NY federal judge denies bail for two real estate brokers and their
brother in sex trafficking case
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[January 16, 2025]
By LARRY NEUMEISTER
NEW YORK (AP) — Two luxury real estate brokers and their brother accused
of raping dozens of women over two decades will remain in jail to await
their trial on sex trafficking charges, a federal judge in New York City
ruled Wednesday.
Judge Valerie E. Caproni heard bail arguments before agreeing with two
federal magistrate judges in Florida who previously ruled that the three
brothers should remain locked up as a danger to the community.
The men, who all reside in Miami, were not in Manhattan federal court
because they remain jailed in Florida. They have pleaded not guilty.
Caproni also found that they were a risk to flee.
She cited the strength of the evidence and potential penalties,
including a mandatory minimum of 15 years in prison and a maximum of
life if they are convicted. She also noted that the crimes allegedly
occurred for two decades and did not result from “a one-time party where
things went wrong.”
In an indictment unsealed last month and a detention letter, New York
prosecutors alleged that Oren Alexander, 37, and Tal Alexander, 38,
using their wealth and influence they gained by brokering deals on
high-end properties in New York City, Miami and Los Angeles, teamed up
with sibling Alon Alexander, 37, to rape and sexually abuse women from
at least 2002 to 2021. Several of the victims, a prosecutor said
Wednesday, were minors.
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The indictment accused the brothers of using “deception, fraud and
coercion” to entice victims to travel with them or attend parties and
events before they were attacked. At other times, prosecutors said in
court papers, the men engaged in “opportunistic rapes and sexual assault
of numerous victims who they encountered by chance.”
In a detention letter, prosecutors said law enforcement agents had
spoken to over 40 women who said they were forcibly raped or sexually
assaulted by at least one of the brothers and that one or more of the
brothers had drugged victims prior to a rape.
Each of the brothers had been accused of forcible rape by at least 10
women, prosecutors said.
During Wednesday's hearing, multiple lawyers for the men argued that the
government's evidence in the case was weak and that the men have not
been accused of committing any crimes in the last four years. One lawyer
even said that his client had passed a lie detector test that proves his
innocence.
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Oren Alexander and Tal Alexander speak at a panel at the Rockstars
of Real Estate Event, Tuesday, Sept. 3, 2013 in New York. (Photo by
Amy Sussman/Invision for DETAILS Magazine/AP Images, File)
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Attorney Milton L. Williams Jr., representing Tal Alexander but
speaking for all of the defendants, said the men were now married
with young children and are entrenched in their communities and
posed no threat to anyone.
He said a $115 million proposed bail package meant that the
Alexander family members “are willing to give up basically
everything that they have” in the event any of the defendants flee.
As he spoke, the parents of the men sat behind him.
In their detention letter, prosecutors said a Dec. 11 raid on a New
York City apartment leased by Tal Alexander had turned up numerous
photographs and videos showing Oren, Alon and several third parties
recording or photographing themselves with women in states of
intoxication and undress.
“There is no evidence demonstrating that the defendants learned the
error of their ways. The fact that video versions of trophies of the
defendants’ criminal conduct were found in Tal Alexander’s residence
as recently as last month also suggests that the defendants have not
closed the door on their criminal conduct,” prosecutors said.
“Some victims said ‘no’ or ‘stop;’ others screamed,” prosecutors
wrote. “But the defendants ignored their victims’ distress. Multiple
women described being terrified that the Alexander Brothers were
going to hurt or even kill them — these victims’ only goal in that
moment became to survive.”
Prosecutors say numerous victims will testify at trial “about the
horrific sexual violence committed against them” and their testimony
will be corroborated by testimony by non-victim witnesses,
electronic evidence, physical evidence and documentary evidence.
The government said in its submission that the accounts of the
victims “strongly corroborate each other” as they recount similar
experiences of sexual violence even though they occurred in
different settings, states and even different decades.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Andrew Jones told the judge that the
defendants sometimes threatened the women to remain silent about
what had happened after attacking them. He said one of the brothers
had told “multiple women he would ruin or destroy them if they made
allegations.”
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