Crime Stories with Nancy Grace - Fake "Heiress" throws courtroom tantrum,demands designer duds, fraudster?
Episode Date: May 9, 2019Fake German heiress, Anna Sorokin, seemed as concerned with her outfits in court as she did with the fact that she was facing charges of grand larceny after swindling banks, hotels and even her friend...s.How did she convince so many that she was a jet-setting socialite with a fortune of $67 million?Nancy's Expert Panel Weighs In:Wendy Patrick: Trial Attorney & author of “Red Flags”Jeff Cortese: Former FBI supervisory special agentDr. William July: PsychologistJohn Lemley: Crime online investigative reporter Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Crime Stories with Nancy Grace.
By 2016, Anna Delvey was a regular in the NYC social scene,
frequenting many popular downtown restaurants, bars, and
clubs. With an extravagant lifestyle and a seemingly endless supply of money, Delvey
was an enigma that was made for the age of Instagram. Always at the right place with
the right people, living her best life, but with no apparent cause for her fame. Her circle
of acquaintances was fed various stories as to how she accumulated her vast wealth.
Her father was a Russian billionaire, a Russian diplomat, an oil tycoon, a Russian antiques collector, or a solar energy capitalist.
While many parts of Delvey's story were fluid, some things were consistent.
Delvey made no effort to hide her internship at the Paris magazine Purple and made it very clear that her dream was to open a Soho house for art. An, quote, upset fake German heiress,
Anna Sorokin, vows to appeal her conviction.
She's found guilty of grand larceny
after a life of fake,
ripping people off to nearly a quarter of a million dollars
that we know of.
Who would believe a Russian heiress and fork over thousands
of dollars? And in court, she was more upset about her designer clothing wardrobe than she was about
being found guilty. Now, that's unusual. I'm Nancy Grace. This is Crime Stories. This girl,
Anna Sorokin, also known as Anna Delvey, somehow manages to con Soho Elite out of a quarter of a million dollars.
Joining me in all-star lineup, Jeff Cortese, former FBI special agent.
Wendy Patrick, California prosecutor, author of Red Flags.
Dr. William July, psychologist and John Limley.
CrimeOnline.com investigative reporter, John Limley, crimeonline.com investigative reporter,
John Limley, help me out. This girl shows up, her skin is so pale, she looks like a ghost,
and she's got this long brown hair, parted, usually slightly on the side, big glasses,
and the hair hangs down like curtains over her face. You can barely see
the eyes. You know, the hair is so close down. Right there. I can't see her face. That makes
me suspicious. But who would buy into, my dad is a Russian billionaire. Give me your money. Oops,
I forgot my credit card. What happened? Let's just start at the beginning.
Well, Nancy, apparently a lot of people were just hungry to buy into this story.
If New York City is a city of dreams, which we hear it called all the time,
Anna had enough for the entire island.
She had longed to be a member of the upper echelon of Manhattan society.
Let me understand something, John Limley, Crime Online investigative reporter.
Did you just call her giant fraud,
ripping people off tens of thousands of dollars,
including one woman that took the stand,
a working class person who goes on an all expense paid trip
with her to Morocco,
and then she gets stiffed with a $65,000 bill.
Wait, are you calling that a dream?
How?
Wait.
How dare you even say?
One person's dream is another person's nightmare.
Don't offend yourself with cliches.
Don't.
The American dream, my rear end, Jeff Cortese, I call it something a lot different than the American dream.
Oh, absolutely. I mean, this was a,
at least on the front end, a well-executed fraud. Over the long term, it didn't have the legs to
remain sustainable. The long term, I mean, she managed to pull it off, Wendy Patrick, for,
you know, what, two years? I forgot how long she managed to pull the wool over everybody's eyes.
Going on trips to Morocco, staying at, I think it's 11 Howard, some ritzy.
I don't even know how you find that hotel in New York.
It's one of those places I don't think is even marked.
Only rich people go there.
Wendy, Patrick, what happened to John Limley, the voice of reason?
He just called this the American dream.
What?
Well, I think John Limley, what he was talking about is there are some misguided, vulnerable people that really are subjected to social predators like Anna.
And some people just are absolutely, you guys mentioned the glamour, the glitz.
It's like they want to believe.
And this fake it till you make it lifestyle.
You know, nobody even took the time to
say show me the money show me the funds show me the corroboration behind your wild stories
because caught up in the moment in an instagram savvy society people want to be in the company
of people like anna and sadly as a prosecutor i am just we are just absolutely just terrified
of people like this that are able to so easily infiltrate our social network.
Dr. William July, psychologist, author of A Dark Night, did acquit her off, which I was shocked about because this girl actually took the stand.
Grand larceny for allegedly stealing sixty two thousand dollars from a friend that she said, come along, I'll pay for everything on a trip to Morocco.
Okay. I think they actually punished the friend because when you go on a luxurious trip to
Morocco, you stay in a five star hotel. They went to spa treatments that were costing like
$300 a treatment. You know what? I take Lucy to let her get her nails done. And I say, oh, no, no,
mommy doesn't want to get her nails done. I am not paying anybody $50 to cut my nails. I can do that.
I'm okay with that. Okay. They were spending $300 for a 40minute treatment, whatever that treatment may be, laying in mud, getting their nails,
whatever. I think the jury punished that friend for going along with the excess, Dr. July.
Yeah, I mean, at worst, Nancy, what you're looking at in cases like this, at worst,
is a psychopathological level of narcissism. At best, what you're looking at is a person who has so much greed and desire to please herself that she doesn't care what the consequences are for other people.
You were asking earlier, and I just want to address what you were asking earlier about why and how can this sort of thing happen.
We're all baffled when we see this, but it's age old.
It's a tale as old
as time. The charlatan comes in and fools everyone. So there's a part of people that are looking at
this who want to believe this because they want to hang out with a person who has this kind of
social, these types of social credentials, and they want to believe that she's an heiress so
that they can be with her. And people are blaming social media. It's not the fault of social credentials and they want to believe that she's an heiress so that they can be with her and people are blaming social media it's not the fault of social media social media is just
a facilitator to the the neediness of other people who want to believe and accept why are you piling
on everybody on the panel except cortese thank goodness as keeps talking about the instagram
society you know what instagram
didn't have a dang thing to do with this it was all miss thing anna sorokin slash anna delvey oh
and p.s p.s i just found out her parents have disowned her they are hard-working middle-class
people that she borrowed a ton of money borrowed i.e stole a ton of money from them as well hey
but she didn't just create a different identity. Her
real name is not Anna Tu, a Russian billionaire, an oil tycoon, or a solar energy magnate. Her
parents, I think the dad drives a truck. And I know that's like my dad, as you know, worked on
the railroad. My mom started as a bank teller. My grandfather drove an ice truck and a school bus, anything to put the food on the table.
But she not only assumed different an identity for herself,
but she also created a whole team of imaginary assistants.
An assistant, an accountant, a manager.
Limley, is this true?
All of her imaginary assistants?
Well, and some were not so imaginary.
She even had the concierge at a hotel, essentially on her staff at her beck and call.
She was able to convince people of not only her wealth, but all of her aspirations, her
dreams. She really wanted to build this members-only arts club on Park Avenue South
and was even working to get the financing for it and was not too far away.
She was doing this, John Lindley.
She lied to a bank using phony records.
She was not working to get funding.
She was lying through her fake Russian teeth.
Crime Stories with Nancy Grace.
Anna, who interned at a trendy French magazine,
reportedly managed to scam extended stays in swanky Manhattan hotels,
dinner at high-end restaurants, and flights on chartered jets.
To finance her lavish lifestyle and keep the grift going,
she allegedly built banks out of thousands in cash.
And that's not all.
The fake heiress reportedly fleeced her friend out of $62,000
for a world-class trip to Morocco. But Anna went too far when she attempted to take out a loan for
$22 million to finance a visual arts center she called the Anna Delvey Foundation. In all, Anna
reportedly scammed a total of $275,000.
Anna's double life began to crumble as hotels went after her unpaid debts and banks began to investigate her alleged assets.
Wow. That's Jesse Palmer over at Daily Mail TV.
Wow. Okay.
So friends and acquaintances say Sorokin spent years playing the part of an art-obsessed German heiress.
Sometimes she'd be Russian. Sometimes she'd be Russian,
sometimes she'd be German. She had an accent to go with it. Rubbing shoulders with the fashion
elite at Paris Fashion Week, frequently spotted in London night spots. Then those who knew her
saw her at a party in Berlin. She told everybody she had just flown in on a private jet. How did she pull it off, scamming nearly $300,000?
It was only when these ritzy hotels in New York went after her to pay her bills
that the whole thing fell apart.
But what really amazed me, you know, I don't know if you do this or not,
Wendy Patrick, California prosecutor, author of Red Flags on Amazon Wendy. Under the Constitution, you can't force a defendant into court in handcuffs
or leg irons or waist shackle. You can't force them to come in in inmate jumpsuit, prison blues
or orange or stripes, whatever the case may be.
But I would always keep a jacket and pants in a couple of different sizes in my office.
So when a defendant would show up on Monday morning trial calendar and say, oh, yeah,
I want to go to trial, but I don't have a suit. I go, oh, I do have a suit for you.
And they, of course, I never had it claimed ever in the 10 years that I prosecuted.
So they would just have to wear the suit. But she was more concerned about what she wore to court.
Every day she had, she actually had a personal dresser,
dialest dressing her for court, Wendy. Yeah. You know, Nancy, what you're describing really
is something hopefully the judge will take into considering at sentencing because it's this entire mentality of, I don't want to say just not getting it.
That would be too kind.
It's a complete underappreciation or I should say nonappreciation for the fact that the rest of us work for a living.
Her family works for a living.
There is so much more to life than clothes and appearances and image. You know, one of the things that distinguishes this case is the fact that this overemphasis on image, on money, on glamour,
sounds like it absolutely overrode every ounce of judgment that she had.
And to take that into the courtroom, as you mentioned, Nancy, is probably a little bit beyond the pale.
Listen to our friends at Inside Edition. This is Diane McInerney.
This woman may look like she is dressed for a fashion show and her designer duds, but the wannabe socialite is actually on trial for swindling
hundreds of thousands of dollars from unsuspecting people. She was so concerned about how she looked
in court, she actually hired a stylist. Is she in a courtroom or at a red carpet event?
Anna Sorokin is accused of posing as an heiress to live an extravagant lifestyle,
but it's what she's wearing to trial
that is making headlines.
The 27-year-old defendant showed up
wearing a form-fitting black dress
with a plunging neckline and choker necklace.
It's a look that could backfire, warns stylist Dawn Caron.
Black dress, definitely a no-no.
It hyper-sexualized her.
It makes her appear to be like a seductress.
The choker kind of shows to me that she's trying
to be overtly sexy. The more sexy she appears to be, it hurts her. Sorokin is so obsessed with her
clothes, she refused to enter the courtroom because the outfit she was given to wear was
not up to her standards. The angry judge told her, this is unacceptable and inappropriate.
This is not a fashion show.
Sorokin's lawyer, Todd Spodek, says accounts of his client delaying the trial because of fashion are being blown out of proportion.
It's not that she didn't want to come out only because of the clothes.
She's going through a major criminal trial that's publicized every day. It's emotional and it's her life.
Don't cry too much for Anna Sorokin
because apparently there's a bidding war going on for her story. I guess it's going to end up
on Netflix or HBO or maybe even on the big screen. She'll make a mint out of that. I'm Nancy Grace.
This is Crime Stories. Everybody, thank you for being with us. She was living a life that many people, not me, but many people dream of. She made a show
of proving she belonged with the rich and famous decked out in signature Celine glasses, Gucci
sandals, high-end buys from Nete Porte, Elise Walker. She usually holed up in a $400 a night room for months on end at Manhattan's very,
very luxurious 11 Howard Hotel. Concierge at the hotel said they became friends when she would repeatedly, routinely pass out crisp $100 tips to both them and Uber
drivers. When I hear the words crisp $100, how many $100 bills do you have, Jackie? I don't
think I have any. I think John David has one and it's hidden in his bathroom under his brush. I
happen to know where it is. One that I know of that I think my mother gave him.
So Jeff Cortese, former FBI special agent, when I hear the word crisp $100 bills, that means you
just got him out of an ATM or from the bank. So how did she manage to defraud the bank to get cash
to tip concierge to fake for her? Yeah, that's a great question. You know, I think
it's a numbers game in many respects. There were multiple banks engaged in her activity.
She, it appears based on the information, limited her trips back to the same well,
though she would go back to the same bank on occasion for certain banking activity,
she did share the wealth amongst the banks within New York
so as not to draw too much attention over an extended period of time.
Well, what I understand that she did, and I'm going to have to get clarity on this,
is that she would provide fake bank records to one bank,
and then she was trying to get a massive
loan for 22 million so she they wanted a down payment so she faked records and got I don't know
50 to 100 grand from one bank and used that money to get a loan as a down payment on a loan a bigger
loan at another bank none of the banks realizing what the others were doing.
Another thing that really fascinates me, Dr. William G. Lai, and not in a good way,
it's like looking at a tarantula under a glass box, okay, that sort of fascination,
is the way she carried on this big, huge, imaginary life.
She would splash out on shopping sprees at boutiques,
very expensive personal training sessions,
and beautician appointments,
and she would always bring along a friend and pay for them,
and they would be all impressed.
The social elite, as they call themselves,
would go to lavish and large dinners for celebs, artists, CEOs, all-in restaurants there in Soho.
And if you do look at her online, she's always drinking a big glass of wine at some beautiful
location. How can an adult have that type of an imaginary life? I mean, I know when children have
an imaginary friend, there's all sorts of psychological reasons for that, maybe just security, but an adult? Certainly people can
have these types of imaginary lives and they're going to recruit other people. But just because
of the chronological age does not make a person have the maturation that they should have. And
that can be from a lot of different things. But certainly as much
as she can get other people to buy into this, then that's because she's going to continue and
she's going to expand that imaginary life. And people can be very charming. They can be very
off-putting, excuse me, they can be very charming. They can be very persuasive and they can get other
people to buy in. There are people that can go into banks and they can fake a story and they can get people
to believe it.
It happens every day.
And this is a person who can do that.
And the imaginary parts of this, I mean, I haven't examined her, so I can't go so far
as to say she's delusional or anything like that.
But clearly, she has the ability, maybe a pathological type of charm.
Some people can do that.
And also, you have to remember, other people are buying into this because the banks aren't
checking credentials properly.
Friends aren't following up to see if she knows other people in the circle.
So it's even more, it's even larger than just about her. Crime Stories with Nancy Grace.
The trial has begun in the case of the woman who led people to believe she was a German heiress named Anna Delvey. 28-year-old Anna Sorkin is
set to stand trial Wednesday on charges of grand larceny and theft of services after allegedly
swindling $275,000 over the course of 10 months, according to the Manhattan District Attorney's
Office. Sorkin is also accused of living in New York City hotel rooms she could not pay for,
attempting to secure a $22 million loan to build a private
arts club using false bank statements purporting that she had millions of dollars overseas,
as well as leaving a friend with a $62,000 bill for a trip to Morocco she allegedly promised to
pay for. Prosecutor Catherine McCaw says the defendant has not assent to her name as far
as we can determine, also noting that Sorokin is Russian-born, not German,
though she could be deported to Germany no matter how the trial turns out, as she's reportedly
overstayed her visa. Under the name Anna Delvey, she arrived in New York with a high-priced wardrobe
and was known for handing out $100 cash tips, reportedly saying at different points that her
father was a diplomat, an oil baron, or involved in the solar panel business, none of which are
the case.
People who knew her said she often asked others to use their credit cards to cover cab and plane fares and then failing to repay them.
Our friend Michael Sissak at Time Magazine Online, yeah, there was one story that came out at trial,
how she hired a PR firm to organize her birthday party in Soho.
It emerged she never paid the bill.
During her stay at 11 Howard, she struck up a friend there in addition to the concierges to
and asked for the recommendations for the very, very, very best food in Soho. We also learned that on one occasion she invited friends to dinner at Soho's San Ambro
and the friend ended up paying a whopper massive bill when Sorokin's 12 credit cards were all
declined. But Sorokin paid her back triple the amount the following day in cash.
We also learned that she would go to unique treatments like infrared saunas in the East Village,
go out to dinner after celebrity training sessions with Casey Duke, which Sorokin also paid for. John Limley, how did she get money
from one bank to get a loan from another bank? How'd that work? It's a very interesting line
to follow how she did this. She would go to a bank and ask for a certain line of credit based on a lot of times just a promise of the fact that
she had millions overseas that she could repay the loan. And she would go from one bank with that
money to another bank and get an even larger. In fact, here's an example.
She talked to an executive with Citi National Bank
into giving her a line of credit on her account for $100,000,
promising to repay it with a wire transfer from a European account.
She used that money in a failed attempt to secure a $25 million loan from Fortress Investment Group.
And one of the managing directors at Fortress has said that she ran into problems providing details about the origin of her wealth.
Someone actually thought to ask about that.
You know, her lies became more and more spectacular. Wendy Patrick, California prosecutor. In fact, she even managed to charter a private plane on one occasion
with absolutely zero money. Wendy, how do you do that? Yeah, the level of sophistication, Nancy,
as John was explaining, and as we know now, looking back, was absolutely stunning. It was
almost as if she was daring authorities to catch her in this
escalating scheme of sophistication. And, you know, the answer to how you do that is the same
way we commit, we see people committing other crimes, is sometimes people are so trusting
because image matters. You know, this is something I talk about in my book. We tend to attribute all
these positive qualities to somebody who comes across as believable, whether they're
pretty or that we like what they say or we're enamored with their accent or their clothes.
All the types of things that Anna used to get ahead can fool other people into letting them
acquire the kind of wealth and, as you point out, tangible benefits that this young lady did.
It's amazing to me that Hollywood is scrambling right now to try to get the rights to her story.
This is her parents' disowner and say she borrowed money from them too.
School friends back in Russia and Germany reveal she was nicknamed Barbie.
And her favorite movie was Mean Girls.
Talk about red flags.
John Lemley, tell me about the luxe treatment she got in Morocco where she ended up stiffing her friend with the bill.
Well, when they went to Marrakesh, she went with a friend and she had offered to pay for everything.
Now, her friend actually offered to help pay, but she said, no, no, no.
You work hard for your money, harder for your money than I do.
This is my treat. And they would go out for a round of drinks and oops, she forgot her credit card. So she would ask, you know, very quietly if the friend could, you know, just cover this one check. And that would happen over and over and over again. And this friend, in the end, ended up covering the $62,000 cost
of the flights, dining, shopping, and the stay at a hotel where they had a private villa with
a courtyard, a pool, and a butler. All the extravagance that you might say was fit for, say, a Kardashian. A $62,000 vacation, that is more than most people make an entire year.
While in Marrakesh, Morocco, Sorokin, a.k.a. Delvey,
took part in all the activities the hotel had to offer.
For instance, they took private tennis lessons.
They ate breakfast poolside.
A butler would deliver them fresh watermelons and bottles of rosé.
They roamed the gardens, relaxed, swam in the villa's private pool,
took a tour of the wine cellar, ate dinner with live Moroccan
music before capping off their nights with cocktails at the Churchill Bar. I mean, this is a
trip that most people only dream of. You know, Wendy Patrick, don't laugh laugh but a couple of weekends ago we really lived it up
I took the children camping we went fishing we built fires with our own hands of course
and I did not use lighter fluid this time after my disastrous RV trip um okay from twigs
for that we picked up and gathered wood and built fires yes I can build a fire
two nights in a row and had hot dogs I don't mean gourmet hot dogs I mean the pink kind
that you're not really sure what they are they're long and skinny and slimy at the grocery store. And then we made s'mores. And can I tell you,
it was one of the happiest weekends of my whole life. The twins are still talking about it.
And then I'm looking at this girl. And I feel blessed to have gotten to do that. Believe me,
I'm not complaining. I'm, I'm, I'm counting my blessings. But I mean, really fresh watermelon and rosé poolside in Marrakesh.
And it's all a big money grab.
I mean, my stomach is just hurting because I'm thinking about my dad who would go to work on the railroad, even when he had chest pains.
And when I would wake up in the morning at 7 o'clock, my mom was already gone to work at a canning company. And there would be
three bowls of grits and three little cups of coffee, half milk, half coffee sitting there
for us because she had been long gone to work. And now here's Miss Thing having a nearly $70,000
vacation built on crime.
Yeah. You know, Nancy, one of the things your camping story illustrates is that the best
things in life are free and everybody knows that. So when you look at a story like this,
part of, I think the offense that everyone is taking is to use crime and criminal activity to
build a fake world where people pay the kind of money that
most of us would never do even if we had it. You talk about the value of hard work,
the way we were all raised. It sounds like those she surrounded herself were really taken with the
fact that someone they believed was as rich and famous as she was would be interested in them.
That is a basic human need, ironically, that was being satisfied through crime and through, as you
pointed out earlier, having this imaginary friend that's larger than life. That's how
she built this criminal empire.
Crime Stories with Nancy Grace. crime stories with nancy grace her true history i'm talking about anna sorokin aka anna delvey you know i don't know about you
jeff cortese a uh fbi special agent but i loved it when i would of course the prosecutor gets in
front of an entire jury panel and reads
the indictment before you begin jury selection. So everybody knows who's charged with what and
what all the counts are. And I would love it to say State versus Jeff Cortese, aka Charlie Tuna,
aka The Hammer, aka blah, blah, blah, and so forth and and so on i would love reading out 10 or 12
aliases and by the time you're done reading that the jury just looks at the person and goes you're
so you're you're guilty you're guilty why are you why do you have 12 aliases and And this girl, I'm telling you, not only had aliases, but she had fake assistants.
She lied about her mom and dad, who they really are. The reality is that her father was a truck
driver. And he went on to work at or start a heating and air condition business. The friends in school called her
Barbie and her favorite movie was Mean Girls. And I don't think that's any of that is good.
Okay. That means nothing good, Jeff Cortese. No, I agree 100%. You hit it on the head.
You know, the minute individuals start layering themselves with
aliases and AKAs, they're putting up walls and barriers that any jury is going to be able to
see through. She really executed a well-thought-out plan against the banks, using multiple techniques
and methods to siphon money from them uh you know from from top to bottom
she exploited uh what what people want to see and and uh exploited the type of lifestyle that people
want to have to the extent that you know if i was going to run an undercover i would i would have
done many of the techniques that that she did in order to manipulate uh my audience well another
aspect to this john lem Lumley, is I remember
one day when John David came running home and went, so-and-so's mom is so cool. She works for
Chick-fil-A and she gets free t-shirts and she gets this and she gets that. I think the lady,
who's very lovely, was in marketing or PR and would bring home you
know like a t-shirt or a moocow or whatever they had and I thought briefly of creating a different
persona to try to impress John David's friends who were then four years old okay but I just decided
no I'm just going to stick with the truth,
you know, and let the chips fall where they may.
But John Lumley, I mean, that would hurt me
if I found out the twins were lying about their mom and dad,
that what we are isn't good enough to fit in to their self-image they're projecting. That would really hurt my
feelers. And that's exactly the way her parents felt about the whole thing. They actually did
help fund her through college and as she was getting out on her own, but there was never any
sort of trust fund. She moved to Germany in 2007, and after she dropped out of college, she interned in public relations before then moving to Paris and became an intern at Purple Magazine.
Once she arrived in New York City, she just somehow managed to be in all the sort of right places.
And she was this German heiress, according to her, with a father that you would think was.
Wait a minute.
I thought she was supposed to be a Russian heiress.
Well, no, she she was from Russia, but she told people she was a German heiress.
What's really funny, though, is that her German, according to a lot of people, was terrible.
Hmm.
Hmm.
I want you to take a listen to what the defense claims in closing arguments.
She had to fake it until she could make it.
Those words from the defendant's own attorney who claims she never intended to commit a crime.
But prosecutors call her a fraud and a liar who would do almost anything to prolong her life of luxury.
This morning, the fate of an alleged scam artist is now in the hands of a jury.
Both sides wrapping up arguments for a case that's drawn international outrage. The style-savvy
defendant even turning heads in court wearing an animal print dress. She called herself Anna Delvey,
a fashionable globetrotter who prosecutors say was pretending to be a high-flying German heiress
living a fairytale life of glitz and glam among Manhattan's elite.
I urge you to come to the only verdict that is in accord with both the law and the evidence,
and that is that the defendant is guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.
Prosecutors say the 28-year-old, whose real name is Anna Sorokin,
stole $275,000 from banks, hotels, and friends, all part of an elaborate scheme to keep up her
illusion of grandeur. Prosecutors also allege Sorokin tried securing a $22 million loan to
operate a private club, claims her lawyer denies. I do not believe she had the intent to ever commit a crime.
Whether she owes people money, that's a fact of life. That's the reality of doing business in
New York. Now facing charges of grand larceny and theft, she could spend up to 15 years in prison
if convicted. But officials say even if acquitted, she will be deported to Germany. Sorkin's attorney
says she got in over her head but was just buying
time until she could pay everyone back. You're hearing our buddy Whit Johnson at GMA at ABC
pay everybody back. I saw no signs of paying everybody back and calling this doing business
that's certainly putting perfume on the pig. Now you you know, there's a problem, Wendy Patrick, California prosecutor and author
of Red Flags, when the defense to theft and fraud is fake it till you make it. Okay. I would not say
that that's a valid defense in a fraud case. You're admitting you're faking it. It's probably
not a good theme for the defense. One, I'm sure they're rethinking right about now. You don't
want to, that's kind of playing right into the prosecutor's case. Now, what they probably were
trying to do, interestingly, in trial, and Nancy, you and I have both seen this, is really kind of
painting this vulnerability picture of the defendant to try to make somebody feel sorry
for her, that she was caught up in this false lifestyle, felt she had to pretend she was
somebody she wasn't, who can't relate to that.
There's a little bit of Anna in all of us.
You know, some of the themes we've seen.
Wait, wait, wait.
I want to isolate what you just said.
The defense argued at trial as if Anna Sorokin, a.k.a. Anna Delvey, was some type of a renegade and a rebel.
Someone who was, you know, making her own path in the world creatively.
B.S. Don't tell me there's a little bit of Anna Sorokin in me because that was their defense.
There's a little bit of Anna in all of us. Oh, no, because she is a fraud, a thief,
and she ripped people off and they're never going to get repaid Wendy. Right that's
what I'm saying that well that's probably why she was convicted because these defenses are just not
realistic to jurors to hard-working jurors that go on camping trips like you did and just cannot
relate to the fact that we are anything like this picture of Anna. Nonetheless we have seen this
defense time and again,
and thankfully it is not successful.
You know, and speaking of my little camping trip,
God willing I get to go on another one,
take a listen to this.
The courtroom drama played out late into the evening.
At one point, the jury appeared deadlocked,
the defense asking for a mistrial,
but then the verdict.
Jurors agreeing with the prosecution
that Anna Sorokin built her fairytale life on a foundation of theft and lies.
Overnight, a New York City jury finding socialite Anna Sorokin, the so-called Soho grifter,
guilty on eight counts, including grand larceny, attempted grand larceny, and theft of services.
Prosecutors arguing the 28-year-old stole a
quarter of a million dollars from banks, hotels and friends to fund a lavish lifestyle. The jurors
obviously believed our point of view and followed our logic and acquitted her of the top charges.
I'm saddened that she was convicted of some of the other charges. Prosecutors say the Russian-born
Sorokin, who called herself Anna Delvey, was pretending to be a high-flying German heiress, living a life of glamour among Manhattan's elite.
Authorities say she even forged financial documents, hoping to get a $100,000, which she never paid back.
Her lawyer saying she meant to, but had gotten in over her head and was just buying time.
Well, I guarantee you, she's not getting breakfast in bed, fresh watermelon and rosé at Rikers.
Nancy Grace, Crime Story, signing off.
Goodbye, friend.
You're listening to an iHeart Podcast. Goodbye, friend.