New York sex cult was front for 'horrible evil,' surveilled members: witness

NEW YORK (Reuters) - A secretive New York group that federal prosecutors say evolved into a sex cult tried to conceal a “horrible evil” behind a facade of self-improvement, a 12-year veteran of the organization said Thursday at the group leader’s criminal trial.

Filmmaker Mark Vicente is the second witness to testify against Keith Raniere, who is on trial for crimes including sex trafficking for his role running the secretive upstate New York Nxivm group. Prosecutors said Raniere forced women to have sex with him and in some cases branded his initials on them.

“It’s a well-intended veneer that covers a horrible evil,” an emotional Vicente said during the trial’s third day in federal court in Brooklyn.

Vicente said he was like many of the group’s members when he joined in 2005, buying into Raniere’s pitch of himself as a genius who could help people turn their lives around. As he rose through the ranks, Vicente discovered that Nxivm spied on its members by placing surveillance cameras in their driveways and pressured them to spend thousands of dollars to take its classes.

Raniere, 58, has pleaded not guilty to charges including sex trafficking and child pornography. He faces life in prison if convicted.

Prosecutors say women were blackmailed into having sex with Raniere and branded with his initials as part of a secret society within Nxivm called DOS, an acronym for a Latin phrase that roughly means “master of the obedient female companions.”

Defense lawyer Marc Agnifilo has argued at the trial that members joined voluntarily and were never forced to do anything against their will.

Vicente, who has spoken out against Raniere since breaking away from the group in 2017, said Nxivm President Nancy Salzman contacted him around 2005 after seeing a film Vicente made about quantum physics and philosophy, saying she wanted to introduce him to Raniere.

That meeting led Vicente to begin his association with the group, he told jurors. He described how Nxivm members wore an array of striped colored sashes to show their rank, and were encouraged to make their way up the “stripe path.”

Senior members got to teach classes to junior members, although the amount they were paid for their teaching followed no clear pattern, Vicente said. Asked to describe the group’s accounting system, he replied, “It was chaos.”

A former Nxivm and DOS member who was only identified by her first name Sylvie told jurors on Wednesday she was recruited as a “slave” to another woman in the organization. Her “master” eventually ordered her to engage in sexual activity with Raniere, who also took nude photos of her, she said.

Other individuals who say they were victims of the group are expected to testify. Five of Raniere’s co-defendants, including Salzman, Seagram liquor heiress Clare Bronfman and former “Smallville” television actress Allison Mack, have pleaded guilty to related crimes.

Reporting by Brendan Pierson; editing by Jonathan Oatis and Bill Trott

Our Standards:The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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