In the early 2000s, Forbes and other media outlets started covering the group NXIVM, a massive marketing enterprise based in Clifton Park, New York, with chapters across the country, Canada and Mexico. Although the company, which had become popular in Hollywood and among business circles, advertised self-help classes, workshops, coaching and mentorship, according to former members, the group—run by Keith Raniere—practiced blackmail, forced labor, literal branding, near-starvation and sex trafficking.
In October 2020, Raniere was sentenced to 120 years in prison for sex trafficking and other crimes. Top recruiter Allison Mack, an actress best known for her role on the TV series Smallville_, is currently awaiting sentencing after pleading guilty in April 2019 to racketeering and racketeering conspiracy charges related to NXIVM._
A&E spoke with Vancouver-based author and journalist Sarah Berman about her new book, Don't Call It a Cult: The Shocking Story of Keith Raniere and the Women of NXIVM, in which she explores NXIVM's shocking practices.
When did you first become aware of the NXIVM story?
It was prevalent here in Vancouver with a center downtown, so I'd heard about the courses as early as 2012 through acquaintances who had taken the courses. And then there was a friend of a friend who had moved to Albany [NXIVM's headquarters] at one point and got out after a few years, nothing long-term. But that didn't have any of the context of the later stories about DOS [a "secret sisterhood" within NXIVM], the branding, and the legal case [against it], so I found out about the criminal aspects through the 2017 New York Times article, just like everyone else. It took me a day or two to put it all together that these classes my acquaintances were into were [part of NXIVM].
Then I did a bunch of bigger NXIVM news stories, like the Vancouver acting connection [with Vancouver-based actor Sarah Edmondson and others from TV shows like Smallville and Battlestar Galactica] as well as NXIVM health claims about being able to cure conditions like Tourette's Syndrome through their exploration of … hypnosis therapy, which actually didn't make it into the book.