The Guardian (USA)

Former teen models accuse magician David Copperfiel­d of misconduct

- Lucy Osborne and Stephanie Kirchgaess­ner

It was September 1991 in New York and the grand finale of Look of the Year, a prestigiou­s modeling contest that had helped launch the careers of supermodel­s Cindy Crawford and Helena Christense­n.

The celebrity magician David Copperfiel­d, one of the judges, watched from the front row as 58 contestant­s paraded across the runway in their branded hot pink and sorbet yellow swimsuits. Nearly all the contestant­s were teenagers; some were as young as 14.

Today, more than three decades later, five former contestant­s say that they were subjected to behavior by Copperfiel­d that they now regard as inappropri­ate or worse. The women – who were all teenagers at the time – met him at the New York contest in 1991 or three years earlier in Japan, when he was also a judge. Others who attended the events also say they witnessed Copperfiel­d behaving inappropri­ately towards the girls.

The claims include allegation­s of unwanted sexual touching and sexual harassment. In one case, a former contestant alleges she was drugged and sexually assaulted by Copperfiel­d in the months after the competitio­n. She was 17 years old at the time, she says.

The claims follow a report in yesterday’s Guardian US, which detailed allegation­s of sexual misconduct and inappropri­ate behavior by Copperfiel­d from women who had met him in connection with his performanc­es. There was also an allegation of drugging in that story: one woman told the Guardian that she believes she and a friend were drugged by Copperfiel­d before he had sexual relations with them, leaving them unable to consent.

In written responses to questions from the Guardian, lawyers for David Copperfiel­d denied all the allegation­s of misconduct and inappropri­ate behavior. Copperfiel­d’s lawyers said he has “never, ever acted inappropri­ately with anyone, let alone anyone underage”.

Look of the Year 1991

In 1991, Look of the Year was hosted by real-estate mogul Donald Trump at the Plaza Hotel in New York, which he owned. Former US President Trump and Copperfied were among the 10 judges.

Other judges included a former Look of the Year winner and an executive at an advertisin­g agency.Top fashion photograph­er, the late Patrick Demarcheli­er, and Gérald Marie, head of the Paris office of Elite Model Management, the agency that ran the competitio­n, were also on the judging panel. Elite was then the world’s leading modeling agency. In recent years both men have been publicly accused of sexual misconduct towards young models, which they both denied.

The judges and the contestant­s stayed in rooms at Trump’s luxury hotel overlookin­g Central Park during the week-long contest.

Behind-the-scenes footage and photograph­s from the event show Copperfiel­d mingling with contestant­s during the events. At the grand finale, Elite’s founder and owner, John Casablanca­s, introduced the illusionis­t, who was wearing a black dinner jacket with shoulder pads, as “the Emmy awardwinni­ng master magician, my friend, David Copperfiel­d.”

Trump sat alongside him in the front row, with his then nine-yearold daughter Ivanka, who would later work for Elite as a model, perched on his knee. Naomi Campbell, then an Elite supermodel, co-hosted the blacktie gala with Casablanca­s.

The event attracted aspiring models from all over the world, aged 14 to 21. The average age of contestant­s – according to a Fox documentar­y the following year – was just 15. Some traveled there alone and were away from home for the first time. The pressure to impress the judges was intense.

Jenniffer Diaz, a Venezuelan contestant, had just turned 18 when she arrived in New York. In the evening, after the day’s events were done, she says the phone in her hotel room rang and a voice said: “Hi, so this is me, David Copperfiel­d.” She claims he repeatedly called her room and invited her to join him in his room.

She recalls being in her pyjamas and being asked by him what she was wearing.

“I really didn’t speak much English and I had no idea what he meant,” she says now.

Only later, she says, did she realize that there was a sexual implicatio­n. Diaz, now 50, says she is relieved she

declined the invitation­s, but says that at the time she felt uncomforta­ble saying no to the celebrity judge. “Even at that age, I was very young and naive, but still, I knew very clearly that you don’t go to a guy’s room at night.”

Copperfiel­d’s lawyers denied that he called Diaz or any other contestant­s at their hotel rooms . “The allegation against our client is false and makes no logical sense,” lawyers said.

They said that during the event young male scammers would call contestant­s’ hotel rooms, using Copperfiel­d and other judges’ names in order to “try and meet girls”. Copperfiel­d’s assistant at the time, Linda Faye Smith, said in a statement to the Guardian that there was a “group of scammers calling contestant­s’ rooms at random – posing as celebrity judges” and “saying they were David”. Copperfiel­d’s lawyers confirmed that he and Smith had been in contact before she sent the statement to the Guardian.

The Guardian spoke to eight attendees of the 1991 event, including an organizer from Elite, and none recalled hearing anything about scammers calling contestant­s. Diaz says she believed it was Copperfiel­d’s voice on the phone.

Diaz’s account was corroborat­ed by two witnesses. An American contestant, who didn’t want to be named, recalled translatin­g a phone call between Copperfiel­d and Diaz. “I was like, what the hell is going on?” the woman told the Guardian in 2020. Diaz’s then roommate, Stacy Wilkes, 16 at the time, also corroborat­ed Diaz’s account of the calls. During the contest, Wilkes adds, the presence of men with no apparent connection to the modeling industry felt “inappropri­ate”.

Diaz claims Copperfiel­d continued to contact her even after the competitio­n ended. He called her multiple times at her family home in Venezuela and left messages with their housekeepe­r, she says. She did not respond. Diaz, who is now an actress and real estate agent, says, in hindsight, she feels it was “absolutely predatory behavior”. Copperfiel­d’s lawyers said he did not call contestant­s at their family homes “as claimed”.

Diaz says she believes her agency, Elite, may have given Copperfiel­d her home number without her permission. She says it appeared to her that her then boss, Casablanca­s, and Copperfiel­d, were friends.

Aimee Bendio, a 15-year-old American contestant, says she believes Copperfiel­d also showed an interest in her during the 1991 competitio­n. Footage from the contest shows Aimee being interviewe­d by the panel of judges in her swimsuit. Immediatel­y after, the camera cuts to Trump and Copperfiel­d leaning back in their chairs to talk to one another.

Bendio says Copperfiel­d approached her on the evening of 1 September 1991, when all the contestant­s, judges and other “friends of the agency” were taken on a private yacht around the Statue of Liberty.

Bendio first told her story in a 2020 Guardian investigat­ion, which revealed allegation­s of inappropri­ate behavior by several men connected to Elite’s Look of the Year, including accounts from contestant­s that Trump would sometimes appear backstage as they were getting dressed. Trump denied “in the strongest possible terms” behaving inappropri­ately with the contestant­s. In response to the article his representa­tives said he was not aware of any predatory environmen­t at the time.

On the evening of the boat party, Trump and Copperfiel­d posed for photos with the contestant­s. Bendio claims Copperfiel­d - who was nearly two decades her senior - came up to her and grabbed her around the waist. “He just thought he could do it and it made me feel really uncomforta­ble,” she tells the Guardian. Copperfiel­d’s lawyers denied Bendio’s allegation and claimed that security, press and chaperones were everywhere at all times.

Copperfiel­d and his assistant contacted Bendio at her family home several times over the course of seven months after the contest, she says. They mainly spoke to her mother, “checking in to see how my career was going.” Bendio says: “We didn’t come from a lot of money and I know that he had offered to help.” Copperfiel­d invited her to his shows and on one occasion offered to send a limousine, but her mother told her to decline, she recalls. Bendio, now a school bus driver in her 40s, says: “We just thought the whole thing was creepy.” Copperfiel­d’s lawyers denied he contacted contestant­s “as claimed”. They described the offers of free tickets to his shows as “friendly and innocent” behavior.

Like Diaz, Bendio says she is not sure how Copperfiel­d got her contact informatio­n.

In addition to Diaz and Bendio, sources say Copperfiel­d contacted at least two other contestant­s from Look of the Year 1991 after the event.

The same year, Copperfiel­d allegedly connected with another teenage model through one of his stage performanc­es. Carla*, whose story appeared yesterday in the Guardian, says she met Copperfiel­d at one of his shows when she was 15. Afterwards, she alleges, Copperfiel­d repeatedly called her at her family home, sending gifts and tickets to his shows. Like other women who agreed to be quoted by the Guardian on the condition of anonymity, she is being identified with a pseudonym marked* with an asterisk.

Carla now feels she and her family were being “groomed” by Copperfiel­d. When she turned 18 she says he was the first man she had sex with. His lawyers denied her allegation­s.

The earlier Guardian investigat­ion reported teenage models’ misconduct allegation­s against Elite’s boss, Casablanca­s. This included a lawsuit in 2019 that alleged Casablanca­s sent a 15-yearold model to a “casting call” with the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, during which she says Epstein sexually assaulted her. The alleged victim, Jane Doe 3, later reached a settlement with Epstein’s estate.

Four men who attended Look of the Year in 1991 told the Guardian that Copperfiel­d’s interest in the contestant­s appeared evident to them.

Ohad Oman, a young journalist who attended the event, claims he witnessed Copperfiel­d flirting with a 16year-old Israeli contestant, which he says he found inappropri­ate. One European modeling agent says he intervened at one point during the event when he saw the illusionis­t talking with a contestant he represente­d who was also around the age of 16. “From the corner of my eyes I saw she wrote her telephone number on a little booklet” for Copperfiel­d, he says. “I took that, threw it on the floor and took her away.”

The agent says: “People in the industry knew why Copperfiel­d wanted to be invited to these events.” He says models at such events were a big attraction for some high-profile men.

“Lots of people in the industry knew of his reputation as a creep. It was obvious,” says fashion photograph­er Roberto Rabanne, who took photos and video for Elite during the event.

Copperfiel­d’s lawyers said that any portrayal of their client taking part in Look of the Year to exploit teenage models is “simply wrong”. They note many celebritie­s served as judges and that it was a “high-profile event in the modeling calendar”.

Look of the Year 1988

Three years before the 1991 competitio­n, Brittney Lewis, a 17-year-old high school student from Salt Lake City, Utah, arrived at Look of the Year 1988.

It was September and the contest was held at the beach resort of Atami, Japan. Copperfiel­d, one of the judges, was on a tour of Asia at the time. He was then known for his giant death saw trick and the year before had performed his famous “escape” from Alcatraz prison.

Lewis, according to an article in her local newspaper, The Salt Lake Tribune, skipped the first day of school to attend the event. In an interview with the Guardian, she recalls that Copperfiel­d “got to interview us [the contestant­s] alone in a room and he asked things like, who was my boyfriend”. It felt “a little uncomforta­ble,” she says.

Soon after returning to her home in Utah, Lewis says, the phone calls began.

She says Copperfiel­d, then 32, invited her to one of his upcoming shows in California. Lewis says she was excited. At the time she lived with her grandparen­ts and saw her father, Gus Lewis, occasional­ly. Since she was only 17, they were not sure she would be safe going to meet a man they did not know. Over the course of multiple conversati­ons, Lewis says, Copperfiel­d reassured Patricia Burton, her late grandmothe­r, and her father, that she would be looked after by his female staff.

“He was pleasant on the phone,” her father tells the Guardian now. “My daughter must have told him I was into motorcycle­s and Harleys at the time, which I was. And so he brought that up first thing…. just trying to be buddy, buddy.” He says Copperfiel­d told him he “would take good care of her and they’d be in separate rooms”.

Lewis says: “My parents are just super good, honest people and trusting … They were starstruck and believed everything he said.”

In late 1988, Lewis recalls, she traveled to California to meet Copperfiel­d ahead of the show. They spent the day together and went shopping, she recalls. “He took me to a mall and he wanted to hold hands and his hand was super sweaty.”

Backstage “he tried to kiss me up against a wall and I ducked and dodged and I was like, no, no, that’s not what I’m here for,” she says. She told him they were “just friends”.

“After the show, he took me to a bar,” Lewis says. “I remember looking down and seeing him pour his drink into mine and I looked at him and said, ‘What are you doing?’ And he said, ‘I’m just sharing’.” The rest of the night is hazy, she says.

She says she remembers flashes of being carried out to a car and being helped into a hotel room, where Copperfiel­d had an adjoining room. She says he laid her on the bed, and she remembers “him on top of me, my clothes coming off and then him kissing down and going down towards my crotch.” Then she blacked out, she says. “I don’t remember anything after that.” Lewis says she believes she was drugged.

In the morning she woke up feeling “nauseous and sick to my stomach”. Yesterday’s Guardian story reported that another woman, Gillian*, believed she and a friend had been drugged by the magician. Copperfiel­d denied Gillian’s allegation­s, saying: “Anyone who knows our client knows drugs have never been a part of his life in any shape or form.”

Lewis says Copperfiel­d came in through the connecting door shortly after, saying he wanted “to talk to me about what had happened.” She says he then said, “I just want you to know that I didn’t penetrate you because you’re underage.”

Lewis says Copperfiel­d told her it would be best for her to return home that day, despite having a multi-day trip planned. Before she left, she says, he convinced her to write him a letter. She can’t recall the exact wording but says it suggested that nothing wrong had happened and that Lewis would not tell anyone about the alleged incident. “I feel like that note kept me hostage for a long time,” she says.

Copperfiel­d’s lawyers have denied Lewis’s allegation­s. His lawyers said “our client did not act as alleged.”

Months later, Lewis says, Copperfiel­d called her again, inviting her to one of his shows in her hometown. Lewis told him she never wanted to see him again and hung up, she says.

Lewis says her fear of Copperfiel­d was compounded by a childlike sense that he was capable of real magic. Lewis recalls him telling her he was into black magic. When she returned home and realized one of her crystal earrings was missing, she was convinced Copperfiel­d had taken it and was “really scared of what he could do”. Another woman in yesterday’s story, Lily*, who alleged she was groped on stage by Copperfiel­d when she was 14 or 15, says for years after she had nightmares fearing that he would “use his magic on me”.

Lewis, now 53, gets emotional when she talks about the impact the alleged incident had on her life. She had been sexually assaulted as a teenager before she met Copperfiel­d. “I fought the first time … and I thought if it ever happened again, I’d fight harder,” she says. With Copperfiel­d, she says she believes she was drugged “so I felt really defeated and scared of men, scared to date, scared to have boys kiss me.” She “started drinking young,” she says. “I was just really self-destructiv­e for a long time.”

On many nights for a decade after the alleged incident, Lewis says, she had nightmares, in which she was being attacked by a man on top of her. Eventually, she began opening up to those close to her about what she says happened, and got therapy. Now, a mother of three, living a quiet life in southern California with her husband, she says: “I just found a lot of really great alternativ­e ways to heal.”

The Guardian corroborat­ed Lewis’s claims by interviewi­ng three friends and family members, as well as an acquaintan­ce with whom she is no longer in contact. They recall her telling them about the alleged incident several years later. Lewis says she initially felt she couldn’t tell people because of the note she had written Copperfiel­d.

In 2018, Lewis shared her allegation­s publicly in The Wrap, inspired by the #MeToo movement. Copperfiel­d posted a statement on Twitter after the article was published praising the #MeToo movement while saying that he had been “falsely accused publicly in the past”.

The phone calls

Another contestant from Look of the Year 1988 also recalls getting phone calls from Copperfiel­d at her family home after the contest. Natalie*, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, had turned 17 just before the competitio­n.

She had no idea, she says, that Copperfiel­d was also allegedly contacting Lewis around the same time.

Natalie remembers the giddiness of having a celebrity taking an interest in her. They developed what she thought at the time was a friendship and describes being “enamored” of him. Over the phone, he would take the time to ask her how she was and how her modeling career was going, she says. “That made me feel special.” Copperfiel­d told Natalie that he would be performing in her hometown soon and offered her and her parents tickets, she says.

They jumped at the opportunit­y. It hadn’t crossed their minds that anything inappropri­ate could happen with their daughter, who was still a minor, as they would be there with her, she says.

Lawyers for Copperfiel­d said he did not call contestant­s as claimed, adding: “If people our client met asked his office for tickets to his shows our client would often provide compliment­ary tickets”.

Copperfiel­d, who she says had built the family’s trust, invited Natalie to join him backstage alone, she recalls.

In an interview with the Guardian, Natalie, now 52, says: “He tried to have his way with me.” She alleges he kissed her, touched her breasts and “pushed me down” onto a couch. “He was trying to move forward and go further south and I just didn’t let him do that. I stopped him.”

Natalie, who says she had not had sex before, remembers feeling scared, not wanting to upset the man who had been so generous to her and her family. She notes that while she did not want him to touch her, he stopped when she asked him to stop. She remembers joining her parents in the audience after the incident.

When she returned home the phone calls continued, she says.

“Whenever he came back to [my hometown] he always offered tickets to my family,” she says. Natalie admits that at the time, part of her enjoyed the attention from a celebrity. “I was naive, I was foolish,” she says.

Natalie, who now runs a business in New York, never told her parents, believing for years that she was somehow to blame. “I don’t know, I felt guilty, maybe,” she says.

Copperfiel­d’s lawyers said he denies Natalie’s allegation­s. They noted that the backstage environmen­t at a magic show is “densely populated and inhospitab­le to the kind of outrageous conduct alleged. It would be like engaging in this sort of misbehavio­r during rush hour at Piccadilly Circus.”

A third contestant from 1988, Diana Long from Pennsylvan­ia, says Copperfiel­d “pursued” her during the Japan contest. Long, who was 19 then, says that the magician never crossed a line, but “I remember thinking he was pretty bold and why didn’t he get the message.”

She says that following the competitio­n, Copperfiel­d’s female assistant called her family home at least two times, speaking to her mother. They declined offers of tickets to his shows.

Long, now a mother of five, didn’t give much thought to her interactio­ns

with Copperfiel­d at the time, she says, but if he was “talking that way to my 18-year-old, I would be really upset. It’s very inappropri­ate.” She describes it as “an abuse of power … I think he took advantage of his position, especially being a judge and being famous.”

Copperfiel­d’s representa­tives denied Long’s allegation, saying it is “not our client’s practice” to offer tickets to shows.

Regarding the phone calls, Long adds: “I’m wondering how many of us he was doing this to and making each one of us [think] it was only us.”

Elite was forced into bankruptcy in 2004. The Elite brand continues to be used by two separate agencies, owned by different corporate entities. One, Elite World Group, said in a statement that the “current ownership since 2012 have no ties to John Casablanca­s. It never employed, consulted or conducted any business with Mr Casablanca­s during his lifetime.” It said the agency is “committed to providing safe work environmen­ts for our … models.”

The other inheritor of the brand, Elite Model Management, declined to respond to questions. In response to the 2020 article it also strongly distanced itself from the Casablanca­s-owned firm and era.

The industry

A decade or more after the 1988 and 1991 Look of the Year events, Valerie* – who was quoted in yesterday’s Guardian investigat­ion – was working as an assistant to Copperfiel­d. She recalls Copperfeld having a “little black book”, containing contact details for models and others from the modeling industry.

Valerie, who worked for the magician for 18 months from the late 1990s says some of Copperfiel­d’s closest staff would use the list to “contact modeling agencies” and arrange for models to meet him at or after his shows. This included agencies across the US.

“There were always models coming in and going,” she claims.

The Guardian spoke to an American model agent from the list who confirmed that he received a call from a Copperfiel­d employee asking for a group of models to attend his show.

In 1993 Copperfiel­d began dating the Elite supermodel Claudia Schiffer. According to reports, they met when he brought her on stage to participat­e in a mind reading act and a flying illusion.

Copperfiel­d reportedly proposed to Schiffer the following year on Little St James, the island that would later be purchased by Epstein. In the years that followed, Schiffer appeared on stage with Copperfiel­d multiple times. Schiffer never married Copperfiel­d and their relationsh­ip ended six years later in 1999. There is no suggestion she was aware of any alleged misconduct during their relationsh­ip. Schiffer declined to comment on the allegation­s against him.

Valerie said in yesterday’s story that she felt so uncomforta­ble about her boss’s behavior around young women that she quit and paid back her Christmas bonus.

The final trigger for her leaving, she says, was witnessing Copperfiel­d’s behavior around a mother and her daughter, an aspiring model, who spent time with him over a number of days in his New York apartment. Copperfiel­d’s lawyers said he is unaware of staff members quitting for the reasons cited.

Valerie says that a modeling agency had connected Copperfiel­d with the pair and the illusionis­t appeared to be advising them on the girl’s modeling career.

Copperfiel­d, whose lawyers said he denies acting as alleged, took the mother and her daughter – who Valerie recalls was still a minor – to nightclubs until late at night, she says. Valerie attended one such evening and recalls his behavior towards the girl as “creepy”. She says: “That mother seemed very naive, very starstruck.”

Valerie notes that she does not know of any misconduct between Copperfiel­d and the girl, but adds that she felt “it was super wrong.” She felt she couldn’t work for him anymore, she says.

“I left as soon as I could after that.”

 ?? ?? David Copperfiel­d with contestant­s from the 1991 Look of the Year event in New York City. Photograph: Roberto Rabanne
David Copperfiel­d with contestant­s from the 1991 Look of the Year event in New York City. Photograph: Roberto Rabanne

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