My Photo

Biography

Pierre S. Freeman has been an analyst for several large financial institutions in the Minneapolis area for the last ten years. Prior to that, he instructed students at the high school and college level. His specialty in school was mathematics.

His career and academic success were preceded by many, many years of isolation, homelessness and poverty due to his involvement with a Rosicrucian cult, which he has chronicled in the Prisoner of San Jose, headquarters of the Ancient and Mystic Order of Rosae Crucis, commonly known as AMORC. The involvement with AMORC began in Haiti, where he was an engineering student and part-time high school math teacher.

This affiliation with AMORC disrupted his work and school, virtually destroying his dream of becoming an engineer. In fact, it diverted him to a downhill path that led to his working as a farm worker, itinerant taxi cab driver, dishwasher and other low level occupations as he attempted to gain prosperity based on the false, exaggerated claims of a religious cult. It took twenty-four years to uncover the psychological and physical damages that resulted from what Freeman calls “Remote Indoctrination,” a sophisticated form of mind control that he explains in depth in the book.

The techniques, which he discovered, mirror many of the methods used in other famous religious cults like Heaven’s Gate, People’s Temple and the Branch Davidians. His rather belated success in unraveling the secret techniques used to create a malleable, cult personality led to a rapid restoration of normality and a determination to expose this so-called Rosicrucian Order.

Interests

pierre s. freeman’s new book, “the prisoner of san jose, ” exposes the invasive psychological methods of a secretive rosicrucian cult based in canada but with its american headquarters in san jose, california. not only does this book expose the shadowy world of the rosicrucian order- with its secret vows, invisible masters and omnipotent authority, but also it sheds light on a technique of mind control freeman calls “remote indoctrination.”