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FL-006 Charismatic commune · Wasco County, Oregon 1985

Rajneeshpuram — A utopian commune that poisoned a town to win an election

Toll
751 sickened, 0 dead
Followers
~7,000 at peak
Ended
1985
Status
Convictions

Summary

Rajneeshpuram was a religious commune built between 1981 and 1985 on a remote 64,000-acre ranch in Wasco County, Oregon, by followers of the Indian guru Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh, later known as Osho. At its height around 1984 it housed roughly 7,000 residents and operated as an incorporated city with its own services and an armed security force. In September 1984, in an attempt to swing a county election, the commune's leadership carried out the largest bioterror attack in United States history, deliberately contaminating salad bars at ten restaurants in the nearby town of The Dalles with salmonella and sickening 751 people. No one died, but 45 were hospitalized. The plot, along with wiretapping, immigration fraud, and an attempted-murder conspiracy, unraveled in 1985: the commune's de facto leader Ma Anand Sheela and other lieutenants fled and were later convicted, Rajneesh pleaded to immigration crimes and was deported, and the commune collapsed.

The attack was not the act of fanatics on the fringe of the movement but a decision made at its operational center. Sheela Silverman — Ma Anand Sheela, Rajneesh's personal secretary and the commune's chief administrator — directed a tight inner circle that ran Rajneeshpuram's affairs while the guru himself spent years in public silence. With the surrounding county hostile and a 1984 election looming for two seats that could decide land-use battles over the commune's future, that inner circle hatched a scheme to make local voters too sick to go to the polls. They tested it, then deployed it across The Dalles. The salmonella strain was later matched to a culture in the commune's own medical laboratory.

What makes Rajneeshpuram instructive is the trajectory from idealism to crime. Thousands of educated, often Western followers had come seeking a new kind of community — work, meditation, sexual openness, and belonging under a charismatic teacher. The commune they built was real and, in many ways, functional. But isolation, a hardening us-versus-them siege mentality, and the concentration of power in an unaccountable inner circle turned a utopian experiment into an organization willing to poison its neighbors. The delusion was not only the guru's promised enlightenment; it was the conviction, inside a sealed world, that the commune's survival justified anything done to outsiders.

This dossier states the ending first. The aim is to trace how a community of seekers arrived at mass poisoning, and how the law finally reached the people who ordered it.

Timeline

1981
The ranch is bought
Rajneesh's followers purchase the 64,000-acre Big Muddy Ranch in Wasco County, Oregon, for about $5.75 million; Rajneesh arrives in the United States in mid-1981.
1981–82
A city is incorporated
The commune founds Rajneeshpuram and, by 1982, has it incorporated as a city, drawing immediate legal challenges from Oregon over church-state and land-use questions.
1982 onward
Conflict with Antelope
Followers move into the tiny nearby town of Antelope and take over its government, deepening fear and resentment among longtime Oregon residents.
1983–84
Growth and arming
The commune swells toward roughly 7,000 residents, builds extensive infrastructure, accumulates a fleet of Rolls-Royces for the guru, and forms an armed Peace Force.
1984
The Share-A-Home scheme
The commune buses in thousands of homeless people, widely seen as an effort to pad voter rolls for the November county election.
Sep 1984
The salmonella attack
Leaders contaminate salad bars at ten restaurants in The Dalles with salmonella; 751 people fall ill and 45 are hospitalized, but no one dies.
Nov 1984
The plan fails at the polls
County authorities block the commune's voter strategy, and its candidates do not prevail.
28 Feb 1985
Suspicion goes public
U.S. Representative James Weaver names the Rajneeshees in a House speech, pressing the theory that the outbreak was deliberate.
Sep 1985
The inner circle flees
Sheela and close associates abruptly leave Rajneeshpuram; Rajneesh publicly accuses them of crimes, and investigators search the commune.
Oct–Nov 1985
Arrest and deportation
Rajneesh is arrested in late October; in mid-November he enters an Alford plea to immigration charges, is fined $400,000, agrees to leave, and returns to India on 17 November.
1986
Convictions
Sheela and Ma Anand Puja enter Alford pleas; Sheela is sentenced for the attack and related crimes and serves about 29 months. The commune is finished.

The promise: a city of seekers in the high desert

Rajneeshpuram began as one of the most ambitious communal experiments of its era. Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh had drawn an international following in India with a message that fused Eastern mysticism, dynamic meditation, psychotherapy, and a frank embrace of sexuality, and when his ashram in Pune ran into trouble, his movement bought a vast, degraded cattle ranch in the Oregon high desert and set out to build paradise on it. Thousands of disciples — many of them affluent, educated Westerners, professionals and graduates who had left careers behind — arrived to wear the movement's red and orange, take new Sanskrit names, and pour their labor and savings into the project.

For a few years they built something startling. On land long thought barren the sannyasins raised housing, roads, a reservoir, farms, a public transit system, and even an airstrip, turning the ranch into a working city of thousands. Days were structured around work as worship and communal meditation; the atmosphere mixed spiritual seeking with festival. To the people who came, Rajneeshpuram answered a real hunger — for meaning, for community, for a life organized around something larger than individual ambition. That this idealism was genuine is part of what makes the later crimes so hard to absorb.

The tightening: a siege mentality and an inner circle

The commune did not exist in a vacuum. Its arrival alarmed rural Oregon, and a grinding legal war began almost at once — over whether a church could incorporate a city, over land-use rules, over immigration. The state challenged Rajneeshpuram's legitimacy; neighbors organized against it; the commune answered by taking over the nearby town of Antelope and treating the surrounding county as an enemy. Inside the ranch, a we-against-the-world mentality hardened. The community armed a security force, conducted surveillance, and increasingly framed outsiders not as neighbors to be won over but as threats to be defeated.

Power, meanwhile, concentrated. For much of this period Rajneesh kept a vow of public silence, and the day-to-day rule of Rajneeshpuram fell to his secretary, Ma Anand Sheela, and a small inner circle around her. They controlled communications, finances, security, and the medical corporation, and operated with little accountability to the wider membership, many of whom knew nothing of what their leaders were planning. As the November 1984 election approached — with seats that could shape the commune's fate up for grabs — this inner circle moved from defense to attack. They imported thousands of homeless people under a "Share-A-Home" program widely read as an attempt to manufacture votes, and, when officials moved to block that, they reached for something far worse.

The end: poison, flight, and prosecution

In September 1984, members of the inner circle deliberately spread salmonella through The Dalles, the county's largest town, smearing the bacteria onto produce and dispensers at ten restaurant salad bars. The aim was coldly practical: sicken enough local voters to keep them home on election day so that commune-backed candidates could win. The outbreak made 751 people ill and sent 45 to hospital. It was, and remains, the largest bioterror attack in American history — and it failed at its own goal, because county authorities tightened voter-registration rules and the commune's electoral gambit collapsed. For months the illness was officially blamed on poor hygiene, until a congressman's pressure and, decisively, the leadership's own fracture reopened the case.

The end came in 1985. In September, Sheela and close associates abruptly left the country, and Rajneesh — emerging from silence — publicly accused them of a list of crimes, inviting investigators in. Searches of the commune turned up a salmonella culture in its medical laboratory that matched the strain that had sickened The Dalles, along with evidence of wiretapping and other plots, including a conspiracy to murder a U.S. official. Rajneesh himself was arrested in late October and, in mid-November, entered an Alford plea to immigration violations; he was fined $400,000, agreed to leave the United States, and flew to India on 17 November 1985, dying there in 1990. Sheela was extradited from Europe and, in 1986, entered Alford pleas to charges including the poisoning and the attempted-murder conspiracy; she received a 20-year sentence but served roughly 29 months. Ma Anand Puja, the nurse who ran the medical corporation, was convicted alongside her. Rajneeshpuram, stripped of its leaders and its legitimacy, emptied out and ceased to exist.

The Five Factors

01
Charismatic authority delegated
Rajneesh's silence left a charismatic vacuum that his secretary and inner circle filled, ruling in his name with little check. When a movement's reverence for one figure is transferred wholesale to the lieutenants who speak for him, those deputies wield unaccountable power that they can turn to ends the followers never sanctioned.
02
Isolation and information control
A remote ranch, a controlled internal media, and a sealed leadership meant most members lived inside a curated reality. Cut off from outside correction and from full knowledge of their own leaders' acts, ordinary followers could neither judge nor restrain what was being done in their name.
03
Us-versus-them siege mentality
Years of legal and social conflict recast outsiders as enemies, lowering the moral threshold for harming them. Once a group decides that the surrounding world is at war with it, acts unthinkable toward neighbors become defensible toward adversaries — and poisoning a town can be rationalized as self-defense.
04
Ends-justify-means escalation
The leadership moved by steps from political organizing to vote-padding to bioterror, each move framed as protecting the commune's survival. Escalation feels incremental from inside: every new tactic is only slightly past the last, until a community of seekers finds itself spreading disease for votes.
05
Diffusion of responsibility in a hierarchy
A compartmentalized structure let a small circle plan and execute the attack while most members remained ignorant or uninvolved. When responsibility is split among "the leadership," no individual feels they have crossed a line, and atrocities become organizational outputs that no single conscience owns.

Aftermath

The salmonella attack injured 751 people, hospitalizing 45; that no one died was a matter of luck, not restraint, and the residents of The Dalles carried the experience of having been deliberately poisoned by neighbors. The case permanently changed how American public-health and law-enforcement agencies think about bioterror, becoming a foundational study in how a non-state group could weaponize a common pathogen against civilians, and it is still cited in biodefense planning. Ma Anand Sheela and Ma Anand Puja were convicted; Rajneesh was deported and never charged in the poisoning itself. The ranch passed through other hands and is now a Christian youth camp. The movement around Osho continued internationally and, in later years, popular documentaries revived public interest in the saga — a renewed attention that, for the people of The Dalles, sat uneasily beside the memory of the harm done to them.

Lessons

  1. Beware leadership that operates in the dark: when a small inner circle controls communications, money, and security with no accountability, the whole community can be implicated in acts it never chose.
  2. Treat a hardening us-versus-them frame as a danger signal — once outsiders are recast as enemies, a group's ordinary restraints against harming people quietly fall away.
  3. Watch for incremental escalation. Movements rarely leap to atrocity; they arrive by small, each-seemingly-justified steps, so the time to object is at the first tactic that treats other people as obstacles.
  4. Keep the harmed at the center: 751 poisoned neighbors are the measure of Rajneeshpuram, not the commune's ambitions or its later notoriety.
  5. Remember that idealism is no safeguard. Sincere seekers built this community, and sincerity did not prevent it from committing the largest bioterror attack in the country's history.

References