According to John Miller he receives telepathic impressions from the spirit world. These impressions lead to the creation of healing instruments. They are "given" to those who "donate", where the "donations" range from hundreds to thousands of dollars.
Gentle Wind Project was, in effect, put out of business by the Maine Attorney General’s Office in August 2006.
The group claimed its products could effectively treat everything from high blood pressure to Alzheimer’s disease.
Not true, said a consumer fraud complaint filed by the Maine Attorney General’s Office in July. The state accused GWP of violating Maine’s Unfair Trade Practices Act in a complaint that contends there is no objective or reliable scientific evidence that the instruments are effective.
The complaint upheld on Aug. 15 2006 in York County Superior Court also accused the group of mismanagement of donations that it had collected as a charity. According to the group’s most recent public tax filing, GWP’s annual revenue for the budget year that ended Aug. 31, 2004, was nearly $1.2 million.
Wind of Changes : "Wind of Changes, this public service website, is offered by ex-members -- former 'instrument keepers' of the Gentle Wind Project -- to former and present follower-members of the group and to current "instrument keepers," as an alternative viewpoint to the leaders' self-promotion, claims, and publicity
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The fact that a person’s name or group appears on our website
does not necessarily mean they are a destructive mind control cult.
They appear because we have received inquiries and have established
a file on the group.
The Freedom of Mind Resource Center Inc. was established by cult expert Steve Hassan.