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Prosecutor in NXIVM case says self-help guru groomed women for sex

Inside the bizarre NXIVM sex cult
Inside the bizarre story of the NXIVM sex cult 04:02

A self-help guru groomed women for sex, subjecting them to "shame and humiliation" and threatening to expose their "deepest, darkest secrets" if they didn't comply with his wishes, a federal prosecutor said Tuesday. Assistant U.S. Attorney Tanya Hajjar presented opening statements at the sex-trafficking trial of Keith Raniere, the former leader of an upstate New York group called NXIVM that's been likened to a cult.

The prosecutor alleged that Raniere had sex with a 15-year-old girl and took nude photos of her; she also described how some female followers were branded with Raniere's initials. Authorities have said the branding was done using a cautery pen without anesthesia by a doctor who is now under investigation by state health officials.

Eight "Jane Does" in that case have refused to answer questions, saying through their lawyers "the branding was a voluntary free expression of personal beliefs." But Raniere's trial is expected to feature testimony from women who claim they were forced to have sex with Raniere.

Five of Raniere's co-defendants, including TV actress Allison Mack, have pleaded guilty. Raniere has denied criminal wrongdoing; his lawyers said his relationships were consensual.

In court papers, defense lawyers have said the alleged victims were never abused. The women were instead described as "independent, smart, curious adults" in search of "happiness, fulfillment and meaning."

But legions of NXIVM defectors and detractors have called the self-help rhetoric a brainwashing device that has destroyed lives. Promotional material for the now-disbanded group once hailed Raniere as a "scientist, mathematician, philosopher, entrepreneur, educator, inventor and author" who has "devoted his life to developing new tools for human empowerment, expression and ethics."

"The defendant pretended to be a guru," Hajjar said, "but he was a criminal."

Last year, The New York Times published an expose on the group. Amid reports that investigators were interviewing some women who had defected from a secret NXIVM sorority called DOS, an acronym for a Latin phrase roughly translated as "Lord/master of obedient women," Raniere fled to Mexico. He was ultimately found staying with Mack and other women in a luxury villa in Puerto Vallarta and taken into custody on a U.S. warrant.

Mack, best known for her role as a young Superman's close friend on the series "Smallville," also was charged, along with Clare Bronfman, an heir to the Seagram liquor fortune who bankrolled NXIVM. Lauren Salzman, the daughter of the group's top executive, and two others also faced charges.

All of Raniere's co-defendants pleaded guilty after prosecutors added child exploitation charges against him earlier this year based on evidence that he allegedly had sex with a 15-year-old.

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