Skip to content

Breaking News

  • Defendant Keith Raniere, center, sits with attorneys Paul DerOhannesian, left,...

    Elizabeth Williams/Associated Press

    Defendant Keith Raniere, center, sits with attorneys Paul DerOhannesian, left, and Marc Agnifilo during closing arguments at Brooklyn federal court on Tuesday in New York.

  • Members of the prosecution in the Nxivm case arrive with...

    Members of the prosecution in the Nxivm case arrive with documents at Brooklyn Federal Court on May 7, 2019, for day one of the trial of Keith Raniere, founder of Nxivm. - The trial of Keith Raniere, a "self-help" guru who ran a secretive society of women sex slaves branded with his initials, begins Tuesday in New York, where his former female supporters may be called to testify against him. (Photo by TIMOTHY A. CLARY / AFP) (Photo credit should read TIMOTHY A. CLARY/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Actress Allison Mack (C) departs the United States Eastern District...

    Actress Allison Mack (C) departs the United States Eastern District Court after a bail hearing in relation to the sex trafficking charges filed against her on May 4, 2018 in the Brooklyn borough of New York City. The actress, known for her role on 'Smallville', is charged with sex trafficking. Along with alleged cult leader Keith Raniere, prosecutors say Mack recruited women to a upstate New york mentorship group NXIVM that turned them into sex slaves. (Photo by Jemal Countess/Getty Images)

  • Former television actress Catherine Oxenberg, whose 26-year old daughter India...

    Former television actress Catherine Oxenberg, whose 26-year old daughter India Oxenberg has been involved with NXIVM, speaks to reporters outside the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York following a status conference for Keith Raniere and Allison Mack, June 12, 2018 in the Brooklyn borough of New York City. Mack was charged in April with sex trafficking for her involvement with a self-help organization for women that forced members into sexual acts with their leader. The group, called Nxivm, was led by founder Keith Raniere, who was arrested in March on sex-trafficking charges. (Photo by Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

  • In this Jan. 29, 2019 file photo, Lauren Salzman leaves...

    In this Jan. 29, 2019 file photo, Lauren Salzman leaves Brooklyn federal court in New York. Testifying in NXIVM leader Keith Raniere's trial on sex trafficking charges Tuesday, May 21, 2019, Salzman said that when Mexican authorities broke down his door at a villa in Puerta Vallarta to grab Raniere, she was there and tried to stand up to them while he hid in a closet. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig, File)

  • Clare Bronfman, center, the heiress to the Seagram Company and...

    Clare Bronfman, center, the heiress to the Seagram Company and a high-ranking Nxivm member, leaves Federal District Court in Brooklyn, April 8, 2019. Bronfman, was one of Keith Raniere’s loyal followers and helped Nxivm obtain access to her father’s email. (Jefferson Siegel/The New York Times)

of

Expand
PUBLISHED: | UPDATED:

CLICK HERE if you are having a problem viewing the photos on a mobile device

[vemba-video id=”us/2019/06/11/what-is-nxivm-orig-tc.cnn”]

VIDEO: Keith Raniere, founder of “NXIVM,” was found guilty of racketeering, sex trafficking

Associated Press

NEW YORK — The former leader of a purported self-help group was convicted Wednesday of federal charges that centered on lurid details of what prosecutors called a secret society of “sex slaves” within a community of followers in upstate New York.

A jury in federal court in Brooklyn took less than five hours to find Keith Raniere (rah-NEER’-ee) guilty on all counts of sex-trafficking and other charges accusing him of coercing women into unwanted sex using systematic shame and humiliation.

Raniere listened attentively, but showed no visible reaction as he learned the verdict.

Prosecutors had told jurors that someone known as “Vanguard” and revered as “the smartest man in the world” among some followers was actually a creepy con man who barely got passing grades in college.

The sorority, sometimes called “The Vow,” was created “to satisfy the defendant’s desire for sex, power and control,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Moira Penza said in closing arguments.

Among the more damning allegations against Raniere were that he had some women branded with his initials and that he started having sex with one of his followers starting at age 15. Prosecutors said he took a series of nude photos of the teen that were shown at trial, one by one, to the eight women and four men who comprised the jury.

Raniere kept the child pornography stashed in his private study as “a trophy” of “his sexual conquest,” Penza said.

The defense argued Raniere was a genuine believer in unconventional means for self-improvement and that all his sexual encounters with female followers of his organization, called NXIVM (NEHK’-see-uhm), were consensual. His behavior could be seen as “repulsive and offensive, but we don’t convict people in this country for being repulsive or offensive,” attorney Marc Agnifilo said in his closings.

Raniere, 58, was arrested at a Mexican hideout in 2018 following an investigation his Albany-area group, that once had an international following with a foothold in Hollywood but was called a cult by critics. His adherents included TV actress Allison Mack, best known for her role as a friend of a young Superman in the series “Smallville,” and Seagram’s liquor fortune heiress, Clare Bronfman.

Raniere’s organization began to crumble amid sensational reports about The Vow alleging its members were held down and branded in ceremonies at a “sorority house” for them that had a mock dungeon.

Mack and Bronfman, who were named as defendants with Raniere in a federal indictment, pleaded guilty before they could go to trial with him. They didn’t testify, leaving a cooperating member of his inner circle and three victims from the secret sorority as the key witnesses.

The cooperator described how female “masters” forced “slaves” for Raniere to give up “collateral” — nude photos and other material that would ruin them if ever made public – to keep them in line.

One of the victims, whose names were withheld to protect her privacy, described being confined to a bedroom for more than 700 days on orders from Raniere as punishment for showing interest in another man. Another explained how Raniere lured her to a home when she was blind-folded and bound to a table so that another woman could perform a sex act on her; and the third recounted making up an excuse to leave the community so she could avoid completing an assignment from her “master” — Allison Mack — to “seduce” Raniere.

Agnifilo, the defense attorney, sought to point jurors to evidence of text and other messages between Raniere and the woman he said showed they had caring relationships that ended with “no hard feelings.” And since the group never released any of the slaves’ collateral, “Where’s the extortion?” he asked.

But with the victims’ stories of abuse at the hands of Raniere, Penza said, “A light has been shown into the darkness and the defendant’s crimes have been exposed.”