The "Boy in the Box" trial was held at the Riverside County Superior Court in Indio, California in 1969 and 1970. It was, at that time, portrayed as a case of child endangerment.
Charges were filed against thirteen members of Solar Lodge after their ranch near Vidal, California was raided by deputies of the Riverside County Sheriff's Department on July 26, 1969.
When the deputy sheriffs arrived at Solar Ranch, they found six-year-old Saul Gibbons sitting inside a six-foot by six-foot box with a chain padlocked to his left leg and attached to a heavy metal plate.
It was alleged that "the boy was kept chained up in a small box and left exposed to the heat of the Sonoran Desert for fifty-six days, between May 1969 to July 26, 1969. He did not leave the box at any time during those fifty-six days."
However, the doctor who immediately examined the child testified that he was "A normal six-year-old boy, perhaps a bit dirty, but not suffering from malnutrition or dehydration." This statement is not consistent with the general accusations of prolonged confinement over many days.
Thirteen members were arrested at the Vidal compound. Four were convicted of a felony, receiving six months in jail, five were convicted of a misdemeanor, receiving three months in jail, and four had their charges dismissed at the Indio branch of the Riverside County Superior Court.
Jean Brayton, her husband, the boy's father, and three other members left California before they could be arrested, going on the run from the authorities. Three years later they all surrendered in court, but none were forced to serve a sentence in jail because it was determined that the circumstances surrounding their charges were subject to entrapment laws. Jean Brayton pleaded guilty and was sentenced to three years probation and a $500.00 fine. Her husband, Richard Brayton, had his charges dismissed. Frater Dys, who had actually chained the boy for no more than 10 hours, pleaded guilty and received probation. Other members had their charges dismissed due to lack of evidence.