Uncover - Uncover Introduces: Crime Story
Episode Date: November 7, 2023Fraud. Abduction. Murder. Every week, Crime Story host and investigative journalist Kathleen Goldhar goes deep into a tale of true crime with the storyteller who knows it best. From the reporter who e...xposed Bill Cosby, to the writer who solved one of Australia’s most chilling cold cases — Crime Story guests include: Gilbert King (Bone Valley), Eric Benson (Project Unabomb),Carole Fisher (The Girlfriends), and many more. More episodes are available at: https://link.chtbl.com/3xHecDMq
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In 2017, it felt like drugs were everywhere in the news,
so I started a podcast called On Drugs.
We covered a lot of ground over two seasons,
but there are still so many more stories to tell.
I'm Jeff Turner, and I'm back with Season 3 of On Drugs.
And this time, it's going to get personal.
I don't know who Sober Jeff is.
I don't even know if I like that guy.
On Drugs is available now wherever you get your podcasts.
This is a CBC Podcast.
Hi, I'm Josh Bloch. I'm the host of the very first season of Uncover, Escaping NXIVM.
And I'm jumping back to this feed because I want to tell you about a brand new podcast called Crime Story. It's hosted by my friend and the co-creator of Escaping NXIVM,
Kathleen Goldhar. Each week, she does a deep dive into one true crime story by interviewing the
storyteller who knows that story best. The lineup she has is incredible, from Gilbert King of Bone
Valley, Eric Benson from Project Unabombe,
Carol Fisher from The Girlfriends, Johansson LeCour from You Didn't See Nothing, just to name a few.
She also interviewed me. We do a deep dive into our experience investigating NXIVM and what it
was like to dig into that story that just grew bigger and bigger the more we dug. Have a listen.
that story that just grew bigger and bigger the more we dug. Have a listen.
The following episode contains difficult subject matter,
including references to sexual assault. Please take care.
I'm Kathleen Goldtar. This is Crime Story.
Every week, a new crime with the storyteller who knows it best.
She said to me at first, people have been branded.
And then a couple of days later, she said, I'm one of those people.
It was August of 2017 when my friend and colleague, Josh Block,
walked into my office to tell me about a crazy story that he'd heard over his summer vacation.
At the time, we were both producers at the CBC current affairs program, The Current.
He had just returned from a trip to Hornby Island in British Columbia
and had run into an old friend,
an old friend that told him that she had just left a cult.
The name of that cult was NXIVM.
ESP NXIVM is a methodology that allows people to optimize their experience and behavior.
The story of the community in Albany, New York, and its creepy leader, Keith Raniere,
has all been told and told a lot.
There has been more than one TV documentary made, including a multi-season HBO series.
There has been a rather cheesy Lifetime movie released,
and it's even been the basis
of an episode of Law & Order.
But before all of that,
and before the court case
that sent Ranieri to prison for life,
there was a podcast.
Because after that day
that Josh walked into my office
to tell me about his friend's
complicated, confusing,
and unbelievably confounding story, Josh and I made Escaping NXIVM. Josh, welcome to Crime Story.
Thanks for having me.
So when you walked into my office that day, what did you know about NXIVM?
I knew, like, not a whole lot.
I had known for over a decade that Sarah was involved in some kind of, like, self-help group. I thought it was kind of, like, landmark. And then I ran into her on Hornby Island, and she was, like, a month, as you know, a month out of NXIVM. And it was actually kind of difficult to understand what she was saying. There's so much jargon. There's so much. And she was, like, also processing what was happening and still didn't quite have a narrative yet.
So I knew that she was involved in something that was really scary and had gotten bad enough
that she had to leave.
I knew that she was frightened and had actually good reason to be frightened because I did
know that people who had come out and spoken out against NXIVM, they had gone after them
and they ended up in court.
They ended up having their lives destroyed by NXIVM, they had gone after them. And they ended up in court. They ended up having their lives destroyed by NXIVM. But I remember coming to you and saying, I think this
is a story. There's something here. I know that the Bronfmans are involved. I know that there's
some celebrities involved. And we were working at this current affairs program. And you and I were
kind of like, well, should we have her on the show? And I think we both realized pretty quickly that there was no way to explain the story easily.
First of all, it wasn't a commonly known story.
So the amount of work you'd have to do to actually get the audience up to speed to understand what Sarah was talking about just wouldn't work on a current affair show at that moment, on an interview show.
So I was still trying to kind of process the bits and pieces that was there, but definitely
my journalistic spidey senses, and I think yours too, were like, this is big. We got to do
something with this. Oh, I just remember you coming in and every day we would talk and I would
be like, but can you remind me who's that again? And where was this? And there were all the, like
you said, all this jargon and all these levels and all this craziness that went into it.
But did you know that she had been branded?
I can't remember if we knew at that point that she had been branded.
I did.
So we were both on this small Gulf Island in British Columbia, Hornby Island.
And we actually ran into each other a few times over the course of this week.
And the first time she kind of said, I've left this group.
I've left, you know, we're gone to the New York Times.
We're trying to, she said to me at first, people have been branded.
And then a couple of days later, she said, I'm one of those people.
And then I was like, holy cow.
And she did, I mean, I didn't see it.
But she, then, then it kind of dawned on me that this is serious.
It's, you know, the extent of it is to do with physical harm, not just psychological harm.
I had never heard of anybody being, I mean, obviously horrible stories of the slave trade.
You heard about stuff like that.
But like modern day us people that we knew, it was insane to think that somebody had been branded.
And I remember you and I trying to even figure out how that happened.
Yeah.
Like, was it a pen or was it like a stamp? I don't think she told me right away then, but it was only, um, certainly once
the New York times article came out, but, but I think we actually interviewed her before that
time, or we had talked to her before that time. And then she started to describe that it wasn't
this five second kind of searing of the skin. It was this 45 minute ceremony where she was being held down
with a cauterizing pen and having this very, very painful symbol burned into her body.
And the symbol ended up being the initials of Keith Raniere.
That's right.
So who was Keith? What did we find out about Keith?
So, I mean, Keith Raniere is, well, you know, there's a public facing side of Keith
Raniere, and then there's actually who he was. So Keith Raniere kind of espoused the mythology
about him is that he was this enlightened figure who was exceptionally intelligent.
He claimed he could speak in full sentences at the age of one and read fluently at the age of two,
was a piano prodigy, a judo prodigy,
and was this incredibly intelligent person.
And then also he had this story of discovering
that he was an enlightened being at the age of 13.
So we had these kind of two things about him.
I'm super smart, and by the way, I'm really enlightened,
and everyone should follow me.
So he had kind of this classic guru leader quality about him.
He was in the world record books for being the smartest man. So one of the wild things was that he actually, kind of this classic guru leader quality about him.
He was in the world record books for being the smartest man.
So one of the wild things was that he actually,
like it wasn't like a lot of it felt like it was hooey,
but then it turns out in 1989,
the Australian Guinness Book of World Records listed him as one of the smartest men in the world.
And this becomes like this huge calling card for him.
And like everything he was involved in before NXIVM still had this quality around it that people would congregate around him and kind of gravitate towards him.
And he would lead them towards like financial success and personal success.
And then eventually he lands on this idea of building NXIVM.
So he like really like the public facing side of him is this super rational, scientific, you know, kind of high
achieving person that can help you realize your dreams. Of course, what we discovered is this
other side of him, which didn't quite match up with that. And in fact, like, it was wild. As you
get closer to him, you start to realize that he had theories that people were, you know, that his
inner circle at NXIVM were reincarnated Nazis,
and people bought that. And he was like, don't tell anyone because we're into the science world right now. Like that's how we're all about rationality and like scientific inquiry.
But by the way, you are Hitler reincarnated, and people bought this.
You talked a little bit about how he lured them in, but I mean, he was luring people in from an early age.
What was it about him that he could enrapture people the way he did?
Right. I mean, I think you and I talked a lot about like once we started digging into who this guy was, we're like, wait a second, this guy's a dork.
He's like really nerdy looking and he like plays volleyball twice a week and invites people to come play volleyball with him at night.
Or to watch him play volleyball.
To watch him play volleyball and like whisper questions in his ears between points.
And he's, he just doesn't have, he's not like this larger than life charismatic figure.
But, you know, as we went out and started interviewing people that knew him from way back, ex-girlfriends
and people in XCM, I think we discovered the same idea that people kept saying again and again,
which was he had an amazing ability to lock into you and make you feel like you're the only person
in the room. And it's kind of like a quality of narcissists. Often people say that about narcissists
is that when they shine their light on you, you just feel enraptured by
it and so taken by it. And I think a lot of people gravitated towards him because of that. And he
obviously had a skill to kind of lock in and figure out what made people tick. And clearly an
ability to engage with people on a lot of different levels. You know, we heard about pianists and scientists and all kinds of like really prominent people
coming to visit the NXIVM headquarters
and that, you know, Keith Raniere would come
and engage with them and feel,
everyone felt like there was a real,
honest, authentic rapport.
So we obviously had this like nimble ability
to engage on a lot of levels.
But I do think it was that kind of one-on-one ability
to connect with someone and kind of figure out
what it is they needed
and where their vulnerabilities were.
It always used to make me think when people said that,
you know, like I once produced an interview
with Bill Clinton and it was just over the phone,
but he, and everybody had always said
that he has this ability to do the same thing,
that when you're in the room with him
and he sees you, everything else falls away. And it even felt like that on the phone. And I think Barack Obama had
the same characteristics and lots of people had the same characteristics. And I always think that
they're all kind of the same type of people. It's just which direction they go. And you can decide
whether even the political path is evil or good or not. But I mean, I felt like that was something
about Keith that we learned as he had that charisma that had nothing to do with a moral compass. It was just his ability to connect
with people that way. And he connected on a sexual level too. Like we ended up finding out that
most of his life as an adult, or even starting as like a teenager, he had these women swirling
around him that even though he told people he was uninterested in sex, he was actually very interested in sex. Right, 100%. And there were actually, I think there were different stages of
vanguard, as he was called in NXIVM. Initially, he was a celibate and a renunciate. And he,
you know, just he couldn't bother with the material world. Eventually, and I remember
Sarah saying, eventually, I think it was in like, 2010 or so, suddenly, they were like,
Keith seems to have some like girlfriends or whatever. And there was a little bit of a sense
that he has sexual partners, but 100% from the get go. And this is like, part of his philosophy
going way back, and it was deeply kind of entrenched in NXIVM philosophy as well. It's that
men are inherently polyamorous, and women are inherently monogamous. And he kind
of set up throughout the various projects he had in his life situations where he would have
multiple partners. In NXIVM, he had like almost a so-called harem of like 10 or 15 women who all
were devoted to him. They could only be with him and were aware that he had multiple other partners
as well. One of the more disturbing things, I mean, there were so many disturbing things,
so I shouldn't say that,
but was when we were interviewing Sarah,
we discovered the misogyny at the basis
of so much of what he was teaching.
And I actually remember you sort of realizing it
as you were interviewing her
and feeling kind of pretty sick about the whole idea
because of your connection to Sarah and her husband.
So tell me a little bit more about what
we discovered in terms of just exactly what that base was and how hard it was for the women and
how they got caught up in it. Yeah, I mean, I think ultimately, one of the big motivating
factors that landed Sarah in this secret women's group called DOS, which is where she got branded,
was because of this idea that Keith
and the folks running NXIVM
instilled in the NXIVM followers.
And it fundamentally comes down to the idea
that women are somehow inherently deficient
and that there's a different path
that women in NXIVM had to go along
to address this deficiency.
So there was all these precursors to DOS where women and men would be
separate or be like given separate curriculum in order to address these
issues.
And yeah,
I mean,
it was,
it was surprising.
I mean,
I think part of that period of time of Sarah coming out of NXIVM and trying
to grapple with the things that she learned was contending with some of
these ideas about like,
I mean, even the names of the groups,
like the Society of Protectors was the name of the men's group
that her husband Nippy was one of the leaders of.
And they had this other program called Jeunesse for Women.
So for the reason Sarah eventually was convinced to join this group
was that a mentor in the program,
Lauren Salzman, comes to her and says, you know, it's time for us to take our training to the next
level. Like we as women need to take accountability for our, you know, inherent deficiencies.
And the only way we can do it is by going next level and joining this kind of secret group.
level and joining this kind of secret group um so it was it's incredibly disturbing to hear that uh the ways that um sarah was complicit in that and and and the way she's very smart and she's
like so smart and and i felt like there was this real effort on keith's part and some of the other
leaders who were teaching to kind of carefully pretzel her
thinking.
And that's what they did is they would say things that seemed on the surface either sort
of benign or common sense.
Like men are physically stronger than women.
All the women in here.
Do you understand why we hate you?
Do you understand why your obnoxious bothers?
Do you understand why we hate you?
Do you understand why your obnoxious bothers?
Why all your little whining and complaining and all this garbage that you do and how much you think you do and it's just all a bunch of crap.
And then you brought her slowly to this place where she started to be like, yeah, women are pains in the asses.
And that was very hard to listen to.
Totally. I remember that. Like, oh, yeah, women complain a lot. Women can't handle pain as much.
And like all these things that she was just sort of saying matter-of-factly, and you're like,
wait a second, what's going on here? And one of the things in terms of that like pretzeling, which is so like one of the key things they introduce in NXIVM is, and this is classic for all coercive groups and all cults,
is an inability to question. So as soon as you start questioning the situation you're in,
you are told that that is your issue, that you have an issue that's holding you back from being
successful because you are the kind of person that won't act. You'll just question. And so
it creates an inability if you're in that group, to at all challenge anything
that's going on. And Sarah described when she's on the table getting cauterized, incredible pain
for 45 minutes, and so much of her body and her mind is saying, run, get the hell out of here.
The other part of her brain, which had been trained for 12 years, is saying, this is it. See,
this is your deficiency,
is to run away from a situation, to not handle the pain because you're not good enough, because you're a woman, because of all those things that had already been instilled in her. And that's like
a really, you know, I think we talked to a lot of people that when you ask them in retrospect,
like there's a ton of red flags from the first course you take a ton of red flags about the
organization that you're part of. I mean, down to having to like, call this dude Vanguard and his
number two prefect, like there's just a lot of weird things. But part of what happens is this
idea of like, are you willing to invest in your personal growth and challenge yourself to not
always ask questions and challenge authorities. Just trust the process.
Trust it.
Super dangerous and super red flaggy in itself.
And I just remember us trying to figure it all out.
You know, it was so dense and so complicated.
And Sarah had spent 12 years trying to learn.
And you and I had like two months.
And I remember our office.
Remember the posters on the wall where we had like the stripe path written out.
And we had like his teachings written out on big poster boards on the wall where we had like the stripe path written out right and we had like his teachings written out on big poster boards on the wall because we kept having to reference the word
salad as they call it of keith renier's teaching because it it was you know and it's such a stark
difference between those of us coming in and trying to like figure it out versus like sarah
who had been indoctrinated slowly over this time. And we did eventually get there and start to be able to obviously not agree,
but see the logic, quote unquote logic,
that they would use to get them to think the way they wanted them to think.
Totally. And I feel like that's one of the decisions we arrived at.
I mean, we had this big board.
We have a million different things.
As we started to dig in the story,
there were so many different threads to pull on
and so many different directions to go. I mean, the Bronfman sisters,
there's like, you know, billionaire heiresses is a whole story, which we were fascinated by.
And at some point, I think we made a really smart decision, which was to say,
what is our like, you know, added advantage or advantage here? What do we have that no one else
has? And it else has and it was
sarah it was the access to sarah and that inside view and even though like you think a podcast is
like seven episodes you have so much real estate it's really not like you you need to be so focused
and especially on a complicated story so i so i think we had early drafts where like the first
episode was gonna like tell you know this sweeping story of nexium and we were like
pair it back pair it back pair it back until it really just became sarah's story and actually a
very specific part of sarah's story of just how she got branded and how that what led up to that
moment um which i felt was like a big relief once we kind of discovered the way to tell it we learned
so much about making podcasts making that podcast because we had no idea what we were doing.
At all. At all.
There was a lot of anxiety, a lot of fear, and then just barreling ahead.
A lot of phone calls all night being like, what are we doing?
Absolutely. How are we going to get through this?
At the height of NXIVM, how successful was it?
Well, it's interesting because like in a lot of ways,
as we went down to Albany and we visited their headquarters
and their headquarters is like rinky dink.
It says executive success on the door,
but like the letters are peeling off of it as this like one story building.
In an industrial area outside of Albany, New York. Right. And it really is like a couple, I don't
think a couple hundred people at most that live there. I don't even think that many, probably
dozens. But there was a few things about it that made it like totally defy the peeling letters on
the door. You know, one of them is the celebrities they started to recruit
so the bronfman family or sisters um the you know allison mack and nikki klein and others that were
you know had had some amount of fame um that became like really important calling cards for
the recruiters people like sarah to get people to come in and take new courses and by the way like
the vast majority of people that as you know that that engaged with NXIVM, all their experience of it was like, you come,
you spend $5,000, you take a five day course or a 10 day course and you're on your way. And there
was something like 20,000 people that did that. And it was only a few people that then would go on
to become more involved with the organization, maybe move to Albany or maybe like be part of
another center. So they were successful in the sense that like, even when we ran into Sarah, they were
operational, you know, in multiple centers across North America, they had big centers
in Mexico, they were expanding into Europe.
And then they had, you know, just say that a couple other like major figures that gave
them serious legitimacy so in mexico the son
of the former president and a son of a of a major media tycoon their um media baron there it was part
of nexium so they had like really um like strong inroads into like powerful mexican community and
then in 2009 i think probably the biggest coup for them, the biggest legitimacy was
that they invited the Dalai Lama, they hosted the Dalai Lama to come speak in Albany. And there you
have the Dalai Lama, Keith Raniere and his number two Nancy Salzman on stage together.
Indeed, I'm very, very happy to be here.
And it's essentially an endorsement for them. And they have these photos, they have these videos.
And, you know, Sarah says that now in a recruiting meeting,
you know, an informational session
where she's getting people to come take the course,
she can say, look, Keith Raniere with the Dalai Lama.
Like, what better legitimacy can you have than that?
So that, I think, elevated them.
And it's kind of wild because, you know,
they had these, like, really lofty visions. I mean, one of their goals was, let's control as much money as we can in the world
and we'll spend it ethically. And that's how we're going to change the world. And they're like,
that's kind of laughable, except he also had this goal to have a NXIVM member as president in Mexico.
And that was not outside the realm of possibility. I mean, there is a world where if he
didn't sort of get so distracted by his sexual proclivities or whatever, or like, that he would
have been able to draw on a ton of power. So it's an interesting tension there between the kind of
small size of it and the amount of resources they ended up having. And I mean, that's really where
Sarah was so important to the organization, too, because
she ran, started and ran with a partner, the Vancouver office, the only Canadian office.
And that was hugely successful.
Right.
Well, I mean, Sarah was their star recruiter.
And Sarah made huge inroads for NXIVM in the acting world, in the, you know, in the yoga
world as well.
But certainly like the whole Allison Mack, you know in the yoga world as well but but certainly
like the whole Allison Mack you know Smallville was shooting in Vancouver that whole cast was in
Vancouver and she was able to kind of infiltrate that world so um that was you know everyone got
their role in NXIVM and like Keith would set up people with different projects and I think they
quickly identified Sarah's skill set as a recruiter. And like it was almost, you know, these kinds of pyramid schemes or like multi-level marketing,
it's like next to impossible to make any money. It takes forever to actually recruit enough people.
And she was one of the few people in NXIVM that actually got to a point where she had enough
people enrolled. And those people that were enrolled were enrolling other people that she
was actually making money for a period of time. She made a lot of money. Yeah. And then you mentioned our trip to Albany.
I have to just talk about one of the most fun.
I mean, that was such a fun, crazy trip.
Right.
And we were nervous most of the time.
And we tried to do a quick undercover session in the next few offices where we got you all set up to go.
And we thought of every convoluted story we could think of as to why you were going
into the offices to ask questions but obviously they were on high alert well it's hilarious because
we were we had come up with a scenario we were like i'm i'm going to walk into the offices i
think we had we had talked to cbc and the idea the rule was that we couldn't lie about anything um so i said you
know uh i'm visiting my partner who was in new york which is true and i'm through albany and
i'd heard about nexium which is true and i'm very interested in in taking a course uh was my story
so i like knock on the door no one answers i like peered through the window no one's there i had
like a wireless mic you're waiting in the car all nervous that something's going to happen to you.
My heart is pounding.
And so eventually I like try the door and it opens.
And I was like, oh my God.
I have to go in now.
I walk in and suddenly a woman like pops out of an office, out of a office.
And she's like, hello.
And I was like, hello.
My voice was like 10 octaves higher than it should have been hi yeah i'm here is this the executive
success program and i and i like rather you know the idea was like just divulge information if it's
asked of you but i just let it all pour out and i was like well i'm coming from new york and i have
my wife's down there and now i'm traveling up to New York, and I really want to take a course.
Can I take a course?
Can I take a course?
Who are you?
My name's Josh.
I just wanted to find out about some programs.
A friend of mine had taken some courses.
Who are you here to meet?
I just wanted anyone that could tell me
about some of the programs that are here.
Well, you would need to be meeting somebody.
How did you get in?
That door was just open,
but I knocked on that door. So it turns out nobody cold calls nexium you don't walk into the
nexium office the whole point of a multi-level marketing company is you get recruited so she was
like like big red flags maybe the red flag that's right she's like you don't feel like uh safe to me
um so she was like okay
to give me your phone number and i'll call you back and i was like okay okay
then i just like ran back to the van and i was like let's get out of here that was so funny In 2017, it felt like drugs were everywhere in the news.
So I started a podcast called On Drugs.
We covered a lot of ground over two seasons,
but there are still so many more stories to tell.
I'm Jeff Turner, and I'm back with season three of On Drugs.
And this time, it's going to get personal.
I don't know who Sober Jeff is.
I don't even know if I like that guy.
On Drugs is available now wherever you get your podcasts.
How's Sarah now? Do we know how she's doing?
She seems to be great. She's, she's,
it's been a whole process of redefining herself. I think that like, you know, she for 12 years of
her professional life, all she had on her resume was like star recruiter of NXIVM. So
there's been a process of like re-entering the world as not a member of a self-help group.
But I think in a lot of ways, she has, you know, used her experience of leaving a group
and turned that into a career. So she has her own podcast and she's, you know, has a book and she
has a speaking engagement. So she's done really well in that
space as being a kind of outspoken advocate for survivors of cults.
Yeah. And she also was a big part of getting Keith finally arrested. So let's jump to that
part of the story. So when we were in Albany, he wasn't there. We didn't know where he was.
It ended up that he actually had fled to Mexico. And he was in a very expensive
villa provided by the Broffman sisters. And what happened to him there?
So I mean, the FBI had, you know, had a warrant for his arrest. And they basically came with the
Mexican police and raided the compound. I think Nikki Klein was filming it at the time.
So suddenly we were privy to this video clip on YouTube
of all the inner circle of NXIVM being chased around by cops
in this fancy Mexican resort.
I think Keith was hiding in a closet and they found him.
And then they hauled him back to the States.
And there was an arraignment and we attended.
Yeah, we saw him in real life.
In real life, which was wild.
In a courtroom in New York, sort of before the trial.
And that was wild because we had been hearing about him and thinking about him and hearing other people talk about for months and months and months.
I mean, I spent so much time.
It's almost a year, I think.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And I think we both had like dreams about him. Like he just became this like real force.
And then suddenly to see like seeing a celebrity and this courtrooms are not big. I mean, there
was like five or six rows of seating for people attending the trial. And there he was in a
jumpsuit and, you know, handcuffed and with lawyers. So it was like a really, it also was
like this crazy journey
in a pretty compressed amount of time from that first day of walking into your office and being
like this, I don't even know how to pronounce this thing, NXIVM, like it's spelt weird. And
like, you know, us trying to pitch it to other people and sort of not registering to at that
point, it had totally become part of the zeitgeist and and and people were aware and it become a kind of big news story
it's a media circus it's a big media media circus yeah so he there was six charges i mean the the
the prosecution's main charge towards him was racketeering which is essentially a a charge you
go after like mob leaders with to say that keith renieri and his co-conspirators were engaged in a pattern of illegal activity for personal financial gain.
But in there is also sex trafficking, child pornography, wire fraud, human trafficking.
So there's a whole host of charges.
And eventually he got 120 years in prison.
And that was really something like, I mean, we joke about him even now when we think about him as sort of this really a silly, pathetic twerp.
Right.
But his crimes were evil and they were against young, especially this one girl.
And I remember reading the testimony of the WhatsApp conversations that he would have with a lot of his victims. And it was within those moments where you finally actually got to see the true evil manipulating Keith.
And it wasn't funny and it wasn't silly. It was incredibly dark, incredibly dark. And, uh, the,
the, the, the victims will never be okay. Right. Yeah. I mean, and there was, you know, having run, you know,
he was running that organization for almost two decades.
And so there were a lot of victims,
a lot of victims testimonies that were involved in the trials.
And certainly the most disturbing stuff were to do with grooming young girls.
I mean, he groomed several young teenagers.
Young teenagers.
Yeah, from an early age. And again, they were like in, in this really sealed off community. In one case,
Mexican national who had they had withheld her passport, so you know, she wasn't even able to
escape. There were also cases of essentially, you know, well, of rape, but through this DOS system where women
had given over their collateral to be part of this secret women's group, thinking it was a
program run for women by women, was actually run by Keith Raniere. So they had, you know,
Sarah included, had given over collateral to kind of show your commitment to your self-improvement and that collateral was nude photos it was
videos um things that if they were to be released would destroy your life so people were really you
know once they were in they were locked in and then there were cases and it came out in the trial
that that women were instructed to go have sex with keith and if they refused they were threatened
with having this collateral released um so it's incredibly dark, incredibly manipulative.
And it is, I mean, in a lot of ways, it was the culmination of all that misogyny and control.
And like, you know, we talked a lot about, you know, what was behind all this and why was Keith Raniere doing this.
and why was Keith Raniere doing this?
And the psychologists and cult experts that we talked to,
you know, talked about this need for control among narcissists like Keith Raniere,
and that it's almost like a drug.
Like, you know, first you start this organization
and people come to you and they venerate you
and they have to say, thank you, Vanguard, after every meeting,
and you get a little bit of a buzz from that,
but then you have to take it to the next level.
And in a lot of ways, DOS was like the logical conclusion of that, of like, what happens if I can control people so absolutely
that every second of their waking day, they are in my control and my power. And that was ultimately
his demise. It was a structure that could never actually sustain itself because it required
recruiting more and more people into it. And at some point, as it did, it was going to crumble. And another one of those cases of that kind of control
ended up being Lauren Salzman, whose mother was prefect, second in control,
Sarah's best friend, the one that convinced her to get the brand and join DOS.
You know, in our mind, Lauren often sort of wasn't the good one in this story.
But during the trial, she testified against Keith and she really, I completely changed my mind about
her and she became as much of a victim as anybody else. Her story was heartbreaking,
not excusing her behavior. But tell us a bit about what Keith did to Lauren.
Tell us a bit about and she did rise really
high in nexium and got a lot of um a lot of praise and and and saw a lot of success within that
system but she like a number of women um you know part of being in this inner circle around keith
was eventually being invited to become a sexual partner of his and he promised
her that that she they owned that that she would carry his baby and i think she dedicated a lot of
time and energy and um a lot of herself to that path and that dream and didn't have other
boyfriends and didn't do other things that people were doing as you know as you come of age and
and by the way like you know
part of of that inner circle and the control around that inner circle was actually a dietary
restriction and you could see it you could see it with alice and mac you could see with a number of
women and sarah talked about it that people were put on these like caloric restrictions of like
800 calories a day and that and lauren was part of that well. And that obviously has like in this dos kind of
pyramid scheme of keith at the top of it she was one of his like slaves and she became really
implicated in this um blackmail system inside dos as well so i totally agree that like she's
and i think this is like the reoccurring theme within people that have been a part of NXIVM is like this tension between your victimization and your complicity in the
organization. And, you know, I think as we talk to people about the podcast, it was interesting
to see the different responses that people had. Some people were very empathetic towards Sarah
and towards others that were a part of it and really realized how traumatizing and damaging and
coercive the organization was. And I think some people had a really hard time wrapping their head
around just being empathetic and felt like, well, wait a second, weren't they recruiting other
people? Weren't they complicit in it? Don't they have like free will as well? And I think it's,
I've always felt like both those things have to exist at the same time. And that there has to be
a space that like, and it's just how complicated that we we are and i think it's what the cult experts say is that
you can be both like we we all are vulnerable to a certain extent of being drawn into these
you know really um damaging and and violent and terrible systems. And there ought to be compassion for people that
suffered that and maybe perpetuate some bad along the way.
I mean, and Lauren really embodies that. Like, one of the stories that really threw me was when
we were in Albany, and even before we got there, we had heard about a woman that we were told has
been locked in her room for three years, two years.
Right.
And we weren't really sure that that could possibly be true.
We even went by, remember, and you thought you saw somebody look out and we had no idea.
Again, like adding to this whole, there was something scary about being in Albany at the same time, thrilling and just none of it was making any sense.
Right.
And then in the trial, we found out that not only was it true,
but tell us more about what Lauren did.
I mean, Lauren was her,
what's the word?
Like she kept her in there.
Right, her captor.
Her captor, yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
I mean, this is again,
it all comes down to Keith
and relationships to Keith.
So she was one of Keith's's partners and the rule is if you
are a girlfriend of keith that you are dedicated to keith and only keith and she committed what
they call an ethical breach which is that she had feelings for someone who was not keith and they
said well you're gonna have to atone and and atone for your your ethical breach and stay in this room
until you apologize and And she refused,
and they wouldn't let her out,
literally for two years.
And it's a story made even more complex
because her entire family was part of NXIVM.
And so this was done with some degree
of complicity with her own parents.
The door wasn't even locked.
Yeah.
And her parents were living in that house.
Her parents were living there.
And this is a case where they had her passport, and she's a mexican national and she couldn't leave um yeah that was unbelievable
is anybody still loyal to keith there are a few. I mean, it's so interesting as the layers of information or as like the stages of information came out about NXIVM.
You slowly started to, you know, there was a period of time that like it was a huge exodus,
but a number of people in the inner circle that were holding out and just saying, you know, this is like a smear campaign. And by the way, like one of the things that NXIVM did
and Keith did really early on was talk about the way
that the media is going to come after us.
I mean, he planted the seed because there were,
like throughout NXIVM's history,
cases of people doing investigations
and trying to go after the organization.
And he kind of inoculated the group by saying,
this happens.
When there's courageous leaders that stand up, people will take you down. And so I think that
that, you know, that idea kind of persisted for some people, all the way through the trial. So
even at the trial, there were a dozen people there that were there on, you know, to defend Keith,
and they're on Keith's behalf. And he was locked up at the, you know, a prison in Brooklyn. And,
And he was locked up at the, you know, a prison in Brooklyn. And, you know, many nights there would be his supporters would come out and dance outside his window and dance for him. And he would like have flashlights. And he would kind of respond back. And they started a whole website and a kind of like, they had a whole narrative about the way that the prosecution had fabricated evidence but even um but slowly slowly so as more information came out and more people you know confessed and more people turned against him
it kind of had this snowball effect so that even some of those diehards people like nikki klein
not too long ago coming forward and nikki klein is you know um she was like the I think she might
have been one of the last women totally yeah that was still that was so deeply deeply committed and
it just felt like well if the trial and the testimony and all these investigations and
documentaries and podcasts and everything come out and it still doesn't shake you from it like
what possibly could but then she did and something clicked and she kind of recognized that
she that you know keith was not who he said he was but there are still a few people um i don't
know if you saw the key after we talked about it keith put out his own podcast at one point
which is really more of a monologue from a prison phone um but the kind of the the producer of that
the guy on the other line is still still strong and still committed to him. And there's, you know, others, there's a whole side of NXIVM. They had this treatment program for Tourette's. And Mark Elliott was a someone who, you know, suffered from Tourette's and claimed that it really cured him and was just like, I have the evidence. It's
me. It's in my body. I know that Nexium has treated me and able to cure me of my symptoms.
So he has remained really loyal to Keith as well.
And one of the most engaging stories to me and one that I wish we had been able to do more on
is Claire Brofman is still and she's in prison. Yeah. Yeah. And you know, and she's, she's in prison. I mean, she could,
she did plead guilty to some charges. She's in prison for, I think, over five years.
And during her, her sentencing, there were a number of witnesses that came forward or a number of victims that came forward pleading with her to say, please just renounce Keith.
Like, let it go.
Like, can't you see the damage he's done and the damage he's caused?
And she's refused.
And likely it played an element in her sentencing as well, just the inability to recognize that he's a bad person.
So I said Claire is one of the stories
that I wish we had been able to dig into more.
Are there any stories that we didn't get to tell
that you wish we had?
I mean, I think the Mexico story is something that,
you know, not only did we not touch on it,
but I think there hasn't actually been a lot done on it.
And it is fascinating and and also incredibly dark and partly just because of the amount of power the nexium number of people in power who had power that were part of nexium and how corrupt
this you know judicial system and various systems are in mexico that were leveraged by them or
certainly threats were leveraged i mean there were people who who we spoke to who had left NXIVM, who had been whistleblowers,
who received threatening letters. Essentially, they would never travel to Mexico because they
knew that the moment they stepped foot in that country, they would be arrested and thrown into
prison. There were actually charges, right? There were charges. And so there's a whole story there just about how, you know, they were able to infiltrate that world. And, you know, there were a steady stream of Mexican, both adults, but also teens that would come and visit the Albany Center. And it's also a very disturbing. We've heard accounts of like grooming going on there and this kind of like pipeline of
young girls that that that were coming from mexico that keith had access to and connections to other
dangerous groups in mexico that's right yeah i know it really is a story that i feel like has
so much to tell and this changed our lives i mean how many downloads of this podcast were there
i mean i think we're we've got to be close to 25 million or more.
Yeah, it was crazy.
It's insane.
You know, and from like, there was a certain moment.
I'll tell you what the moment was.
There was a moment after the podcast was released where we were, you know, doing interviews and on different shows.
And then the PR, our PR person in the States said, Megan Kelly wants to interview you.
I'm just going to fly you down and interview on the show.
And I was like, okay.
But the experience of being on that show
and sort of walking, you know,
they called us up in the commercial break to sit on stage
and they wheeled out this like two-story high scrim
of our escaping NXIVM like key art that they had just made for this like five-story high scrim of the of our escaping axiom like key art that they had just
made for this like five minute section and there's megan kelly and this whole audience of people that
were there and i was like this is never gonna happen again it's just it was to do and i think
you know there was a point probably earlier on that the serendipity of that story landing in
our laps and the way that it became this
international news story kind of under our feet so that by the time we released it it was like
a huge trial coming up and there was such a massive appetite to understand the story to
find access to the story um that the you know the stars just kind of aligned in that way
uh that is really hard to manufacture but it also gave us like you know podcast stars just kind of aligned in that way uh that is really hard to manufacture
but it also gave us like you know podcasting was very young serial had come out sort of you know
either the years before that and we didn't know what we were doing and i'm even still happy that
we thought podcasts like that that was still young even at cb. And both of us, myself and you, we really never looked back. We sort of
quit Daily News and we've been making podcasts ever since. I feel like, well, one, I'm grateful
for you to coming into my office and allowing me to be part of the journey, but also just like
giving us this like access to a way of telling stories that I've come to realize is the best
way in the world to tell stories. And I love every minute of this job. And I always said NXIVM, escaping NXIVM was
the best professional experience of my whole life. And I don't think that that has changed.
Yeah, no, it was. It was on so many levels remarkable, both because of working on that
story, the team of people working on that story, and also it's it's reception but yeah the the way that career
wise opening opening up a ton of of doors and and as you said it happened at a moment in you know
even now we're only what five years or six years since it was released the podcast landscape has
like radically changed again and really shifted like that was a moment when you could kind of
release a podcast and it could become a hit and it's sort of not you can't really do that in the same way anymore um so it was it was a really lucky moment
to release it and then to have the kind of doors open uh that have opened um but but i totally
agree with you that the the medium is incredibly exciting to work in i mean that that that, that, you know, the privilege of sitting
inside a story for a year and like feeling like you really become an expert and talking to dozens
of people about it and just really getting to sink your teeth into it and tell a story in a fulsome
way. I love, I love doing, um, and certainly now having like done others and like helped, you know,
overseeing that a bunch of times,
I also kind of laugh at how we were fumbling in the dark and trying to figure out as we went,
you know, how to put these things together because it is tough and it does, it actually does feel,
even still, every project is its own kind of nut to crack. And it always felt like you're kind of
painting in the dark,
like you sort of like, you know,
pulling clips together and writing and whatever.
And then only when you've heard it and sat down and really digested it.
And then, you know,
having to like take a bunch of notes and go back to it again and again,
can you get a sense of if it's coalescing,
but there's many steps to, you know, to the moment,
like it's really bad until it's not
what's the what's the i don't know if we can keep this in but it's like what are the five
steps to making a podcast it's shit it's shit it's shit it's shit it's done that's right
okay well thanks josh i mean one of the other things for me was it made you my work turned
from my work friend to like a dear dear friend
which was already on the road of going that way but i feel like that gave that to me on a personal
level so that makes me very happy too as well and you know it's rare to find someone that you can
work with so easily together and like now yeah i mean literally we would sit down and be inside a
google doc together and co-writing stuff and And it's a really vulnerable experience, as you know.
Well, you cried a few times.
I still make fun of you for that.
That's true.
Not crying for my performance, but for the things I heard.
But it is so difficult to like, you know, in the series of moments where it's really
not going well or where you're like grappling with it to feel like you can trust someone else and like work through it together. It's a rare thing. So I
totally agree that it was, um, it was really fortunate that we landed on it together for sure.
Cool. Well, thank you for coming in. Thank you so much. You've been listening to Crime Story from CBC Podcasts.
We drop a new episode every Monday.
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Next week, I'll be talking to Nikki Egan about exposing Bill Cosby.
I stood my ground because I believed my reporting and I believed these women.
I'm not one who's going to back down when someone's attacking my reporting.
Crime Story is written and hosted by me.
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