New York Daily News

FBI: Cult big defended rape & child abuse

- BY SHAYNA JACOBS AND LEONARD GREENE

Accused “sex cult” leader Keith Raniere believed some women never had an orgasm until they were raped, and said there was room to question whether child sex abuse was wrong, according to the FBI.

Raniere, who led the Albany-based NXIVM organizati­on, shared his outrageous notions in writings directed to a women’s group, said Michael Weniger, an FBI special agent who testified Friday at Raniere’s sex traffickin­g trial in Brooklyn Federal Court.

In one NXIVM class called “The Human Experience,” Weniger said, there was a segment called “rape as a metaphor for orgasm.”

“There are even some women, they never had an orgasm in their life until they were raped,” Raniere (photo) wrote in the materials, according to Weniger. “In a sense it’s the very act of sex. The issue of it being bad or inappropri­ate does not exist during rape.”

Weniger said also shared Raniere’s bizarre and disturbing views about sex with minors.

“If someone comes from a country where adults orally stimulate children and they find out, according to American culture, they have been abused, have they?” Raniere pondered, according to Weniger.

The answer is “yes,” Raniere wrote. But “the abuser is our culture, our society.”

What’s the harm, Raniere said in the materials.

“Where is the injury if an and [the child] enjoys it?” the NXIVM leader wrote. “What is the difference between the child being tickled and being stimulated.”

Prosecutor­s have said that Raniere’s sex slaves included a 15-year-old girl, who was the youngest of three Mexican sisters who were part of Raniere’s harem.

Weniger said agents confirmed the girl was underage with pictures of nude women found on Raniere’s hard drive.

Weniger said the Mexican girl had an appendecto­my when she was 16, and the photos of her pre-dated the scar she got from that surgery.

“These photograph­s were taken before the appendecto­my surgery in 2002,” he said.

Weniger was the trial’s last witness. Lawyers for both sides are scheduled to make closing arguments Monday.

Raniere is accused of helping himself to a group of brainwashe­d women who were recruited for his sexual pleasure, with some branded with his initials. He’s pleaded not guilty, saying his encounters with the alleged victims were consensual.

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