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'''Keith Allen Raniere''' (born August 26, 1960) is an American cult leader and convicted sex trafficker who | '''Keith Allen Raniere''' (born August 26, 1960) is an American cult leader and convicted sex trafficker who received a 120-year federal prison sentence for leading NXIVM, which prosecutors demonstrated was a criminal enterprise involving sex trafficking, forced labor, and racketeering despite being marketed as a self-improvement organization.<ref name="doj-raniere">U.S. Department of Justice, "NXIVM Leader Keith Raniere Sentenced to 120 Years in Prison for Racketeering and Sex Trafficking Offenses," October 27, 2020, https://www.justice.gov/usao-edny/pr/nxivm-leader-keith-raniere-sentenced-120-years-prison-racketeering-and-sex-trafficking.</ref> Between 1998 and 2018, the Albany-based organization attracted thousands through its "Executive Success Programs." Investigators uncovered a hidden subgroup called DOS (Dominus Obsequious Sororium), where Raniere maintained women as "slaves" who were branded with his initials, coerced into sexual acts, and forced into severe caloric restriction.<ref name="famous-bio">The Famous People, "Keith Raniere Biography," https://www.thefamouspeople.com/profiles/keith-raniere-36713.php.</ref> In October 2025, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit rejected Raniere's fifth bid for a new trial, affirming his conviction and the lower court's rulings.<ref name="spectrum-appeal">Spectrum News, "U.S. Court of Appeals rejects NXIVM founder's appeals," October 2025, https://spectrumlocalnews.com/nys/central-ny/news/2025/10/27/u-s--court-of-appeals-denies-nxivm-founder-a-new-trial.</ref> | ||
== Summary == | == Summary == | ||
Keith Raniere's case | Keith Raniere's case revealed how a charismatic con artist could build a predatory organization hidden inside a self-help company. For twenty years, Raniere—who demanded his followers call him "Vanguard"—claimed to be one of the world's most intelligent people. He insisted he'd solved problems that eluded history's greatest thinkers. NXIVM's "Executive Success Programs" charged thousands of dollars for courses teaching what Raniere said would erase psychological obstacles to success. The organization drew members including Hollywood actresses, wealthy heiresses, and professionals seeking self-improvement.<ref name="cbc-vanguard">CBC News, "Escaping NXIVM: Inside the secretive world of leader Keith Raniere," https://newsinteractives.cbc.ca/longform/the-making-of-the-vanguard/.</ref> | ||
What lay beneath that veneer told a different story. Federal prosecutors proved Raniere ran a criminal operation. He kept a harem of sexual partners, including women he'd groomed since their teenage years. Around 2015, he created DOS, the secret subgroup that became his most direct abuse apparatus. Women were recruited as "slaves" by "masters" who were themselves slaves to Raniere. Collateral was required: nude photographs, confessions, damaging material. That collateral would be released if anyone tried to leave. He branded these women with his initials using a cauterizing pen. They endured extreme diets. They were required to be sexually available to him on demand.<ref name="frankreport-appeal">Frank Report, "Second Circuit Rejects Keith Raniere's Latest Appeal, Upholds NXIVM Convictions," October 2025, https://frankreport.com/2025/10/27/second-circuit-rejects-keith-ranieres-latest-appeal-upholds-nxivm-convictions/.</ref> | |||
Documentaries brought the case to national attention. HBO's "The Vow" and the Starz series "Seduced: Inside the NXIVM Cult" featured former members describing their experiences in detail. | |||
== Background == | == Background == | ||
| Line 22: | Line 23: | ||
=== Early Life === | === Early Life === | ||
Raniere was born August 26, 1960, in Brooklyn to James Raniere, an advertising executive, and Vera Oschypko. At age five, the family relocated to Suffern, New York. His mother suffered from heart disease and underwent open heart surgery when he was thirteen. She struggled greatly to recover. Those who knew him said the experience marked him deeply. He spent much of his time caring for her, keeping mostly to himself rather than spending time with other children. She died on his eighteenth birthday, four months after her operation.<ref name="famous-bio" /> | |||
=== Education === | === Education === | ||
He apparently excelled in science and mathematics. He left high school early to attend Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, New York. His claims about his education vary: he said he'd earned three degrees there, majoring in mathematics, physics, and biology while minoring in psychology and philosophy. He built himself a reputation as a genius. Later he claimed the Guinness Book of World Records had listed him for the highest recorded IQ. That claim was disputed.<ref name="wiki-raniere" /> | |||
=== Consumer's Buyline === | === Consumer's Buyline === | ||
Raniere founded Consumer's Buyline in the early 1990s as a multi-level marketing company selling discounted consumer goods. State attorneys general in multiple states investigated. They accused it of operating as a pyramid scheme. The company shut down in 1996 after he reached regulatory settlements. It was an early sign. His later ventures would show the same pattern: grandiose claims mixed with predatory practices.<ref name="wiki-raniere" /> | |||
== NXIVM == | == NXIVM == | ||
| Line 36: | Line 37: | ||
=== Founding and Growth === | === Founding and Growth === | ||
In 1998, Raniere partnered with Nancy Salzman, a nurse | In 1998, Raniere partnered with Nancy Salzman, a nurse trained in neurolinguistic programming, to establish Executive Success Programs (ESP), the foundation of NXIVM. These courses promised to help participants overcome psychological barriers and reach their full potential. Raniere's methodology, which he called "Rational Inquiry," pulled from various self-help traditions and charged thousands of dollars for multi-day intensives.<ref name="doj-nxivm">U.S. Department of Justice, "Jury Finds NXIVM Leader Keith Raniere Guilty of All Counts," June 19, 2019, https://www.justice.gov/usao-edny/pr/jury-finds-nxivm-leader-keith-raniere-guilty-all-counts.</ref> | ||
At its | At its peak, roughly 700 members were enrolled. Centers operated in Albany, Vancouver, and Mexico. The membership roll included actress Allison Mack and Kristin Kreuk from Smallville. Clare and Sara Bronfman, heiresses to the Seagram fortune, poured millions into the organization.<ref name="cbc-vanguard" /> | ||
Within NXIVM, Raniere | Within NXIVM, followers called Raniere "Vanguard." They treated him with something approaching religious reverence, required to use special greetings and accept his judgment on everything. | ||
=== DOS === | === DOS === | ||
Around 2015, Raniere | Around 2015, Raniere established DOS (Dominus Obsequious Sororium, Latin for "Master Over Slave Women"). It operated as a pyramid. He sat at the apex as the sole "grandmaster." Women were brought in by other women who acted as their "masters." Each recruit had to provide "collateral" to stay in the group: nude photographs, video confessions, or information that could damage them or their families. If they left, that material would supposedly be released.<ref name="frankreport-appeal" /> | ||
DOS imposed brutal requirements on its members. Some women consumed only five hundred to eight hundred calories daily. Sleep deprivation was standard. They had to be available instantly to respond to Raniere's texts whenever he demanded. On their pubic region, they were branded with a symbol that, unbeknownst to most, incorporated Raniere's initials. Many were pressured into sexual acts with him, which were framed as an honor.<ref name="courthouse-appeal">Courthouse News, "Second Circuit upholds Keith Raniere sex cult abuse conviction," October 2025, https://www.courthousenews.com/second-circuit-upholds-keith-raniere-sex-cult-abuse-conviction/.</ref> | |||
A doctor performed the brandings using a cauterizing pen without anesthesia. Other women held the victim down. Photographs documented each branding. | |||
== Arrest and Conviction == | == Arrest and Conviction == | ||
| Line 54: | Line 55: | ||
=== Exposure === | === Exposure === | ||
The organization began to crumble in 2017 when former members talked to journalists. The New York Times ran an exposé in October 2017 detailing the branding ceremonies and coercive practices within DOS. Reporting and testimony from additional former members poured out over the following months, further revealing the group's brutality.<ref name="wiki-raniere" /> | |||
=== Arrest === | === Arrest === | ||
Raniere fled to Mexico in March 2018. Mexican federal police working with the FBI arrested him at a luxury villa in Puerto Vallarta on March 26, 2018. He was extradited to the United States and held without bail before trial.<ref name="wiki-raniere" /> | |||
=== Trial and Conviction === | === Trial and Conviction === | ||
The trial started May 2019 in federal court in Brooklyn. Judge Nicholas G. Garaufis presided. Prosecutors called multiple women who testified about their experiences in DOS. They described branding ceremonies, coerced sexual acts, and the collateral system. They presented a photograph collection from Raniere's computer showing child pornography depicting a fifteen-year-old girl called "Camila" at trial.<ref name="frankreport-appeal" /> | |||
On June 19, 2019, the jury convicted Raniere on | On June 19, 2019, the jury convicted Raniere on every count. Racketeering, racketeering conspiracy, sex trafficking, attempted sex trafficking, sex trafficking conspiracy, forced labor conspiracy, wire fraud conspiracy. They found prosecutors had established 11 "bad acts" that supported the racketeering conviction.<ref name="times-union">Times Union, "U.S. Court of Appeals rejects Keith Raniere's appeals," October 2025, https://www.timesunion.com/news/article/u-s-court-appeals-rejects-keith-raniere-s-appeals-21122215.php.</ref> | ||
=== Sentencing === | === Sentencing === | ||
Judge Garaufis sentenced Raniere to 120 years on October 27, 2020. Life imprisonment for a sixty-year-old man. He also ordered a $1.75 million fine and imposed lifetime supervised release in case he's ever released.<ref name="wiki-raniere" /> | |||
== Appeals == | == Appeals == | ||
Multiple attempts have been made to overturn the conviction. His October 2025 Second Circuit appeal, his fifth try for a new trial, claimed FBI agents fabricated or tampered with digital evidence. Specifically a hard drive and camera containing the child pornography images. Raniere argued the evidence was planted.<ref name="findlaw-appeal">FindLaw, "Leader of NXIVM Wants To Nix Convictions by Accusing Feds of Planting Evidence," 2025, https://www.findlaw.com/legalblogs/courtside/leader-of-nxivm-wants-to-nix-convictions-by-accusing-feds-of-planting-evidence/.</ref> | |||
On October 27, 2025, | On October 27, 2025, three judges voted unanimously against him. Judges Pierre N. Leval, Richard J. Sullivan, and Maria Araujo Kahn found no abuse of discretion in Garaufis's rulings. No government misconduct. They noted that even without the child pornography conviction, the racketeering conviction would stand because prosecutors proved 11 bad acts. Only two were needed.<ref name="spectrum-appeal" /> | ||
The Supreme Court remains an option if he petitions for review, though such petitions succeed rarely. A pending habeas corpus petition in the Eastern District of New York remains on hold.<ref name="frankreport-appeal" /> | |||
== Current Status == | == Current Status == | ||
Raniere, | Raniere, sixty-five years old, is housed at USP Tucson, a high-security federal penitentiary in Arizona, serving his 120-year sentence.<ref name="headline-society">Headline Society, "Where Is Keith Raniere Now? Inside the NXIVM Leader's Life After Being Sentenced to 120 Years in Prison," June 2025, https://headlinesociety.com/2025/06/19/where-is-keith-raniere-now-inside-the-nxivm-leaders-life-after-being-sentenced-to-120-years-in-prison/.</ref> | ||
== Other NXIVM Defendants == | == Other NXIVM Defendants == | ||
Several | Several organization members pleaded guilty or faced conviction: | ||
* '''Allison Mack''': The actress | * '''Allison Mack''': The actress recruited women into DOS and participated in branding ceremonies. She was sentenced to three years in prison in 2021 and has since been released. | ||
* '''Nancy Salzman''': NXIVM's co-founder | * '''Nancy Salzman''': NXIVM's co-founder received 42 months in prison. | ||
* '''Clare Bronfman''': The Seagram heiress was sentenced to nearly seven years | * '''Clare Bronfman''': The Seagram heiress was sentenced to nearly seven years for her financial involvement. | ||
* '''Lauren Salzman''': Nancy Salzman's daughter | * '''Lauren Salzman''': Nancy Salzman's daughter served as a "master" in DOS and received probation.<ref name="wiki-nxivm" /> | ||
== Terminology == | == Terminology == | ||
| Line 95: | Line 96: | ||
* '''Racketeering''': Operating an ongoing criminal enterprise through a pattern of illegal activity, charged under the RICO Act. | * '''Racketeering''': Operating an ongoing criminal enterprise through a pattern of illegal activity, charged under the RICO Act. | ||
* '''Sex Trafficking''': | * '''Sex Trafficking''': Using force, fraud, or coercion to compel a person to engage in commercial sex acts. | ||
* '''Forced Labor''': Compelling a person to work through threats or coercion. | * '''Forced Labor''': Compelling a person to work through threats or coercion. | ||
* '''Multi-Level Marketing (MLM)''': A business model | * '''Multi-Level Marketing (MLM)''': A business model where participants earn money by recruiting new members, often criticized for resembling pyramid schemes. | ||
== See Also == | == See Also == | ||
* | * Overview of the Federal Prison System | ||
* | * Pre-Sentencing Process | ||
== Frequently Asked Questions == | == Frequently Asked Questions == | ||
{{FAQSection/Start}} | {{FAQSection/Start}} | ||
{{FAQ|question=What was Keith Raniere convicted of?|answer=Raniere was convicted | {{FAQ|question=What was Keith Raniere convicted of?|answer=Keith Raniere was convicted in June 2019 on all counts including racketeering, racketeering conspiracy, sex trafficking, attempted sex trafficking, sex trafficking conspiracy, forced labor conspiracy, and wire fraud conspiracy. The jury established 11 "bad acts" that supported the racketeering conviction. His computer contained child pornography photographs depicting a fifteen-year-old girl identified as "Camila."}} | ||
{{FAQ|question=How long is Keith Raniere's sentence?|answer=Raniere | {{FAQ|question=How long is Keith Raniere's sentence?|answer=Raniere received 120 years in federal prison on October 27, 2020. For a sixty-year-old, that's effectively a life sentence. Judge Garaufis imposed a $1.75 million fine and lifetime supervised release should he ever be freed. In October 2025, the Second Circuit rejected his fifth attempt at a new trial, affirming his conviction.}} | ||
{{FAQ|question=What was NXIVM?|answer=NXIVM | {{FAQ|question=What was NXIVM?|answer=NXIVM marketed itself as a self-improvement organization offering "Executive Success Programs" at thousands of dollars per course. About 700 members participated at its height, operating from centers in Albany, Vancouver, and Mexico. Allison Mack and heiresses Clare and Sara Bronfman were members. Raniere was called "Vanguard" and treated with reverence by followers. Federal prosecutors proved it was actually a criminal enterprise involving sex trafficking, forced labor, and racketeering.}} | ||
{{FAQ|question=Where is Keith Raniere imprisoned?|answer=Raniere is incarcerated at | {{FAQ|question=Where is Keith Raniere imprisoned?|answer=Raniere is incarcerated at USP Tucson, a high-security federal penitentiary in Arizona, where he's serving his 120-year sentence. Mexican federal police working with the FBI arrested him at a luxury villa in Puerto Vallarta on March 26, 2018, and he was extradited to the United States.}} | ||
{{FAQ|question=What was DOS?|answer=DOS was a secret | {{FAQ|question=What was DOS?|answer=DOS (Dominus Obsequious Sororium, Latin for "Master Over Slave Women") was a secret subgroup Raniere created within NXIVM around 2015. The pyramid structure put Raniere alone at the top as "grandmaster." Women had to provide "collateral": nude photos, confessions, or damaging information that would be released if they tried to leave. They were branded on their pubic region with symbols containing Raniere's initials, subjected to extreme diets of five hundred to eight hundred calories daily, deprived of sleep, and coerced into sexual acts with Raniere.}} | ||
{{FAQ|question=Has Keith Raniere's conviction been appealed?|answer=Yes. Raniere's made several appeals. In October 2025, the Second Circuit unanimously rejected his fifth appeal for a new trial. He claimed FBI agents fabricated or planted digital evidence, but the court found no abuse of discretion and no government misconduct. Even if the child pornography conviction were dismissed, the racketeering conviction would stand. Raniere could still petition the Supreme Court, though chances are slim.}} | |||
{{FAQSection/End}} | {{FAQSection/End}} | ||
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{{#seo: | {{#seo: | ||
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|description=Explore Keith Raniere's NXIVM cult conviction and 120-year federal prison sentence. Learn about the sex trafficking and racketeering case. | |description=Explore Keith Raniere's NXIVM cult conviction and 120-year federal prison sentence. Learn about the sex trafficking and racketeering case. | ||
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Latest revision as of 18:15, 23 April 2026
| Keith Allen Raniere | |
|---|---|
| Born: | August 26, 1960 Brooklyn, New York |
| Charges: | Racketeering, Racketeering conspiracy, Sex trafficking, Forced labor conspiracy, Wire fraud conspiracy, Sex trafficking conspiracy, Identity theft |
| Sentence: | 120 years |
| Facility: | USP Tucson |
| Status: | Incarcerated |
Keith Allen Raniere (born August 26, 1960) is an American cult leader and convicted sex trafficker who received a 120-year federal prison sentence for leading NXIVM, which prosecutors demonstrated was a criminal enterprise involving sex trafficking, forced labor, and racketeering despite being marketed as a self-improvement organization.[1] Between 1998 and 2018, the Albany-based organization attracted thousands through its "Executive Success Programs." Investigators uncovered a hidden subgroup called DOS (Dominus Obsequious Sororium), where Raniere maintained women as "slaves" who were branded with his initials, coerced into sexual acts, and forced into severe caloric restriction.[2] In October 2025, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit rejected Raniere's fifth bid for a new trial, affirming his conviction and the lower court's rulings.[3]
Summary
Keith Raniere's case revealed how a charismatic con artist could build a predatory organization hidden inside a self-help company. For twenty years, Raniere—who demanded his followers call him "Vanguard"—claimed to be one of the world's most intelligent people. He insisted he'd solved problems that eluded history's greatest thinkers. NXIVM's "Executive Success Programs" charged thousands of dollars for courses teaching what Raniere said would erase psychological obstacles to success. The organization drew members including Hollywood actresses, wealthy heiresses, and professionals seeking self-improvement.[4]
What lay beneath that veneer told a different story. Federal prosecutors proved Raniere ran a criminal operation. He kept a harem of sexual partners, including women he'd groomed since their teenage years. Around 2015, he created DOS, the secret subgroup that became his most direct abuse apparatus. Women were recruited as "slaves" by "masters" who were themselves slaves to Raniere. Collateral was required: nude photographs, confessions, damaging material. That collateral would be released if anyone tried to leave. He branded these women with his initials using a cauterizing pen. They endured extreme diets. They were required to be sexually available to him on demand.[5]
Documentaries brought the case to national attention. HBO's "The Vow" and the Starz series "Seduced: Inside the NXIVM Cult" featured former members describing their experiences in detail.
Background
Early Life
Raniere was born August 26, 1960, in Brooklyn to James Raniere, an advertising executive, and Vera Oschypko. At age five, the family relocated to Suffern, New York. His mother suffered from heart disease and underwent open heart surgery when he was thirteen. She struggled greatly to recover. Those who knew him said the experience marked him deeply. He spent much of his time caring for her, keeping mostly to himself rather than spending time with other children. She died on his eighteenth birthday, four months after her operation.[2]
Education
He apparently excelled in science and mathematics. He left high school early to attend Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, New York. His claims about his education vary: he said he'd earned three degrees there, majoring in mathematics, physics, and biology while minoring in psychology and philosophy. He built himself a reputation as a genius. Later he claimed the Guinness Book of World Records had listed him for the highest recorded IQ. That claim was disputed.[6]
Consumer's Buyline
Raniere founded Consumer's Buyline in the early 1990s as a multi-level marketing company selling discounted consumer goods. State attorneys general in multiple states investigated. They accused it of operating as a pyramid scheme. The company shut down in 1996 after he reached regulatory settlements. It was an early sign. His later ventures would show the same pattern: grandiose claims mixed with predatory practices.[6]
NXIVM
Founding and Growth
In 1998, Raniere partnered with Nancy Salzman, a nurse trained in neurolinguistic programming, to establish Executive Success Programs (ESP), the foundation of NXIVM. These courses promised to help participants overcome psychological barriers and reach their full potential. Raniere's methodology, which he called "Rational Inquiry," pulled from various self-help traditions and charged thousands of dollars for multi-day intensives.[7]
At its peak, roughly 700 members were enrolled. Centers operated in Albany, Vancouver, and Mexico. The membership roll included actress Allison Mack and Kristin Kreuk from Smallville. Clare and Sara Bronfman, heiresses to the Seagram fortune, poured millions into the organization.[4]
Within NXIVM, followers called Raniere "Vanguard." They treated him with something approaching religious reverence, required to use special greetings and accept his judgment on everything.
DOS
Around 2015, Raniere established DOS (Dominus Obsequious Sororium, Latin for "Master Over Slave Women"). It operated as a pyramid. He sat at the apex as the sole "grandmaster." Women were brought in by other women who acted as their "masters." Each recruit had to provide "collateral" to stay in the group: nude photographs, video confessions, or information that could damage them or their families. If they left, that material would supposedly be released.[5]
DOS imposed brutal requirements on its members. Some women consumed only five hundred to eight hundred calories daily. Sleep deprivation was standard. They had to be available instantly to respond to Raniere's texts whenever he demanded. On their pubic region, they were branded with a symbol that, unbeknownst to most, incorporated Raniere's initials. Many were pressured into sexual acts with him, which were framed as an honor.[8]
A doctor performed the brandings using a cauterizing pen without anesthesia. Other women held the victim down. Photographs documented each branding.
Arrest and Conviction
Exposure
The organization began to crumble in 2017 when former members talked to journalists. The New York Times ran an exposé in October 2017 detailing the branding ceremonies and coercive practices within DOS. Reporting and testimony from additional former members poured out over the following months, further revealing the group's brutality.[6]
Arrest
Raniere fled to Mexico in March 2018. Mexican federal police working with the FBI arrested him at a luxury villa in Puerto Vallarta on March 26, 2018. He was extradited to the United States and held without bail before trial.[6]
Trial and Conviction
The trial started May 2019 in federal court in Brooklyn. Judge Nicholas G. Garaufis presided. Prosecutors called multiple women who testified about their experiences in DOS. They described branding ceremonies, coerced sexual acts, and the collateral system. They presented a photograph collection from Raniere's computer showing child pornography depicting a fifteen-year-old girl called "Camila" at trial.[5]
On June 19, 2019, the jury convicted Raniere on every count. Racketeering, racketeering conspiracy, sex trafficking, attempted sex trafficking, sex trafficking conspiracy, forced labor conspiracy, wire fraud conspiracy. They found prosecutors had established 11 "bad acts" that supported the racketeering conviction.[9]
Sentencing
Judge Garaufis sentenced Raniere to 120 years on October 27, 2020. Life imprisonment for a sixty-year-old man. He also ordered a $1.75 million fine and imposed lifetime supervised release in case he's ever released.[6]
Appeals
Multiple attempts have been made to overturn the conviction. His October 2025 Second Circuit appeal, his fifth try for a new trial, claimed FBI agents fabricated or tampered with digital evidence. Specifically a hard drive and camera containing the child pornography images. Raniere argued the evidence was planted.[10]
On October 27, 2025, three judges voted unanimously against him. Judges Pierre N. Leval, Richard J. Sullivan, and Maria Araujo Kahn found no abuse of discretion in Garaufis's rulings. No government misconduct. They noted that even without the child pornography conviction, the racketeering conviction would stand because prosecutors proved 11 bad acts. Only two were needed.[3]
The Supreme Court remains an option if he petitions for review, though such petitions succeed rarely. A pending habeas corpus petition in the Eastern District of New York remains on hold.[5]
Current Status
Raniere, sixty-five years old, is housed at USP Tucson, a high-security federal penitentiary in Arizona, serving his 120-year sentence.[11]
Other NXIVM Defendants
Several organization members pleaded guilty or faced conviction:
- Allison Mack: The actress recruited women into DOS and participated in branding ceremonies. She was sentenced to three years in prison in 2021 and has since been released.
- Nancy Salzman: NXIVM's co-founder received 42 months in prison.
- Clare Bronfman: The Seagram heiress was sentenced to nearly seven years for her financial involvement.
- Lauren Salzman: Nancy Salzman's daughter served as a "master" in DOS and received probation.[12]
Terminology
- Racketeering: Operating an ongoing criminal enterprise through a pattern of illegal activity, charged under the RICO Act.
- Sex Trafficking: Using force, fraud, or coercion to compel a person to engage in commercial sex acts.
- Forced Labor: Compelling a person to work through threats or coercion.
- Multi-Level Marketing (MLM): A business model where participants earn money by recruiting new members, often criticized for resembling pyramid schemes.
See Also
- Overview of the Federal Prison System
- Pre-Sentencing Process
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: What was Keith Raniere convicted of?
Keith Raniere was convicted in June 2019 on all counts including racketeering, racketeering conspiracy, sex trafficking, attempted sex trafficking, sex trafficking conspiracy, forced labor conspiracy, and wire fraud conspiracy. The jury established 11 "bad acts" that supported the racketeering conviction. His computer contained child pornography photographs depicting a fifteen-year-old girl identified as "Camila."
Q: How long is Keith Raniere's sentence?
Raniere received 120 years in federal prison on October 27, 2020. For a sixty-year-old, that's effectively a life sentence. Judge Garaufis imposed a $1.75 million fine and lifetime supervised release should he ever be freed. In October 2025, the Second Circuit rejected his fifth attempt at a new trial, affirming his conviction.
Q: What was NXIVM?
NXIVM marketed itself as a self-improvement organization offering "Executive Success Programs" at thousands of dollars per course. About 700 members participated at its height, operating from centers in Albany, Vancouver, and Mexico. Allison Mack and heiresses Clare and Sara Bronfman were members. Raniere was called "Vanguard" and treated with reverence by followers. Federal prosecutors proved it was actually a criminal enterprise involving sex trafficking, forced labor, and racketeering.
Q: Where is Keith Raniere imprisoned?
Raniere is incarcerated at USP Tucson, a high-security federal penitentiary in Arizona, where he's serving his 120-year sentence. Mexican federal police working with the FBI arrested him at a luxury villa in Puerto Vallarta on March 26, 2018, and he was extradited to the United States.
Q: What was DOS?
DOS (Dominus Obsequious Sororium, Latin for "Master Over Slave Women") was a secret subgroup Raniere created within NXIVM around 2015. The pyramid structure put Raniere alone at the top as "grandmaster." Women had to provide "collateral": nude photos, confessions, or damaging information that would be released if they tried to leave. They were branded on their pubic region with symbols containing Raniere's initials, subjected to extreme diets of five hundred to eight hundred calories daily, deprived of sleep, and coerced into sexual acts with Raniere.
Q: Has Keith Raniere's conviction been appealed?
Yes. Raniere's made several appeals. In October 2025, the Second Circuit unanimously rejected his fifth appeal for a new trial. He claimed FBI agents fabricated or planted digital evidence, but the court found no abuse of discretion and no government misconduct. Even if the child pornography conviction were dismissed, the racketeering conviction would stand. Raniere could still petition the Supreme Court, though chances are slim.
References
- ↑ U.S. Department of Justice, "NXIVM Leader Keith Raniere Sentenced to 120 Years in Prison for Racketeering and Sex Trafficking Offenses," October 27, 2020, https://www.justice.gov/usao-edny/pr/nxivm-leader-keith-raniere-sentenced-120-years-prison-racketeering-and-sex-trafficking.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 The Famous People, "Keith Raniere Biography," https://www.thefamouspeople.com/profiles/keith-raniere-36713.php.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Spectrum News, "U.S. Court of Appeals rejects NXIVM founder's appeals," October 2025, https://spectrumlocalnews.com/nys/central-ny/news/2025/10/27/u-s--court-of-appeals-denies-nxivm-founder-a-new-trial.
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 CBC News, "Escaping NXIVM: Inside the secretive world of leader Keith Raniere," https://newsinteractives.cbc.ca/longform/the-making-of-the-vanguard/.
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 Frank Report, "Second Circuit Rejects Keith Raniere's Latest Appeal, Upholds NXIVM Convictions," October 2025, https://frankreport.com/2025/10/27/second-circuit-rejects-keith-ranieres-latest-appeal-upholds-nxivm-convictions/.
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 Cite error: Invalid
<ref>tag; no text was provided for refs namedwiki-raniere - ↑ U.S. Department of Justice, "Jury Finds NXIVM Leader Keith Raniere Guilty of All Counts," June 19, 2019, https://www.justice.gov/usao-edny/pr/jury-finds-nxivm-leader-keith-raniere-guilty-all-counts.
- ↑ Courthouse News, "Second Circuit upholds Keith Raniere sex cult abuse conviction," October 2025, https://www.courthousenews.com/second-circuit-upholds-keith-raniere-sex-cult-abuse-conviction/.
- ↑ Times Union, "U.S. Court of Appeals rejects Keith Raniere's appeals," October 2025, https://www.timesunion.com/news/article/u-s-court-appeals-rejects-keith-raniere-s-appeals-21122215.php.
- ↑ FindLaw, "Leader of NXIVM Wants To Nix Convictions by Accusing Feds of Planting Evidence," 2025, https://www.findlaw.com/legalblogs/courtside/leader-of-nxivm-wants-to-nix-convictions-by-accusing-feds-of-planting-evidence/.
- ↑ Headline Society, "Where Is Keith Raniere Now? Inside the NXIVM Leader's Life After Being Sentenced to 120 Years in Prison," June 2025, https://headlinesociety.com/2025/06/19/where-is-keith-raniere-now-inside-the-nxivm-leaders-life-after-being-sentenced-to-120-years-in-prison/.
- ↑ Cite error: Invalid
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