Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Man sentenced for years of abuse of women

Ex-convict inflicted ‘psychologi­cal terror’

- By Larry Neumeister

An ex-convict who obtained millions of dollars by subjecting his daughter’s ex-college roommates to forced labor and prostituti­on was sentenced Friday to 60 years in prison by a judge who labeled him an “evil genius” who used sadism and psychologi­cal torture to control every aspect of his victims’ lives.

Lawrence “Larry” Ray, 63, was sentenced in Manhattan federal court by Judge Lewis Liman.

“There is no reason to believe Mr. Ray will age out of criminal behavior,” Liman said, noting that the crimes began when Ray moved in late 2010 into his daughter’s on-campus housing at Sarah Lawrence College, a small New York liberal arts school.

The judge said Ray charmed his victims with his “exaggerate­d sense of self ” and his intelligen­ce before “robbing them of their relationsh­ips, self-worth, memories and then their bodies” after convincing them they had poisoned him and owed him for it.

“Through psychologi­cal terror and manipulati­on, he convinced them what they knew to be true was in fact false,” Liman said. “He beat his victims. He tortured them, and at times he starved them. He degraded them sexually to the point where they lost any self-worth.”

Once his vulnerable victims were diminished, Ray extorted them, forced them to engage in labor and sex trafficked one woman, Liman said.

“He had the evil genius to take people who were young, not minors, and he broke them … and then he used them for his evil needs,” the judge said.

Liman announced the sentence after Assistant U.S. Attorney Mollie Bracewell requested a life sentence, citing Ray’s “unspeakabl­e cruelty.”

Given a chance to speak, Ray

expressed no remorse but decried his prison conditions and physical ailments.

“Being in jail has been horrible,” he said, noting that his father and both step-parents recently died in the same week.

Defense attorney Marne Lenox argued against a life term, saying the 15-year mandatory minimum was sufficient, particular­ly because Ray has experience­d harsh conditions while in federal jails.

She said her client still believes that he is innocent and that his victims poisoned him.

Ray was convicted at trial last April of charges including racketeeri­ng, conspiracy, forced labor and sex traffickin­g.

During the trial, one women testified that she became a sex worker to try to pay reparation­s to Ray after becoming convinced that she had poisoned him. She said that, over four years, she gave Ray $2.5 million in installmen­ts that averaged between $10,000 and $50,000 per week.

In a statement read aloud at sentencing Friday by a lawyer, the woman said she had been subjected to “unremittin­g sadistic torture” by a man who offered a “twisted, empty and broken version of life.”

“Experience­s I had while being sex trafficked haunt me today,” according to her statement. She said Ray had forced “us to hold his evil for him. … Each time we tried to put it down, he brutalized us.”

Another victim said in court that he fears Ray will find a way to harm him from prison.

During Ray’s trial, several students testified that they were drawn into Ray’s world as he told them stories of his past influence in New York City politics, including his role in ruining the career of former New York City Police Commission­er Bernard Kerik after serving as the best man at his wedding years earlier.

Ray had, in fact, been a figure in a corruption investigat­ion that derailed Kerik’s 2004 nomination by President George Bush to lead the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.

 ?? Elizabeth Williams The Associated Press ?? Defendant Lawrence Ray makes a statement during his sentencing Friday in Manhattan federal court as defense attorney Peggy Cross-goldenberg looks on.
Elizabeth Williams The Associated Press Defendant Lawrence Ray makes a statement during his sentencing Friday in Manhattan federal court as defense attorney Peggy Cross-goldenberg looks on.

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