Albany Times Union

NXIVM co-founder released from halfway house

- By Robert Gavin

ALBANY — NXIVM cofounder Nancy Salzman, who spent two decades as the top deputy to cult leader Keith Raniere, has been released from the Albany halfway house where she had been staying since September.

Salzman, 69, of Halfmoon, who was released from prison in September after serving less than 20 months of a 31⁄2 year sentence for racketeeri­ng conspiracy, was released from its custody on March 19, the federal Bureau of Prisons website said.

The Cranford, N.J. native and one-time nurse was released under the 2018 First Step Act, which enables federal inmates to request compassion­ate release after they exhaust administra­tive requests through the prison system. Salzman will be on supervised release until March 18, 2027.

Salzman, once romantical­ly involved with Raniere, now calls the convicted sex trafficker a predator and possible psychopath. Beginning in 1998,

Salzman, known as “Prefect” among NXIVM members, had loyally served Raniere, known as “Vanguard,” atop a secretive personal growth company based in Colonie that is now widely considered a cult. She taught Raniere’s philosophi­es as NXIVM and its Executive Success Programs spread to the West Coast, Mexico, Canada and Europe — and fell victim to his cruelty and manipulati­on, according to former members of the group.

In 2018, federal prosecutor­s in Brooklyn charged Raniere, Salzman, Salzman’s daughter, Lauren Salzman; Seagrams heiress Clare Bronfman, actress Allison Mack, and bookkeeper Kathy Russell in a sweeping racketeeri­ng case. Salzman first pleaded guilty, admitting she doctored tapes for a lawsuit in which NXIVM had sued cult expert Rick Ross and faced countercla­ims. Salzman also admitted she conspired to commit identity theft when she attempted to obtain names and passwords of email accounts of Raniere’s perceived enemies.

Lauren Salzman, who pleaded guilty to racketeeri­ng and racketeeri­ng conspiracy charges and testified for prosecutor­s, received five years of probation. She detailed the Raniere-controlled “master/ slave” side group, Dominus Obsequious Sororium, in which sleep-deprived and calorie-starved women were at times branded with Raniere’s initials. Nancy Salzman was not involved with DOS.

In June 2019, a jury convicted Raniere of sex traffickin­g, forced labor conspiracy, wire fraud conspiracy and racketeeri­ng counts. He is serving a 120-year prison sentence in Arizona.

Mack, who pleaded to racketeeri­ng and racketeeri­ng conspiracy charges, was released last July; Russell, who pleaded to visa fraud, received two years probation; and Bronfman, who pleaded to conspiring to conceal and harbor undocument­ed immigrants for financial gain, and fraudulent use of identifica­tion, is expected to be released from prison next June.

 ?? Will Waldron/times Union ?? Nancy Salzman, NXIVM’S president, during Vangaurd week at Silver Bay Center on Lake George on Aug. 27, 2003.
Will Waldron/times Union Nancy Salzman, NXIVM’S president, during Vangaurd week at Silver Bay Center on Lake George on Aug. 27, 2003.

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