Inside the ‘love fest’ cult that’s allegedly infiltrated Google headquarters
Google has been infiltrated by a “destructive” California
cult led by a “pedophilic” leader, according to a lawsuit.
Former Google video producer and whistleblower Kevin Lloyd
is suing the technology giant, alleging that he was fired after he began
complaining that his bosses at Google Developer Studio, where he worked in
Mountain View, Calif., were stacking the division with members of the
Fellowship of Friends.
Past members of the group, which was registered as a
religious organization with the IRS in 1971 and is based at a sprawling
compound in Northern California, have accused its longtime leader Robert Earl
Burton of sexual abuse and misconduct, according to “Revelations,” a six-part
podcast series on Spotify released last year. Two lawsuits related to these
accusations and filed by ex-members, in 1984 and 1996, were settled out of
court.
In the early 1970s, Burton preached that members needed to
immerse themselves in high art, such as opera and literature, in order to get
rid of negative thinking. He relied on “44 Angels” — who included the spirits
of historical figures such as William Shakespeare, Benjamin Franklin and
Italian poet Dante Alighieri — to lead him in enlightenment.
“[Former members] told me about these sex rituals where [the
leader] would attempt to have sex with 100 followers in a day. He called them
love fests,” the podcast’s investigative reporter Jennings Brown told The Post
last year.
“There are online support groups for former Fellowship of
Friends members to help them process the trauma endured during their
membership, as well as problems that arise after leaving,” according to Lloyd’s
lawsuit filed in California Superior Court in August.
According to the lawsuit, Lloyd, 34, began working for the
Google Developer Studio in August 2017, hired through Advanced Systems Group, a
technology support services firm which he is also suing in the same filing.
In his court filings, Lloyd alleges that soon after being
employed, he noticed that his bosses at Google exclusively promoted members of
the cult, all of whom lived in and around the group’s 1,200-acre headquarters,
known as Apollo, in Oregon House, Calif., north of Sacramento. At least 12 of
the 25 employees in Lloyd’s division were members of the cult, the lawsuit
claims.
One of Lloyd’s supervisors, Peter Lubbers, is allegedly a
member of the Fellowship of Friends, according to the lawsuit. On numerous
occasions, Lubbers, the director of the Google Development Studio, hired his
son to work as a DJ at Google corporate events; another of Lubbers’ sons was
hired as a freelance video producer, while his wife was also put on the Google
payroll, Lloyd’s court filings allege.
“Mr. Lubbers gained status and praise relative to the
increase of money flowing to the Fellowship through his efforts at Google that
put (and kept) other Fellowship members — directly or indirectly — on Google’s
payroll,” according to the lawsuit.
Members of the Fellowship are typically required to give 10
percent of their monthly earnings to the organization, which boasts up to 1,500
members, per the podcast.
Google even purchased wine, the lawsuit claims, from the
Grant Marie Winery, an allegedly cult-affiliated vineyard run by a Fellowship
member in Oregon House.
Lloyd’s lawsuit also alleges that employees at the Google
Development Studio who did not belong to the cult were treated with disdain.
“Anyone outside of the Fellowship is seen as somehow
inferior and at times adversarial,” the lawsuit says. “Those that express
serious concerns, criticism or question the group may be eventually perceived
as enemies.”
A supervisor at Google Development Studio, who used homophobic
slurs against an employee and openly spoke about that employee being “useless,”
was not reprimanded although the employee was fired, according to the lawsuit.
“Plaintiff’s preliminary research into Oregon House and the
Fellowship of Friends described the Fellowship as a destructive cult, with a
pedophilic leader
who makes false prophecies about the end of the world,” the
lawsuit claims. “Plaintiff became alarmed that Google was involved with and/or
financially supporting such an organization.”
Lloyd, who developed chest pains and other stress-related
maladies while working at Google, was worried that local events he produced
“could somehow be used to funnel money back into the Fellowship of Friends,”
according to court papers.
After complaining about his co-workers’ and supervisors’
close ties to the cult, Lloyd was fired in February 2021 by ASG, according to
the lawsuit.
“All that was needed for the GDS department to get rid of
troublesome ‘vendor’ such as plaintiff was to tell ASG that the particular
‘vendor’ was no longer needed,” the lawsuit claims. “In plaintiff’s case, once
upper GDS management had decided to get rid of him and at their direction, ASG
summarily terminated plaintiff’s employment without providing any legitimate
business reasons. Or any reasons whatsoever.”
Founded in 1970 by Burton, who is known as “our beloved
teacher” to members, the Fellowship of Friends first came under fire in 1984
when a former member filed a $2.75 million lawsuit claiming that young men who
joined the group “had been forcefully and unlawfully seduced by Burton.” In
1996, another former member accused Burton of sexual misconduct while the
member was a minor. Both of the lawsuits were settled out of court, according
to the New York Times.
In the past, the group was also investigated by immigration
officials for allegedly bringing foreign recruits into the US on religious
visas, then forcing them into sexual slavery, according to the “Revelations”
podcast. No charges were ever brought.
Burton founded the group on the principle that it was
“available to anyone interested in pursuing the spiritual work of awakening.”
He has said he considers women “inferior” and frowns upon childbirth. The
former San Francisco Bay Area school teacher studied the teachings of a
self-help movement called The Fourth Way, founded by Greek Armenian philosopher
George Gurdjieff, who advocated methods, including sacred dances, for bringing
about more self-awareness.
“How to describe a conscious teacher? He does what no one
else will or can do — teaching the most unpopular of all truths: that our
illusory sense of ‘I’ must die,” reads the bio for Burton, a white-haired guru
now in his 80s, on his website, which says that Burton lives at Apollo with 500
of his followers. Other followers are spread out in more than 80 cities around
the world, but meet regularly for “spiritual gatherings,” the website details.
Burton has encouraged his followers to buy art and place it
in his “Galleria” at the group’s compound. In 1996, the Fellowship’s collection
of antique Chinese furniture sold for $11.2 million at a Christie’s auction.
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