TV actor Allison Mack has been sentenced to three years in prison for manipulating women into becoming sex slaves for the spiritual leader of a scandal-ridden, cult-like group called NXIVM.
Mack — best known for her role as a young Superman’s close friend on the series Smallville — had previously pleaded guilty to the charges and was expected to seek credit for co-operating against NXIVM leader Keith Raniere and taking responsibility for helping him create a secret society of brainwashed women who were branded with his initials.
At her sentencing in Brooklyn federal court in New York, Mack renounced Raniere.
“I made choices I will forever regret,” she said, telling the judge she was filled with “remorse and guilt”.
Devoting herself to the self-improvement guru “was the biggest mistake and greatest regret of my life”, she wrote in a letter filed with the court last week.
“I am sorry to those of you that I brought into NXIVM,” she wrote. “I am sorry I ever exposed you to the nefarious and emotionally abusive schemes of a twisted man.”
She reiterated her apologies to the victims in court on Wednesday: “From the deepest part of my heart and soul, I am sorry.”
Under advisory sentencing guidelines, Mack would face between 14 and 17 years behind bars, but her defence team argued in court papers that probation or a sentence to home confinement would be more appropriate. Prosecutors had agreed that any prison term should be below the guideline range because of her co-operation.
“The NXIVM saga and the story of Ms Mack’s descent have been a tragedy for all involved. But that need not, and should not, be the end of the story for Allison Mack,” her lawyers wrote in court papers.
Mack, 38, was once part of the inner circle of Raniere, whose group attracted millionaires and actors among its adherents. Prosecutors said she became a “master” for “slaves” she ordered “to perform labour, take nude photographs, and in some cases, to engage in sex acts with Raniere”.
As authorities closed in on him, he fled to Mexico with Mack and others to try to reconstitute the group there.
He was arrested and sent to the US in March 2018. Mack was arrested a few days later.
“Ms Mack now understands that this was the best thing that could have happened to her at that time,” the defence papers said.
She provided information to prosecutors about how Raniere, now 60, encouraged “the use of demeaning and derogatory language, including racial slurs, to humiliate ‘slaves’”, the government papers said. More importantly, she provided a recording of a conversation she had with Raniere about the branding, they added.
The branding should involve “a vulnerable position type of a thing” with “hands probably above the head being held, almost like being tied down, like sacrificial, whatever”, Raniere told her.
The women, he added, “should say, ‘Please brand me. It would be an honour’. Or something like that”.
Raniere was sentenced last year to 120 years in prison for his conviction on sex-trafficking charges.
A 41-year-old heir to the Seagram’s fortune, Clare Bronfman, was sentenced to nearly seven years in prison in September for her role as Raniere’s benefactor.