Man charged with sex-trafficking college
students after moving into daughter's dormitory and targeting her friends.
A
father who allegedly turned his daughter’s university dormitory
into a “cult” has been charged with extorting students out of $1m (£770,000)
and forcing one of them into sex work. Prosecutors said Lawrence Ray, 60, “used
physical and psychological threats and coercion to indoctrinate and exploit a
group” of students at Sarah Lawrence College
in New York City. The
ex-convict moved into his daughter’s dormitory at the prestigious liberal arts
college shortly after leaving prison, and is alleged to have convinced her
friends they were indebted to him, subjected them to hours of gruelling
"interrogations," and deprived them of food and sleep.
Ray
was arrested on Tuesday following an investigation prompted by an article
published last year in New York magazine under the headline “The stolen
kids of Sarah Lawrence”.
He is
alleged to have ensnared many of his victims while they were second-year
students at the university. His first victims were his daughters' flatmates, US
district attorney Geoffrey Berman said.
Ray
moved into the students' on-campus housing in late 2010, presenting himself as
a father figure to his daughter’s friends and conducting "therapy"
sessions with them, according to an indictment filed in US District Court.
Prosecutors
said he alienated his victims from their parents, convincing them they were
"broken", and persuaded some of them to move into a Manhattan
apartment.
“I
didn’t want to go back home, and this was my alternative,” one of the students
said. “Part of why I got in a cult at all was because I had no idea how one
finds a place to live in New York.”
After
gaining his victims' trust, Ray "turned on them, falsely accusing them of
harming him by attempting to poison him or to deliberately damage his
property," Mr Berman said.
Ray
solicited false confessions – some of them recorded - from at least six victims
and coerced them into making payments "they did not actually owe and could
not possibly afford," the US attorney added.
He
allegedly directed the students to drain money from their parents' savings
accounts and forced some of them into unpaid labour at a family member's
property in North Carolina. Others opened lines of credit or solicited
contributions from others to help pay the false debts.
Ray “subjected his victims to almost unspeakable abuse,” Mr
Berman said. He allegedly tied one a victim to a chair and placed a plastic bag
over her head, almost suffocating her. Ray forced the same woman into
prostitution and ultimately took $500,000 (£385,000) from her, processing the
money an internet domain business.
“For
nearly a decade, Lawrence Ray exploited and abused young women and men
emotionally, physically, and sexually for his own financial gain,” Mr Berman
said. “College is supposed to be a time of self-discovery and new-found
independence. But as alleged, Lawrence Ray exploited that vulnerable time in
his victims’ lives through a course of conduct that shocks the conscience.”
FBI
assistant director William Sweeney Jr added: “There was no limit to the abuse
Ray’s victims received, and there is no way of knowing the amount of damage he
may have caused them in the years to come.”
Ray,
who was arrested at his home in Piscaway, New Jersey, is due to appear in a
Manhattan court charged with multiple offences including extortion, sex trafficking, and
forced labour.
He
faces decades in prison if convicted.
Ray
has previously denied wrongdoing and claimed to New York magazine he
was being “poisoned” as part of a conspiracy hatched by some of the students
and former New York City police commissioner Bernard Kerik. Ray’s evidence had
helped to convict Kerik, once his best friend, of tax fraud charges for which
he was jailed in 2009.
“Larry
Ray is a psychotic con man who has victimised every friend he’s ever had,” said
Kerik last year, denying any part in a conspiracy. “It’s been close to 20 years
since I last heard from him, yet his reign of terror continues.”
Sarah
Lawrence College said it had not been contacted by federal prosecutors but
would cooperate "if invited to do so."
The
university said it had investigated the allegations raised in the New York
article but "did not substantiate those specific claims"
"The
charges contained in the indictment are serious, wide-ranging, disturbing and
upsetting," it added in a statement. "As always the safety and
well-being of our students and alumni is a priority for the college."
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