr. Ray and others espoused, was the concept that optimistic pondering can actually make the world shift in your favor.
Issues started to maneuver shortly for Mr. Ray. He appeared on Oprah Winfrey’s present, the place she lavished reward on him. Inside months he was standing in entrance of sold-out crowds of tons of, then hundreds. In 2008 he printed “Harmonic Wealth: The Secret of Attracting the Life You Need,” written with Linda Sivertsen, which reached The New York Occasions’s best-seller checklist.
He was, Fortune journal declared in 2008, “the following large factor within the extremely aggressive world of motivational gurus.”
Mr. Ray blended self-help {and professional} improvement with a dollop of mysticism — a potent mixture of Tony Robbins, Stephen Covey and Deepak Chopra. He was tall and charismatic, with a simple smile and simply the correct quantity of self-deprecation to win over a crowd.
He supplied a hierarchy of programs, every dearer than the final, culminating in “Religious Warrior,” a $10,000 retreat close to Sedona, Ariz. After a sequence of endurance workout routines, together with prolonged fasting, members spent hours in a sweat lodge, the place temperatures soared above 150 levels.
Mr. Ray introduced “Religious Warrior” a number of instances, and a few previous members had raised questions on whether or not he or his workers members had enough coaching to run a sweat lodge.
Nonetheless, nobody was ready for what occurred on Oct. 8, 2009. Mr. Ray packed about 50 individuals into a brief construction fabricated from a spherical wooden body coated in tarps, measuring about 25 ft in diameter and solely 5 ft on the heart. He poured gallons of water over fire-heated rocks, filling the lodge with sizzling steam.
Although he instructed members they may depart at any time, many mentioned later that they felt pressured by him to remain. Ultimately the situations inside grew insufferable, and the gang flooded out; many individuals collapsed on the bottom.
Somebody referred to as 911; one first responder later mentioned that the scene seemed like the location of a mass suicide. Twenty-one individuals have been taken to the hospital.
Three of them died — James Shore and Kirby Brown have been declared lifeless on arrival, whereas Liz Neumann died 9 days later. Mr. Ray was arrested shortly afterward on manslaughter fees.
The story turned nationwide information in a season of scandals; it shared headlines with the “balloon boy” hoax, by which Colorado dad and mom falsely claimed their son was trapped in a big helium balloon, and the trial of Amanda Knox, an American pupil who was discovered responsible in an Italian court docket of murdering her roommate. (Her conviction was overturned in 2015.)
Mr. Ray’s trial unfolded within the spring of 2010 and ended together with his conviction on three counts of negligent murder. The decide sentenced him to 2 years in jail.
James Arthur Ray was born on Nov. 22, 1957, in Honolulu, the place his father, Gordon Ray, was serving within the Navy. The household later moved to Tulsa, Okla., the place his father turned a preacher and his mom, Joyce (Schott) Ray, managed the house.
Mr. Ray mentioned the household was so poor that they lived in an workplace hooked up to his father’s church. However he additionally mentioned his father’s talent as a minister impressed his later profession.
“He was very charismatic,” Mr. Ray mentioned in an interview for the CNN documentary “Enlighten Us: The Rise and Fall of James Arthur Ray” (2016), directed by Jenny Carchman. “He actually might contact his congregation. He was my first wow.”
Mr. Ray attended Tulsa Group School however left earlier than ending his diploma. He went to work for AT&T, beginning as a telemarketer and shifting as much as coaching and junior administration.
A part of the corporate’s coaching program relied on the work of Mr. Covey, a professional-development skilled and speaker and the creator of “The 7 Habits of Extremely Efficient Individuals” (1989). Mr. Ray determined he might do one thing related, and he left AT&T to discovered an organization referred to as Quantum Consulting.
Motivational talking is tough, typically thankless work, with most practitioners scraping by in entrance of luncheon crowds in Vacation Inn convention rooms. For greater than a decade, that was Mr. Ray, too — till Ms. Byrnes included him in “The Secret.”
By then he had moved past self-help speak to incorporate New Age philosophy and mysticism. He spoke of classes realized from a Peruvian shaman and a Hawaiian non secular information. Viewers members paid hundreds of {dollars} to listen to him, typically over a number of lengthy days in huge convention halls.
These prepared to pay much more have been taken far past the convention heart, on retreats that always concerned intense bodily and psychological workout routines — resulting in “Religious Warrior.”
Alongside together with his brother, Mr. Ray’s survivors embrace his spouse, Bersabeh. Info on different survivors was not instantly obtainable.
Mr. Ray was launched from jail in 2013, and by the following yr he was as soon as extra talking professionally.
He was upfront in discussing the occasions of October 2009 together with his audiences. And he agreed to be interviewed at size by Ms. Carchman for “Enlighten Us.”
“I’m accountable,” he mentioned concerning the sweat-lodge catastrophe.
On the finish of the movie, he added: “It needed to occur, as a result of it was the one manner I might discover and study and develop by means of the issues that I’ve achieved. Am I ingesting the Kool-Support? Perhaps, however the Kool-Support works for me.”