Mysterious Vanishing: 6 Individuals Follow Online "spiritual Cult" Leader And Vanish Into Thin Air
A self-proclaimed prophet built a ‘spiritual cult’ online. Now, six followers are missing without a trace
A group of six people, including two young children, have been missing since August – and police say the adults all have one thing in common – they all openly follow a self-proclaimed “prophet” and rapper with a massive social media following.
After they seemingly vanished without a trace from a rental home in St. Louis, an investigation by the Berkeley Police Department in Missouri was launched, but months later, there are still no answers about their whereabouts
“These people are gone, and it blows my mind,” Major Steve Runge said.
Mikayla Thompson, 25, of St. Louis; Naaman Williams, 30, of Washington, D.C.; Gerrielle German, 27, of Lake Horn, Mississippi; Ashton Williams, 2, of Lake Horn; Ma’Kayla Wickerson, 36, of St. Louis; and Malaiyah Wickerson, 3, of St. Louis, were all living in the same St. Louis house briefly before they disappeared.
They were last seen on August 13 2023 at a Quality Inn Hotel at 55 Dunn Road in Florissant, Missouri.
When police searched the house, they found it left as if the individuals had just “gone to the store” and were expecting to return.
Food was still in the microwave, laundry was still in the washing machine, and left behind were several valuables including a closet full of shoes worth thousands of dollars.
Police also discovered an altar, items wrapped in copper, and other odd findings that led them to believe the adults were fully “living this cult.
The investigation revealed the group had become a part of a spiritual cult and they follow the teachings of Rashad Jamal, a self-proclaimed prophet who has tens of thousands of followers across multiple social media platforms.
Jamal, who was convicted of various crimes in Georgia, was sentenced in August to 18 years in prison.
“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,” according to police.
"We have learned that similar cult members travel at great lengths to live off the grid and stay with fellow cult members and that their economic status does not appear to be a factor.”
Major Runge, who has been investigating the group’s whereabouts for nearly five months, said that neighbors noticed some abnormal behaviours before they vanished.
“Neighbors reported seeing these people outside daily, worshiping the sun,” he said. “When it was raining, they would come outside naked and run around the yard. They were digging up things in the yard.”
Major Runge said the missing adults went by aliases that pay tribute to certain gods and goddesses — which has been reported as a common theme among many of Jamal’s followers.
Ms Thompson called herself Antu Anum Ahmat, Mr Williams called himself Anubis Aramean and Ms Wickerson called herself Intuahma Aquama Auntil.
Major Runge said Jamal’s followers believe in polygamy, are anti-government, encourage followers to go off the grid and that there is a “total disconnection” from family and friends.
What’s most concerning, he said, is that the missing individuals had a vast social media presence before they disappeared. They made their money off readings and selling things.
But as of August 13th, they’ve gone silent.
Rashad Jamal created The University of Cosmic Intelligence — an online religious group with thousands of followers.
According to its website, The University of Cosmic Intelligence is “geared toward enlightening and illuminating the minds of the carbonated beings, a.k.a. your so called Black and Latino people of Earth.”
“I am a god, and all of my people, the Black and Latino people, are gods. And we were made in the image of our creator,” Jamal said in a video post.
“Therefore, I am an extension of Her/Them, and I am the creator and destroyer of my reality, so I take full responsibility for all events that I have experienced through this lifetime, for this is what we call shadow work in the spiritual realm.”
Jamal has a massive following on social media with nearly 200,000 followers on TikTok, more than 10,000 followers on X and 90,000 followers on Instagram.
In his videos, he makes wild claims that birds are actually drones operated by the US government to spy on its citizens, that the Mississippi River is really the Nile River and that Arizona is a gateway to Africa.
In August, Jamal was found guilty of child molestation and sentenced to 18 years in prison.
Later that same month, he filed a motion for a new trial, citing “the State’s failure to prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.”
“The only law I had broken was speaking out against oppression,” Jamal said in a YouTube video post. “…The only thing I am guilty of is freeing the minds of my people and speaking out against this system, and I’ll never back down from that.”
A self-proclaimed prophet built a ‘spiritual cult’ online. Now, six followers are missing without a trace
A group of six people, including two young children, have been missing since August – and police say the adults all have one thing in common – they all openly follow a self-proclaimed “prophet” and rapper with a massive social media following.
After they seemingly vanished without a trace from a rental home in St. Louis, an investigation by the Berkeley Police Department in Missouri was launched, but months later, there are still no answers about their whereabouts
“These people are gone, and it blows my mind,” Major Steve Runge said.
Mikayla Thompson, 25, of St. Louis; Naaman Williams, 30, of Washington, D.C.; Gerrielle German, 27, of Lake Horn, Mississippi; Ashton Williams, 2, of Lake Horn; Ma’Kayla Wickerson, 36, of St. Louis; and Malaiyah Wickerson, 3, of St. Louis, were all living in the same St. Louis house briefly before they disappeared.
They were last seen on August 13 2023 at a Quality Inn Hotel at 55 Dunn Road in Florissant, Missouri.
When police searched the house, they found it left as if the individuals had just “gone to the store” and were expecting to return.
Food was still in the microwave, laundry was still in the washing machine, and left behind were several valuables including a closet full of shoes worth thousands of dollars.
Police also discovered an altar, items wrapped in copper, and other odd findings that led them to believe the adults were fully “living this cult.
The investigation revealed the group had become a part of a spiritual cult and they follow the teachings of Rashad Jamal, a self-proclaimed prophet who has tens of thousands of followers across multiple social media platforms.
Jamal, who was convicted of various crimes in Georgia, was sentenced in August to 18 years in prison.
“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,” according to police.
"We have learned that similar cult members travel at great lengths to live off the grid and stay with fellow cult members and that their economic status does not appear to be a factor.”
Major Runge, who has been investigating the group’s whereabouts for nearly five months, said that neighbors noticed some abnormal behaviours before they vanished.
“Neighbors reported seeing these people outside daily, worshiping the sun,” he said. “When it was raining, they would come outside naked and run around the yard. They were digging up things in the yard.”
Major Runge said the missing adults went by aliases that pay tribute to certain gods and goddesses — which has been reported as a common theme among many of Jamal’s followers.
Ms Thompson called herself Antu Anum Ahmat, Mr Williams called himself Anubis Aramean and Ms Wickerson called herself Intuahma Aquama Auntil.
Major Runge said Jamal’s followers believe in polygamy, are anti-government, encourage followers to go off the grid and that there is a “total disconnection” from family and friends.
What’s most concerning, he said, is that the missing individuals had a vast social media presence before they disappeared. They made their money off readings and selling things.
But as of August 13th, they’ve gone silent.
Rashad Jamal created The University of Cosmic Intelligence — an online religious group with thousands of followers.
According to its website, The University of Cosmic Intelligence is “geared toward enlightening and illuminating the minds of the carbonated beings, a.k.a. your so called Black and Latino people of Earth.”
“I am a god, and all of my people, the Black and Latino people, are gods. And we were made in the image of our creator,” Jamal said in a video post.
“Therefore, I am an extension of Her/Them, and I am the creator and destroyer of my reality, so I take full responsibility for all events that I have experienced through this lifetime, for this is what we call shadow work in the spiritual realm.”
Jamal has a massive following on social media with nearly 200,000 followers on TikTok, more than 10,000 followers on X and 90,000 followers on Instagram.
In his videos, he makes wild claims that birds are actually drones operated by the US government to spy on its citizens, that the Mississippi River is really the Nile River and that Arizona is a gateway to Africa.
In August, Jamal was found guilty of child molestation and sentenced to 18 years in prison.
Later that same month, he filed a motion for a new trial, citing “the State’s failure to prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.”
“The only law I had broken was speaking out against oppression,” Jamal said in a YouTube video post. “…The only thing I am guilty of is freeing the minds of my people and speaking out against this system, and I’ll never back down from that.”
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