Attorneys for Bronfman, the youngest daughter of the late billionaire businessman Edgar M. Bronfman, dismissed the lawsuit as an attempt to gain a financial windfall.
Clare Bronfman (born 1979) is an American heiress and former equestrian. She is the youngest daughter of billionaire philanthropist and former Seagram liquor chairman Edgar Bronfman Sr. Bronfman is notable for her involvement in NXIVM, a business involved with criminal activities that lead to indictments on federal charges...
Forbes also reported that it is estimated Clare Bronfman hired 50 to 60 lawyers from about 30 law firms to pursue cases against NXIVM critics over the course of 15 years.
"Seagram's Heiress Clare Bronfman Sentenced to 81 Months in Prison in NXIVM Case". PEOPLE.com. Retrieved October 1, 2020. ^ Goldberg, Noah (October 15, 2020).
Bronfman is serving 6 years and 9 months in a minimum security federal prison in Philadelphia.
Seagrams Heiresses Clare and Sara Bronfman Funded NXIVM For Years. Here's Where They Are Now. A federal judge has sentenced Clare to six years and nine months in prison for her involvement with the notorious organization.
Bronfman unleashed an army of lawyers and investigators to pursue Nxivm's critics. On Wednesday, a federal judge sentenced Ms. Bronfman, 41, to six years and nine months in prison for her role in enabling what prosecutors said was a corrupt organization.
Descendants of Russian immigrant tobacco farmer Yechiel (Ekiel) Bronfman and his wife, Mindel, members of the Bronfman family have owned and controlled huge financial empires built from the profits of the family liquor business (see Seagram).
Members, many of them recruited from wealthy families, would pay thousands of dollars for Nxivm courses. They could advance within the organization, and earn “commissions” to offset some of their costs, by recruiting new members.
NEW YORK — TV actor Allison Mack, who played a key role in the cultlike group NXIVM, has surrendered to a California prison to serve her sentence in a New York case against the group's spiritual leader.
Park is a former member of NXIVM, a multi-level marketing organization and cult, and appeared in video interviews with NXIVM founder Keith Raniere.
Keith Allen Raniere (/ræˈnjɛəri/; born August 26, 1960) is an American racketeer convicted for a pattern of offenses including human trafficking, sex offenses, and fraud. He co-founded NXIVM, a multi-level marketing company headquartered near Albany, New York.
Ronald Sullivan represents Clare Bronfman in her appeal of her sentence and other matters,
Geragos, whose tenure with Bronfman came late in the game, negotiated a plea deal for Bronfman about a month before she was scheduled to go to trial.
The 21-27 month sentencing guideline estimated by the prosecution, however, turned out to be worthless. That may be because an estimated 100 victims came forward after her plea deal and wrote shocking victim impact statements, which were included in her presentencing report, describing, in horrifying detail, how Clare Bronfman destroyed their lives.
If he still owes the money, Bronfman’s retainer may go a long way towards curing that.
There is a good reason why some 100 people came forward to state their lives were ruined by Clare Bronfman. What she pled guilty to was just the tip of the iceberg.
At Harvard, Sullivan teaches criminal law and upper-level criminal procedure. He is the director of the Criminal Justice Institute. He writes on criminal law, criminal procedure, democracy, and race. He also serves as the official faculty advisor for Harvard Law School’s chapter of the Black Law Students Association.
According to Wikipedia, Ronald Sullivan is 54, a law professor at Har vard Law School, who was elected President of the Black Law Students Association while he was a student there. He served as an editor of the Harvard Black Letter Law Journal, now known as the Harvard Journal on Racial and Ethnic Justice.
Did Clare Bronfman Get Set Up by Her Attorney Mark Geragos? - Frank Report
Clare Bronfman pleaded guilty on April 19, 2019 – exactly one month after Geragos had held the first meeting with Nike’s attorneys in his New York City office.
Part 1 of the twofer would have been Geragos’ testimony at Avenatti’s trial.
Geragos later became a witness for the government in its case against Avenatti – and subsequently testified against him at his trial.
The actual wording in Clare’s plea agreement is as follows: “The parties agree that either party may seek a sentence outside of the Guidelines range, suggest that the Probation Office consider a sentence outside of the Guidelines range, and suggest that the Court consider a sentence outside of the Guidelines range, based upon the factors to be considered in imposing a sentence pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 3553 (a).”
As was noted by the government in its recent submission, “Unlike most plea agreements into which the government enters, the agreement the government negotiated with Bronfman in this case expressly allows it to recommend any sentence to the Court”.
Mark Lennihan/AP. Clare Bronfman, center, a member of NXIVM, an organization charged with sex trafficking, arrives at Brooklyn Federal Court, Monday, April 8, 2019, in New York.
Heiress sentenced to nearly seven years in Nxivm case, more than recommended sentence. Clare Bronfman arriving in federal court on Wednesday.
Bronfman was one of five co-conspirators indicted on racketeering charges in connection with Raniere's case, but her sentence was in connection with two charges she pleaded guilty to in April 2019 which included conspiracy to conceal and harbor people who were not in the US legally for financial gain, as well as fraudulent use of identification.
Bronfman will be housed at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn, the same facility where Raniere is housed. He is expected to be sentenced Oct. 27.
“Despite press reports to the contrary, the court did find that Clare did not fund a sex cult.
US District Judge Nicholas Garaufis said in his hour-long reading of her sentence, that while she was not convicted of racketeering, sex trafficking ...
In July of 2018, Clare Bronfman was indicted on racketeering, identity theft, and money laundering charges. Sara Bronfman was not accused of any wrongdoing, but Raniere and other high-ranking organization members including Smallville actress Allison Mack had already been arrested earlier that spring, as well.
On September 30, a federal judge sentenced Clare Bronfman to six years and nine months in prison. Nine former members of NXIVM testified against Bronfman, detailing her role in the organization's fierce and unabated legal pursuit of them for years after they had left. According to the New York Times, several women who took the stand pleaded with Clare directly to denounce Keith Raniere during the trial. Although Clare had not herself been a member of DOS, the secret society within NXIVM that was branding women, her steady flow of funds enabled years of abuse and brainwashing within the organization.
Episode Five of HBO’s The Vow introduces the sisters into the slowly unfolding narrative, explaining the important role that the deep pockets of the Bronfmans played within the NXIVM organization over the years. Clare and Sara Bronfman first enrolled in NXIVM classes in 2002.
Clare’s choice to tell her father about the loan, which led him to talk to the press, was an “ethical breach,” according to Keith Raniere’s philosophical playbook. The Vow explains the repercussions Clare faced for years within the organization for this cardinal NXIVM sin—Raniere led her to believe that only using her money “ethically” from there on out could help her atone.
Lauren Kranc Lauren Kranc is an editorial assistant at Esquire, where she covers pop culture and television, with entirely too narrow of an expertise on Netflix dating shows.