American ‘self-help guru’ accused of operating pyramid scheme of women sex slaves | World News - Hindustan Times
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American ‘self-help guru’ accused of operating pyramid scheme of women sex slaves

Agence France-Presse, New York | By
Mar 27, 2018 10:14 AM IST

As a pre-condition of joining, women allegedly had to provide “collateral” such as damaging information about friends and family, nude photographs and rights to their assets, which they feared they would lose if they did not have sex.

An American “self-help” guru, who presided over a secretive society of women sex slaves branded with his initials, is due in court Tuesday, five months after fleeing to Mexico.

Keith Raniere set up supposed self-help workshops called ‘Executive Success Programs’ in 1998, whose umbrella organisation Nxivm has operated in Canada, Mexico, South America and the United States, and recruited in Brooklyn, officials said.(AFP File)
Keith Raniere set up supposed self-help workshops called ‘Executive Success Programs’ in 1998, whose umbrella organisation Nxivm has operated in Canada, Mexico, South America and the United States, and recruited in Brooklyn, officials said.(AFP File)

Keith Raniere, 57, from Waterford, New York, is known as ‘The Vanguard’.

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He is charged with sex trafficking and conspiracies that could see him jailed for between 15 years and life if convicted, US prosecutors said on Monday.

The FBI and Mexican police tracked him down Sunday at a luxury villa on the Pacific coast, following his escape to Mexico with an unnamed heiress after The New York Times exposed the organisation last October.

He is due to appear in a Texas court on Tuesday.

FBI senior official William Sweeney accused Raniere of displaying “a disgusting abuse of power in his efforts to denigrate and manipulate women he considered his sex slaves”.

The case involved “serious crimes against humanity,” said Sweeney, “and we are putting an end to this torture today.”

Raniere set up supposed self-help workshops called ‘Executive Success Programs’ in 1998, whose umbrella organization Nxivm has operated in Canada, Mexico, South America and the United States, and recruited in Brooklyn, officials said.

Participants paid up to $5,000 for a five-day workshop with members often required to sign non-disclosure agreements, US prosecutors said.

Each August, they also paid $2,000 to gather in the New York lakeside hamlet of Silver Bay to honour Raniere for his birthday.

Carrying on poly-amorous relations from the start, in 2015 he is accused of creating a secret society called “DOS” – a pyramid scheme of women “slaves” and “masters” with Raniere, the sole man – alone at the top.

Members were allegedly told that they would be empowered, but were instead treated as slaves – branded with Raniere’s initials on their pelvic areas while being pinned down naked and filmed at initiation ceremonies.

As a pre-condition of joining, women allegedly had to provide “collateral” such as damaging information about friends and family, nude photographs and rights to their assets, which they feared they would lose if they did not have sex.

Some were forced onto low-calorie diets as Raniere preferred exceptionally thin women, and none were allowed to sleep with anyone but him, prosecutors said.

Slaves were also required to fetch coffee and groceries, make lunch and clean the houses of their “masters”, officials alleged.

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