Rockford Register Star

Officials: Cult is linked to missing people

- Minnah Arshad

Authoritie­s are searching for six people who disappeare­d last year and are believed to be followers of an online cult led by a convicted child molester, Missouri police said.

The Berkeley Police Department told USA TODAY on Tuesday that two children were among the group that vanished in August and are tied to Rashad Jamal, leader of what he calls the “University of Cosmic Intelligen­ce.” Police described the group as a “spiritual cult,” which has 200,000 subscriber­s on its YouTube channel.

Three of the missing people are based in St. Louis, according to police: 24-year-old Mikayla Thompson, 25year-old Ma'Kayla Wickerson and 3year-old Malaiyah Wickerson. Gerrielle German, 27, and Ashton Mitchell, 3, are from Lake Horn, Mississipp­i. Naaman Williams, 29, is from Washington, D.C.

“I would like to know that they're OK so that I can get a good night's sleep,” Shelita Gibson, whose daughter and grandson are among the missing, told KSDK in St. Louis. “I would like to know they're not hungry, they're not cold, that no one is making her do things that she would have to pay for in the long run.”

Jamal, whose full name is Rashad Jamal White, denied knowing the six missing people and said he does not lead a cult. Jamal told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch his University of Cosmic Intelligen­ce is a spiritual channel.

“I'm just giving you my opinion on a plethora of different subjects: from metaphysic­s to quantum physics to molecular biology to marine biology to geography to Black history to world history. I'm giving you my opinions on these things,” he told the Post-Dispatch. “That doesn't make me a cult leader.”

Jamal is serving an 18-year prison sentence in Georgia for child molestatio­n, the station reported.

The members were active on social media and shared Jamal's videos, disconnect­ed from family and friends, quit their jobs, meditated outside without clothes, and had polygamous relationsh­ips, police said. They also

changed their names to honor what they believed were gods and goddesses.

Jamal's website said the “ONLINE UNIVERSITY IS GEARED TOWARDS ENLIGHTENI­NG AND ILLUMINATI­NG THE MINDS OF THE CARBONATED BEINGS

A.K.A YOUR SO CALLED BLACK & LATINO PEOPLE OF EARTH.”

The six people were last seen Aug. 13 at Quality Inn in Florissant, Missouri. Berkeley police said it opened an investigat­ion on Aug. 12 into the disappeara­nce of four adults and two children from a rental home near St. Louis Lambert Internatio­nal Airport.

Other members have traveled at “great lengths to live off the grid and stay with fellow cult members,” police added.

In one of the last conversati­ons Naaman Williams had with his mother, Lukeitta Williams, he told her she was not his mother, just a “shell” that brought him into the universe, police said.

“The purpose of sharing this informatio­n is to locate these individual­s and bring awareness to other law enforcemen­t agencies who investigat­e similar missing persons or come across sovereign citizens displaying this type of behavior,” Berkeley police said. “It is extremely troubling to the family members of all of the missing people. The level of disconnect these cult members have demonstrat­ed with friends and family members is unfathomab­le.”

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