




A Lafayette woman who claims to be a "master clairvoyant" and offered psychic readings out of her homes on South and Main streets is being investigated for allegations of welfare fraud and theft, court documents reveal.
Judge Randy Williams of Tippecanoe Superior Court 1 signed off on a search warrant Friday that allowed investigators to further look into Patricia Johns and her business, Astrology Gallery.
The warrant was requested by a special agent with the Social Security Administration's Chicago Field Division, Indianapolis office.
According to a probable cause affidavit included in the warrant request, Johns has received supplemental security income benefits since 2001 for affective disorders.
She's accused of never reporting employment with or income from Astrology Gallery.
Johns' telephone listing for her psychic services went straight to a recorded message on Monday, and a message could not be left because the voicemail box was full.
Her website, www.astrologygallery.com, also was down on Monday.
According to a Twitter account that reportedly belongs to Johns, @FREE_psychic, she posted on March 22 that she is now in Dallas and available for readings there.
Here's what prompted the Social Security Administration investigation, according to the affidavit:
The special agent read a story in February by Indianapolis television news station WTHR about Johns and former clients who believed they had been scammed by her services.
The four victims -- three in Lafayette and one in Frankfort -- paid Johns a combined $181,432 in goods and money. The "goods" included a Rolex watch and crystals.
The special agent then contacted Lafayette police and decided to check Johns' name in the Social Security Administration database, which showed that she has received $67,012 in supplemental security income benefits since November 2001.

Stay tuned.

"She always protested that she was not New Age. You've heard that one before, for sure. 'Who me? Oh, I'm not New Age!' We've all heard it. Only terminal cases ever admit to the proclivity. Maybe the last gasp of those people who recently died in James Arthur Ray's Sedona sweat lodge was 'Oh fuck, I guess I am New Age!' But of course, we'll never know if, even then, the denial was finally overcome. When you get right down to it, nobody wants to be seen as New Age because nobody wants to be seen as irreparably stupid.

She was a free-spirited adventurer who lived in Mexico in an octagonal art-filled house on "Gringo Hill," overlooking the Sea of Cortez. Her high-end interior painting business was taking off. And on many mornings, she shared the waves at Old Man's break with the legends of long board surfing.
As summer faded into fall in 2009, Kirby Brown stood at a crossroads. Although her bohemian lifestyle in San Jose del Cabo was the envy of her friends, she felt something was missing.
At 38, she was still searching for her one true love. She craved financial stability. She wanted children. And so, her family and friends say, she dedicated herself to introspection and self-improvement.
"Trying to find that bigger meaning was important to her," said her brother, Bobby Brown.
To that end, she lived "a self-styled life," added her sister Jean Brown, who admired Kirby's ability to set priorities and create "a wonderfully abnormal life."
She constantly tried new things, and when she found something she liked, it became a part of her. So, it was no surprise to the people who knew Brown that when she turned her light inward, she gave it her usual "135%."
She was "not overly 'New Agey,'" said her longtime friend and confidante, Emily Forbes, "just looking outside the box."
From the best-selling author Caroline Myss, who blends mysticism, spirituality and healing, Brown learned, "We are in charge of our happiness," said Forbes, her best friend since their freshman year at the State University of New York at Geneseo.
But Brown remained a healthy skeptic. "I don't think she got too hung up on the different chakras."
She was drawn more to the practical approach of James Arthur Ray, whose seminars challenged participants to shed fears and old baggage and build "harmonic" lives with personal and financial success in balance. Believing the so-called "mystical millionaire" could coach her on how to "live impeccably," as he put it, Brown ponied up $9,695 -- her life's savings -- for Ray's Spiritual Warrior seminar in Sedona, Arizona, in October 2009.

Anyway, let's cut to the chase here, on this typically dissatisfied NewAge nut:
"She was constantly looking for ways to make herself better, even though she already was an amazing person," said Billy Dahly, a commercial real estate appraiser from Denver, and one of her surfing friends in Mexico.
So she headed to Sedona's mystical red rocks in search of enlightenment. There, she would be asked to get a buzz cut, go without sleep and fast for 36 hours before squatting in her bikini on the dirt floor of a makeshift sweat lodge.
At the end of the five-day seminar, Kirby Brown's life wasn't enriched. It was over.


Somebody should keep an eye on Jane now:
At times like this, the vultures will be circling,....

You're welcome
ReplyDeletehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Age
I don't know what you're saying that for, since you just made my point:
ReplyDeleteNewAge is a single word - rhymes with "sewage".
This is where you get an education.
And YOU'RE welcome.
In this context, "healthy skeptic" = "thinking critically about any practice that might be difficult or inconvenient to her." Ray promised Enlightenment in one weekend for $7k on the barrelhead, and that kind of deal is irresistible to someone whose true gods were Instant Gratification and Conspicuous Consumption.
ReplyDeleteMay she rest in peace for her folly, and may Ray serve a long, hard stretch for his crimes.