Nancy Salzman Finally Forced To Tell The Truth As Part Of Her Guilty Plea – Frank Report Has Her Complete Allocution

For the first time in nearly 20-years – and probably quite a bit longer – Nancy Salzman was forced to tell the truth on Wednesday when she stood before U.S. District Court Judge Nicholas G. Garaufis and pleaded guilty to one count of Racketeering Conspiracy and two racketeering acts.

Although it’s standard practice for a federal judge to remind a defendant who is entering a guilty plea that they will face perjury charges if they lie during their allocution, it was particularly appropriate for Judge Garaufis to remind Salzman about that outcome.

That’s because Salzman has been lying non-stop for so long.

And though she lied throughout the time that she was part of the NXIVM/ESP crime syndicate, her proclivity for prevarication started long before that.

She lied when she told people that she had a Master’s Degree.

She even lied when she said she has a Bachelor’s Degree (Turns out she has an Associate’s Degree and she’s a registered nurse – which, while noteworthy accomplishments, are way below what she claimed to have achieved academically).

She claimed to be a Psychotherapist – which is not a recognized profession in New York State.

She claimed to be a certified Medicaid provider when, in fact, she never had that certification – and she fraudulently billed her clients through someone else’s Medicaid Provider Number, which is another crime all by itself.

*****
But on Wednesday, Salzman was forced to tell the truth.

In a carefully orchestrated proceeding, Judge Garaufis went through the requisite step-by-step process that is necessary in order to make sure that Salzman could not change her mind at a later date – and try to withdraw her guilty plea.

He started out by confirming that she was there to enter a guilty plea to Count One of the first superseding indictment “without an agreement” (We’ll discuss the importance of that “without an agreement” part in a later post).

Next, he put her under oath – and asked her a series of questions to confirm:
• That she knew she could consult with her attorneys at any time during the proceeding;
• That English is her primary language (She is also, of course, totally fluent in Ranierese);
• That she has not recently been under the care of a psychiatrist;
• That although she had taken some medications within the past 24-hours, that medication was not affecting her ability to think or reason or understand what people were saying to her;
• That she had consumed one glass of wine the prior evening;
• That she has never been hospitalized or treated for any drug-related problem;
• That her mind was clear;
• That she understood everything he was saying to her;
• That she understood what legal rights she would be waiving by pleading guilty;
• That the court would appoint an attorney to represent her should she need one in the future;
• That she did not need any more time with her attorneys to discuss the question of pleading guilty;
• That she understood the crimes with which she was charged in the first superseding indictment;
• That her attorneys have answered all her questions about those charges;
• That she understood she would be pleading to one count of Racketeering Conspiracy –and two racketeering acts: i.e., conspiracy to commit identity theft –and conspiracy to alter records in an official proceeding;
• That she understood what the prosecution would have to prove beyond a reasonable doubt in order to convict her under Count One of the superseding indictment;
• That she had the right to persist in pleading not guilty to all the pending charges against her;
• That if she went to trial, she would be presumed innocent;
• That she understood all the rights she would have if she chose to proceed to trial;
• That she would not be able to appeal her guilty plea;
• That although the sentencing guidelines called for a sentence of 33-41 months, the judge would have total discretion in deciding what her actual sentence would be;
• That she would have the right to appeal whatever sentence is imposed on her; and
• That she had no questions regarding any aspect of her entering a guilty plea.

And, after all that, Nancy got to read her allocution into the record – which the Frank Report is able to provide word-for-word to its readers:

THE DEFENDANT: Judge Garaufis, want you to know that I am pleading guilty because I am, in fact, guilty. It has taken me some time and some soul searching to come to this place.

When I began working with NXIVM I believed that we would be helping people. I still believe that some of what we did was good. The problem began when I compromised my principles and did things which I knew or should have known
were wrong. I justified them to myself by saying that what we were doing was for the greater good.

Now, having had time to step back from the community I was immersed in for nearly 20 years, I accept that some of things I did were not just wrong but criminal.

I am deeply sorry for the trouble that I’ve brought to my daughter, the pain I’ve caused my parents and the things I’ve done that have hurt others. If I could go back and do it all over I would, but I cannot. By my plea of guilty I hope to at least begin atoning for my actions and to start the next part of my life.

Between 2005 and 2018, I agreed to join an enterprise comprised of people close to Keith Raniere and agreed to participate in its affairs through a pattern of racketeering activity. While doing so, I was aware of and participated in some of the criminal objectives of the enterprise which were jointly undertaken by its members, including me, and I agreed that a conspirator would commit at
least two acts of racketeering in furtherance of the objectives of the enterprise.

Such objectives included agreeing that others would commit improper and, at times, illegal invasions of privacy against perceived critics of NXIVM, the company of which I was president. Including computer hacking in their email accounts and other acts of improper prying for the purpose of either trying to achieve
success in court litigation against those individuals, or trying to stop them from continuing to publicly criticize the organization.

Such objectives also included agreeing during discovery proceedings in a District of New Jersey civil case to which NXIVM and I personally were parties, to have others
alter videotapes memorializing NXIVM classroom proceedings that we were required to turn over to our adversaries. We agreed together that the recordings would be edited to remove certain sections we did not want to turn over and to do so without revealing our editing plans to such adversaries in knowing violation of the Court’s rules.

I recognize that what I did was illegal and wrong and I deeply regret my participation in these acts.

*****
So, there you have it.

In 441 words, Salzman has admitted to being involved in a Racketeering Conspiracy – and to participating in two racketeering acts.

And just like that, Salzman went from being a Prefect to being a felon.

Viva Executive Success!

*****

One of the most noteworthy moments during Wednesday’s hearing was an exchange between Judge Garaufis and David Stern, Nancy’s lead attorney. Just think how chilling this must sound to the other defendants in this case:

THE COURT: Are you aware of any viable legal defense to the charge?

MR. STERN: I think we’ve thought this case through and discussed it amongst ourselves and I think on balance we’ve decided there is not a viable legal defense.

WOW! Sleep tight Keith, Allison, Clare, Lauren and Kathy…

Nancy – front row in black – listening to her glorious Vanguard – the man she will now testify against.
Nancy Salzman and her daughter Lauren – who she may testify against in the upcoming trial.
Barbara Bouchey, Keith Raniere and Nancy Salzman during the early days of Executive Success Programs.
Nancy [Prefect] Salzman cuts the ribbon opening up the Mexico NXIVM center. Alex Betancourt [l] Emiliano Salinas [R].
Nancy Salzman AKA Prefect and Keith Raniere AKA Vanguard at Vanguard week.
A slide shown at Vanguard Week.
Nancy Salzman with Sara Bronfman at V-Week 2017.
Keith Raniere and Nancy Salzman in 2009 in the audience listening to the Dalai Lama.

About the author

K.R. Claviger

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Heidi
Heidi
5 years ago

Good luck teaching an old bitch new tricks!

I expect “Nancy pants on fire” will have a fresh memory jog each time DOJ fishes another piece of kiddie porn or equally damning whopper out of those remaining library floors of terabytes, but not before.

As IF she hasn’t sought an enemy password or tampered with any evidence in over a decade? …HA! But, hey, what’s a son-in-law for?

Just Facts
Just Facts
5 years ago

now the defense lawyers are going to have to change their defense strategy, because she will be testifying against their clients now.

shadowstate1958
5 years ago

Nancy Salzman:

‘Confession is good for the soul.”

Scott Johnson
5 years ago

That assumes she has one.

Anonymous
Anonymous
5 years ago

Registered nurse has a four year nursing degree.
Licensed practical nurse has a two year nursing degree.

sk
sk
5 years ago
Reply to  Anonymous

One can get their LPN in a one year program and a RN in a 2 year program. You get your BSN with a 4yr degree.

Scott Johnson
5 years ago
Reply to  sk

Nursing has nothing to do with what Salzman did to people. Good thing nurses don’t take the Hippocratic oath, or she would be in big trouble….LOL

Pyriel
Pyriel
5 years ago
Reply to  Scott Johnson

Scott, I found this oath for nurses. Nancy could be in trouble.

“Practical Nurse Pledge”, a modern version based on the “Nightingale Pledge”
Before God and those assembled here, I solemnly pledge;
To adhere to the code of ethics of the nursing profession;
To co-operate faithfully with the other members of the nursing team and to carryout [sic] faithfully and to the best of my ability the instructions of the physician or the nurse who may be assigned to supervise my work;
I will not do anything evil or malicious and I will not knowingly give any harmful drug or assist in malpractice.
I will not reveal any confidential information that may come to my knowledge in the course of my work.
And I pledge myself to do all in my power to raise the standards and prestige of the practical nursing;
May my life be devoted to service and to the high ideals of the nursing profession.

Scott Johnson
5 years ago
Reply to  Pyriel

See what I mean? She followed “Dr.” Brandon Porter’s fright experiment directions perfectly. What a great nurse!

Anon
5 years ago
Reply to  Pyriel

Nancy is. NYS registered nurse with an associate degree. Now that she has pled guilty to a felony, the NYS Office of Professions can order a hearing and should revoke her license to practice. The key to the revocation is the FELONY. conviction. She may just let the registration lapse and not renew it.

Scott Johnson
5 years ago
Reply to  Pyriel

Salzman should have her human being license revoked.

Anonymous
Anonymous
5 years ago
Reply to  sk

In what State, because every State I have ever seen RN is a 4 year degree, and LPN is a 2 year degree. (Went to university for a BSN.)

sk
sk
5 years ago
Reply to  Anonymous

NY, MASS, and every state in the country. Google it. Very few LPN programs these days.

ADK DREAMER
ADK DREAMER
5 years ago
Reply to  Anonymous

In NY you can be an RN with a 2 year degree. Most institutions do require that a 4 year BSN degree is completed within a certain period of time.

Anon
5 years ago
Reply to  Anonymous

During Nancy’s time of schooling, a registered nurse was only required to get an associate degree in Applied Science. They still have it available at HVCC. However, in the last decade, the hospitals are requiring a bachelor degree for a new hire. Example: Saratoga Hospital. An LPN also as an associate degree, but not the same academic track as a nurse.

ADK DREAMER
ADK DREAMER
5 years ago
Reply to  Anonymous

Not true. You can be an RN in New York with a 2 year degree but most hospitals require you get a bachelor’s degree within a set period of time after employment.

Anonymous
Anonymous
5 years ago

Wonder if Lauren will be visiting her mother daily now that Nancy has joined the “dark side”?

Nancy never said she was sorry to her other daughter while in court. What’s with that?

If I had to do it all over again, I would? Is she saying she break the law with her Vanguard… REALLY?

Scott Johnson
5 years ago
Reply to  Anonymous

Because her other daughter hasn’t been indicted. Yet.

Anonymous
Anonymous
5 years ago
Reply to  Anonymous

Not if Lauren wants to stay on Clare’s good side, and wants Clare to keep paying for her lawyers.

Anonymous
Anonymous
5 years ago

Cry Baby Jane will die in jail; and so will Clare. One way of another.

Blkdudeinvan
5 years ago

she age well
look at all those attentive
soul searcher
damn he had it good
til someone didn’t get enuff love. here are

nancy fake grin
killed my wood
thnks

Scott Johnson
5 years ago

Salzman is the typical criminal who isn’t sorry what she did, she’s sorry she got caught. Lock her up!

Anonymous
Anonymous
5 years ago
Reply to  Scott Johnson

Most accurate thing that spectator has ever said.

Scott Johnson
5 years ago
Reply to  Anonymous

I’ve said many accurate things, you just weren’t paying attention and/or didn’t get it.

NoisyMouse
NoisyMouse
5 years ago

Not having a signed plea agreement is also known as a ‘cold plea’. In Nancy’s case, she will cooperate with the Govt so that the US Attorneys Office will ask for a downward departure. Nancy can also get a year shaved off her sentence if she completes a drug rehab program in prison.

But the big benefit to a cold plea is that Nancy can appeal a sentencing error

Scott Johnson
5 years ago
Reply to  NoisyMouse

What drugs does Salzman have to be rehabbed from?

Gin an juice
Gin an juice
5 years ago

Interesting that she threw the community under the bus with her statement. After the read, I doubt D. Richard Bandler certified Nancy as a NLP practitioner. Just another lie.

Peaches
Peaches
5 years ago

If I err not, it was Keith who coined the term, ‘rapegasm’ to express the subtle joy a woman experiences when what began as coercion, ended with joyous acceptance, compliance and retroactive consent via orgasm[s].

Blkdudeinvan
5 years ago
Reply to  Peaches

caught myself
getting hard
all this sensual chat
making me blush

About the Author

Frank Parlato is an investigative journalist.

His work has been cited in hundreds of news outlets, like The New York Times, The Daily Mail, VICE News, CBS News, Fox News, New York Post, New York Daily News, Oxygen, Rolling Stone, People Magazine, The Sun, The Times of London, CBS Inside Edition, among many others in all five continents.

His work to expose and take down NXIVM is featured in books like “Captive” by Catherine Oxenberg, “Scarred” by Sarah Edmonson, “The Program” by Toni Natalie, and “NXIVM. La Secta Que Sedujo al Poder en México” by Juan Alberto Vasquez.

Parlato has been prominently featured on HBO’s docuseries “The Vow” and was the lead investigator and coordinating producer for Investigation Discovery’s “The Lost Women of NXIVM.” Parlato was also credited in the Starz docuseries "Seduced" for saving 'slave' women from being branded and escaping the sex-slave cult known as DOS.

Additionally, Parlato’s coverage of the group OneTaste, starting in 2018, helped spark an FBI investigation, which led to indictments of two of its leaders in 2023.

Parlato appeared on the Nancy Grace Show, Beyond the Headlines with Gretchen Carlson, Dr. Oz, American Greed, Dateline NBC, and NBC Nightly News with Lester Holt, where Parlato conducted the first-ever interview with Keith Raniere after his arrest. This was ironic, as many credit Parlato as one of the primary architects of his arrest and the cratering of the cult he founded.

Parlato is a consulting producer and appears in TNT's The Heiress and the Sex Cult, which premiered on May 22, 2022. Most recently, he consulted and appeared on Tubi's "Branded and Brainwashed: Inside NXIVM," which aired January, 2023.

IMDb — Frank Parlato

Contact Frank with tips or for help.
Phone / Text: (305) 783-7083
Email: frankreport76@gmail.com

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