“The thing that makes the American legal justice system the envy of the world is that every man gets his day in court,’’ another of Ray’s lawyers, Luis Li, said afterward. “This was a terrible, terrible accident. This wasn’t a crime. Mr. Ray looks forward to his day in court.’’
Ray is being held in the Yavapai County jail on $5 million bond and faces a minimum of three years and a maximum of 12 1/2 years on each count.
His lawyers asked the judge to lower the bond, with Kelly saying in court that it was unconscionable and arguing that the manslaughter charges are probation-available offenses and that Ray has no criminal history.
Judge Warren Darrow is expected to set a hearing on whether to lower the bond amount as early as next week.
Prosecutor Steven Young did not argue against lowering the amount in court but has until Wednesday to file a motion opposing it.
Young declined to answer reporters’ questions afterward but said he wanted to keep Ray’s trial in Yavapai County, because that is where the alleged crime occurred.
During the October ceremony, more than 50 people filed inside the sweat lodge, built in 2008 and used numerous times without incident. Eventually, people started vomiting and passing out, and some were hosed off in an effort to cool them.
Three people who never regained consciousness died at hospitals - Kirby Brown, 38, of Westtown, N.Y.; James Shore, 40, of Milwaukee; and Liz Neuman, 49, of Prior Lake, Minn. Eighteen others were hospitalized.
Ray’s lawyers have said he took all necessary safety precautions and was not aware of any medical problems until the ceremony was over.
The self-help superstar, who teaches people about financial and spiritual wealth, uses free seminars to recruit followers to more expensive events. His company, James Ray International, is based in Carlsbad, Calif.
About a half-dozen American Indians attended yesterday’s court hearing and told reporters that Ray’s ceremonies and others like them violate their way of life.
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