Sarah Lawrence Sex Cult: Lawrence Ray trial exposes BRUTAL crimes committed on students
Sex cult leader Lawrence Ray was accused of several vicious
acts during the first day of his trial at the Federal District Court in
Manhattan on March 10, 2022. In her opening statement, Assistant US Attorney
Lindsey Keenan offered various examples of sordid acts committed by Ray to the
students of Sarah Lawrence College, where his daughter studied.
Ray is facing a massive 17-count indictment including
extortion, forced labor, sex trafficking, and money laundering for
"physical and psychological threats and coercion to indoctrinate and
exploit a group of college students." According to the Department of
Justice, Ray extorted as much as $1 million from five victims, while forcing at
least one girl into prostitution. The acts continued for nearly a decade,
shortly after he walked out of jail, ending with his arrest in February 2020.
At the time of his arrest, a DoJ announcement did detail
some of the acts Ray engaged in, including "his manipulative interrogation
sessions" which formed the backbone for his extortion and forced labor of
the students. The New Jersey resident immediately became infamous for his
"cult leader tactics", more about which we learned during the first
day of his trial.
Ray's actions come to the spotlight
While many of Ray's actions have been reported on in the
past, Keenan opted to go into great detail about what exactly happened over the
course of a decade in her opening statement, leaving little to the imagination.
One woman was handcuffed to a chair, naked, before being suffocated with a
plastic bag. "He took the bag off of her face. He towered over her as she
was handcuffed to that chair, gasping. She was helpless. Unable to move, unable
to breathe, unable to scream for help. For hours he tormented her, putting the
plastic bag over her head again and again and again," Keenan said.
"He ruthlessly threatened and extorted his victims to
get what he wanted — sex, money, and power," she added. One of Ray's
victims, Santos Rosario also testified on the opening day and added, "He
would hit me. He slapped me. He held a knife to my throat. He held a knife to
my genitals." To back up Rosario's claim, prosecutors then played an audio
clip in which Ray can be heard saying, "F-----g little brat. How does that
feel?"
Despite that damning testimony and exhibits, Ray's lawyers
attempted to flip the narrative. "This was not a criminal enterprise. This
was a group of storytellers," they said and attempted to portray it as
more nuanced than the indictment stated. "Larry’s stories were full of
mystery, intrigue, and excitement. They wanted to hear more," Ray's
attorney Allegra Glashausser told the jury. The defense went on to claim that
the students eventually created their own stories, a narrative that is a complete
360 of what the prosecution claims.
For those unaware, this isn't Ray's first time in court. In
2000, he was tied to organized crime and charged for participating in a scheme
where mobsters and stockbrokers were accused of cheating investors out of $40
million. He was slapped with nine months of home confinement and five years of
probation over that case. Later, he served time in New Jersey over a child
custody dispute, for which he was released in 2010. He now faces life in prison
if found guilty in this case.
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