Anonymous ID: c76ba5 March 22, 2022, 9:27 a.m. No.15918534   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8566

>>15918437

NOTABLE

 

EXCLUSIVE: NYC's elite are in a tizzy after Justice Department 'inadvertently' publishes list of 121 'clients' - including lawyers, businessmen, and socialites - who solicited Sarah Lawrence 'sex cult victim' who was forced into prostitution

 

-The US Attorney's Office on Tuesday accidentally published a list of alleged clients of the student prostitute in the Sarah Lawrence 'sex cult' case

 

-DailyMail.com acquired a copy of the list of 121 names which was taken down nearly as fast as it was put up

 

-The list, which was entered into evidence in the trial under seal, includes lawyers and businessmen and socialites throughout the Tri-state area

 

-Alleged clients include a Metropolitan Transit Authority executive, an account executive at Amazon, and a former New York State Supreme Court judge

 

-The Justice Department later sent out an email admitting the file was shared in error, adding: 'Please do not reproduce, share, or use this exhibit in any way'

 

-Alleged cult victim Claudia Drury, 31, took the stand Friday and Monday to tell jurors how she was forced into prostitution by accused leader Larry Ray, 62

 

-Ray is charged with sex trafficking, extortion, money laundering, violent crime in aid of racketeering, racketeering conspiracy and forced labor

 

-The ex-convict is accused of running a sex cult out of his daughter Talia's dorm at Sarah Lawrence College

 

>https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10639767/Sarah-Lawrence-sex-cult-trial.html

Anonymous ID: c76ba5 March 22, 2022, 9:34 a.m. No.15918566   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>15918534

 

(Last Paragraph)

 

Ray, who once served as the best man at a wedding of disgraced former New York City police Commissioner Bernard Kerik, has been incarcerated since his 2020 arrest.

 

He is a well-known New York scammer with a murky past. In addition to spending times behind bars for his role in a securities fraud scam, he has worked on Wall Street, owned nightclubs, been an FBI informant and inserted himself in into powerful networks by brokering meetings.

 

He had previously been sentenced to five years probation for his role in a securities fraud scam.

 

The allegations involving the latest case were laid out in a lengthy article by New York magazine's The Cut in 2019, that included accounts from some of the purported cult members.