On May 22, 2026, MSN published "I was in the infamous NXIVM cult — even when I was branded I couldn't leave." The next day, May 23, the Daily Mail published "I was in NXIVM sex cult. I was branded with a hot iron…"

This piece is a rigorous analysis of those two articles.

The image is, by now, iconic. A woman's hip, a two-inch cauterized monogram, a story of secret ceremonies and burning skin. It is the picture that built a documentary cycle, a book deal, a podcast, and — through repetition — a public understanding of what "NXIVM" was.

It is also, in one specific sense, not part of the case.

When Keith Raniere was tried in the Eastern District of New York in 2019, the branding was not on the verdict sheet. None of the seven counts of conviction concern it. No criminal charge — by any prosecutor, in any federal district — was ever brought over it. Sarah Edmondson, whose branding became the public face of the case, did not testify at the criminal trial.

That gap — between the trial record and the press tour — is what this piece is about.

The press tour returns

This spring, with the release of A Little Bit Culty — the self-published book Edmondson and her husband Anthony Ames brought out in March — the press tour returned in full. The Daily Mail's piece in May ran under the headline "I was in NXIVM sex cult. I was branded with a hot iron, 'slave' women were ordered to have sex and torture each other if they broke the rules." A near-identical MSN/Metro retelling appeared alongside it. Both close with purchase links.

Both pieces tell a serious story about coercion and recovery. They also do something a careful reader should notice: they treat Edmondson's memoir as if it were the trial record. "During his trial," the Daily Mail writes, "the secrets of NXIVM were finally unveiled." The reader is invited to believe the article is sourcing claims from court records. It is sourcing them, in fact, from her book.

The trial record looks different from the press tour's account in three specific ways.

One: The branding was not charged.

The verdict sheet for United States v. Raniere et al., EDNY 18-CR-204, is a public court document. It lists the seven counts of conviction. The branding is not among them. The 120-year sentence rests on RICO predicates, two trafficking counts, forced-labor conspiracy, and wire-fraud conspiracy — none of which name the ceremony that has dominated the coverage for nine years. This is in plain view. The press tour does not mention it.

Claim · Record

As reported

"During his trial, the secrets of NXIVM were finally unveiled… he was sentenced to 120 years in prison for racketeering, sex trafficking and possessing child pornography, as well as a litany of other crimes."

Daily Mail, May 2026.

In the record

The branding is not listed among the seven counts of conviction. No prosecutor in any federal district brought a charge over it. The conduct that became the iconic image of the case is not the conduct on which any conviction rested.

Verdict Sheet, U.S. v. Raniere et al., EDNY 18-CR-204 (June 19, 2019).

Two: The conduct was already reviewed and not pursued.

The same New York Times article that, in October 2017, brought NXIVM to national attention contains a sentence the press tour has spent eight years not quoting:

From The New York Times, October 17, 2017
Excerpt from the New York Times October 17, 2017 article 'Inside a Secretive Group Where Women Are Branded.' A red box highlights the sentence: 'Separately, a state police investigator told Ms. Edmondson and two other women that officials would not pursue their criminal complaint against Nxivm because their actions had been consensual, a text message shows.'
NYT, October 17, 2017 — the state police investigator told Ms. Edmondson and two other women that officials would not pursue their criminal complaint against NXIVM because their actions had been consensual.

That is the finding of the New York State Police, in The New York Times's own reporting, about the specific complaint Edmondson and two other women filed. The Northern District of New York — the federal district where the alleged conduct occurred — had been approached months earlier, per the trial testimony of government witness Mark Vicente, and did not bring charges.

It was the Eastern District of New York, 160 miles away in Brooklyn, that picked it up. The lead EDNY prosecutor, Moira Kim Penza, said on camera in the STARZ docuseries Seduced:

"When I read the New York Times article, it immediately felt apparent to me that there was criminal conduct going on… My office very quickly got an amazing team of FBI agents on board, and within days really, we were interviewing witnesses and victims."

— Moira Kim Penza, lead EDNY prosecutor, on camera in Seduced (STARZ).

That is a description of a federal prosecution launched by a newspaper article — in a district that had not been approached, against conduct two other reviewing bodies had already declined to act on. It is also, notably, the opposite of how the press tour describes the case's origin: "police armed with machineguns stormed a $10,000-a-week villa in Mexico to arrest Raniere." Both sentences can be literally true. They tell very different stories about how a federal prosecution begins.

Claim · Record

As reported

"Together with other NXIVM whistleblowers, Sarah took her story to The New York Times which published an explosive exposé in October 2017, leading to an FBI investigation."

Daily Mail, May 2026.

In the record

The same article reports the NY State Police finding that the conduct was "consensual." The Northern District of NY had previously declined to prosecute. EDNY — 160 miles away in Brooklyn — assembled a task force "within days" of reading the article, per Penza on camera in Seduced.

NYT, October 17, 2017; Mark Vicente trial testimony; STARZ, Seduced (2020).

Three: The witness who became the face of the case was not a witness in the case.

Edmondson is described in the Daily Mail piece, and across the press cycle, as a "whistleblower" who "took her story to The New York Times… leading to an FBI investigation." All of that is, in the narrow sense, true. It also produces an inference the article does not correct: that she testified in the criminal proceeding she helped launch. She did not. The case was tried on the testimony of other women.

So readers of these pieces are reading something complicated: a personal memoir, sold as history, citing a trial that didn't include the speaker, about conduct that wasn't charged, that the state had already ruled consensual. That's worth naming.

The same speaker, three accounts

The press tour's description of the branding ceremony is harrowing. From the Daily Mail, quoting Edmondson's 2019 memoir Scarred:

"For hours, the smell of scorched skin filled the room as each woman had Raniere's initials burnt into their most intimate parts… Lying here now, I can feel each millimeter of my flesh singed open. I close my eyes and imagine staring into the face of my son… When the last line's been drawn, my eyes need a moment to adjust to the light. I feel like I'm floating out of my body."

— Sarah Edmondson, Scarred (Chronicle Prism, 2019), as quoted in Daily Mail, May 2026.

What's interesting is what the same speaker said about the same event earlier.

In the October 2017 New York Times article — the piece that, on Penza's account, launched the federal investigation — Edmondson described the ceremony in her own voice as a painful dissociation: "I wept the whole time. I disassociated out of my body."

From The New York Times, October 17, 2017
Excerpt from the NYT October 17, 2017 reporting. The text reads: 'A female doctor proceeded to use a cauterizing device to sear a two-inch-square symbol below each woman's hip, a procedure that took 20 to 30 minutes. For hours, muffled screams and the smell of burning tissue filled the room. \
NYT, October 17, 2017 — Edmondson's contemporaneous description of the ceremony: weeping and dissociation.

In HBO's The Vow (Episode 3, 2020) — recounting the immediate aftermath of the same ceremony, on camera — Edmondson described something different. Not dissociation. Not weeping. Empowerment:

"I came out of that being like, holy fuck, I did it, I can do anything."

— Sarah Edmondson, on camera in HBO, The Vow, Season 1, Episode 3 (2020), at approximately 39:00.

And, of the impulse to tell her husband what she had just done:

"I was dying to tell him… I wanted to tell him, like, I'm so strong, you'd never be able to do what I just did."

— Sarah Edmondson, on camera in HBO, The Vow, Season 1, Episode 3 (2020), at approximately 39:00.

By the 2026 press tour, the account is back to PTSD, dissociation, and (in the new Scarred passage the Daily Mail quotes) the smell of scorched skin filling a room for hours.

Why this story, why now?

Nine years is a long time for a story to stay on a press tour. Why this one, why now?

The answer is partly commercial. A Little Bit Culty is a March 2026 book release; the Daily Mail and Metro pieces are book-launch coverage; the podcast of the same name is a Spotify property; HBO's The Vow is a continuing asset. There is a normal industrial logic to the timing — the spring of any book release is when this happens.

But the timing also sits inside a wider pattern — and this is where the May 2026 pieces would have looked, if they were looking.

What else was happening in this case, 2017–2026
Oct 2017
NYT publishes "Inside a Secretive Group Where Women Are Branded." Same article reports NY State Police told Edmondson and two other women that their criminal complaint would not be pursued because the conduct had been "consensual."
Oct 2017
EDNY prosecutor Moira Kim Penza, per her on-camera statement in STARZ docuseries Seduced, reads the NYT article and assembles a federal task force "within days," despite the conduct occurring 160 miles away.
Jun 2019
Six-week trial concludes. Verdict on seven counts. The branding is not among them. Sarah Edmondson is not a witness in the criminal trial.
Oct 2020
Raniere sentenced to 120 years.
Dec 2024
Newsweek reports that an independent forensic expert it retained agrees the digital evidence at the "heart" of the case was planted and falsified. Within 24 hours, the article disappears from Google search results. It reappears after reporter Valerie Bauman draws attention to its absence on X.
Mar 2026
Edmondson and Ames self-publish A Little Bit Culty.
May 2026
Daily Mail and MSN/Metro publish near-identical first-person retellings. Neither mentions the Newsweek reporting, the forensic finding it confirms, the NY State Police's 2017 "consensual" determination, or that the branding was never a criminal charge.

In December 2024, Newsweek reported that an independent forensic expert it retained had concluded the FBI's digital evidence in the case — described by the prosecution as the "heart" of its case — had been planted and falsified. Within 24 hours, the article disappeared from Google's search results. It reappeared only after the reporter, Valerie Bauman, publicly called attention to its absence on X.

Valerie Bauman, X, January 6, 2025
X post by Valerie Bauman (@valeriereports), January 6, 2025: 'Did the @FBI bury this story by hiding it from Google search results? It's the first piece that takes seriously the alleged major malfeasance by the agency in the #NXIVM case against Keith Raniere. An independent expert who reviewed documents and spoke to Newsweek said he believes the experts who say the FBI planted evidence and staged a search. The article came out Dec. 23. Why is it erased from Google and Google News searches?'
Reporter Valerie Bauman publicly notes the disappearance of the December 23, 2024 Newsweek piece from Google search results — the first piece, in her view, to take seriously the alleged FBI misconduct in the case.

Newsweek's reporting confirmed an earlier joint forensic conclusion that the involvement of government personnel in the evidentiary fraud was "inescapable — an unprecedented finding in our combined 150+ years of forensic experience."

In March 2026, the Edmondson book was released. In May, the Daily Mail and MSN/Metro pieces ran. Neither piece mentions the Newsweek reporting. Neither mentions the forensic finding. Neither mentions that the branding was not a charge, or that the NY State Police called the conduct consensual.

All of this could be coincidence. Books are released on a schedule. Outlets cover what their readers want. A careful version of this story doesn't need to claim coordination. It only has to ask: why are outlets eager to retell a nine-year-old account in May, but not eager to engage with Newsweek's December 2024 reporting that an independent forensic expert agreed the FBI's core digital evidence was planted — reporting that briefly disappeared from Google itself? The asymmetry is the story.

Stories age, normally, by acquiring nuance. This story has aged differently. It has acquired commercial infrastructure — a book, a podcast, an HBO documentary — that depends on the original shape of the story being correct.

From the analysis above.

Amplifying that shape at the moment the shape is being questioned isn't necessarily a conspiracy. It's what happens when a story becomes infrastructure.

A modest standard

There's a version of this story that would have served readers. It would have introduced Edmondson with the basics. The branding wasn't a charge. The New York State Police called the conduct consensual. She didn't testify at the criminal trial. Her account of the ceremony has shifted significantly since 2017. That would have taken three sentences. It would have left her free to tell her story, in her own voice, without converting it into a verdict.

It would also have given readers the context to ask the question their own attention is being asked to validate: if the case is as straightforward as the press tour says, why did Newsweek's December 2024 reporting on a planted-evidence finding briefly disappear from Google search results — and why has that same reporting not been engaged by outlets willing to retell the original account?

None of these are unanswerable questions. They are simply unasked.

In May 2026, in two major outlets, a story was retold for the ninth straight year as if it had never been examined. The trial it cites did not include the conduct it centers. The witness it canonizes was not a witness. The first reviewing body called the conduct consensual. The federal district closest to the conduct declined to prosecute. A joint forensic conclusion, independently confirmed by Newsweek's own expert, holds that the prosecution's core digital evidence was planted.

A reader does not need to choose between the press tour and the malfeasance reporting to notice that only one of those is being covered.

Frequently asked

Was the branding ceremony a criminal charge in US v. Raniere?
No. The branding is not on the verdict sheet of US v. Raniere et al., EDNY 18-CR-204. None of the seven counts of conviction concern it. The 120-year sentence rests on racketeering, racketeering conspiracy, two trafficking counts, sex-trafficking conspiracy, forced-labor conspiracy, and wire-fraud conspiracy.
Did Sarah Edmondson testify at the criminal trial of Keith Raniere?
No. Sarah Edmondson is not among the witnesses called by either side in the six-week criminal trial (May 7 – June 19, 2019). The case was tried on the testimony of other women. Edmondson appears in extensive media coverage and in HBO's documentary The Vow, but not as a witness at trial.
What did the New York State Police say about the branding conduct in 2017?
The October 17, 2017 New York Times article that brought NXIVM to national attention contains this sentence: "Separately, a state police investigator told Ms. Edmondson and two other women that officials would not pursue their criminal complaint against Nxivm because their actions had been consensual, a text message shows." The state-level finding was reported in the same article that triggered the federal investigation.
How did Edmondson's account of the branding change between 2017 and 2026?
In the October 2017 NYT article, Edmondson described the ceremony in her own voice as: "I wept the whole time. I disassociated out of my body." In HBO's The Vow (Episode 3, 2020), on camera, she described the immediate aftermath in terms of empowerment: she said she came out of it thinking "holy fuck, I did it, I can do anything" and that she wanted to tell her husband "I'm so strong, you'd never be able to do what I just did." By the 2026 press tour for A Little Bit Culty, the account had resolved into PTSD, dissociation, and harrowing imagery from her 2019 memoir Scarred.
Is this article a defense of Keith Raniere?
No. It is a record-check of two specific news articles against the public trial and reporting record. The piece argues that retelling a nine-year-old story without noting what the trial record actually included, what the state authorities actually found, and what the speaker herself has said about the same event at different times, is not journalism — it is repetition.

Citations & sources

  1. Daily Mail, "I was in NXIVM sex cult. I was branded with a hot iron…," May 2026 Article under analysis.
  2. MSN / Metro, "I was in the infamous NXIVM cult — even when I was branded I couldn't leave," May 2026 Article under analysis. Near-identical to the Daily Mail piece; same press tour.
  3. Barry Meier, "Inside a Secretive Group Where Women Are Branded," The New York Times, October 17, 2017 Primary source for: (a) the NY State Police investigator's statement that officials would not pursue Edmondson's criminal complaint because the conduct had been "consensual"; (b) Edmondson's 2017 statement, "I wept the whole time. I disassociated out of my body."
  4. Verdict Sheet, United States v. Keith Raniere et al., EDNY 18-CR-204 (E.D.N.Y., June 19, 2019). Public court filing. Seven counts of conviction: racketeering; racketeering conspiracy; sex trafficking; attempted sex trafficking; sex-trafficking conspiracy; forced-labor conspiracy; wire-fraud conspiracy. The branding is not among them.
  5. Trial Transcripts, EDNY 18-CR-204 (May 7 – June 19, 2019). Sarah Edmondson is not among the witnesses called by either side in the criminal proceeding.
  6. Mark Vicente, trial testimony, EDNY 18-CR-204 (May 2019). Vicente, a government witness, testified that the underlying allegations had been raised with the Northern District of New York months before the October 2017 NYT article.
  7. STARZ, Seduced: Inside the NXIVM Cult (2020), four-part documentary series. Lead EDNY prosecutor Moira Kim Penza, on camera: "When I read the New York Times article, it immediately felt apparent to me that there was criminal conduct going on… within days really, we were interviewing witnesses and victims."
  8. HBO, The Vow, Season 1, Episode 3 (2020), at approximately 39:00. Sarah Edmondson, on camera: "I came out of that being like, holy fuck, I did it, I can do anything." And: "I was dying to tell him… I wanted to tell him, like, I'm so strong, you'd never be able to do what I just did." Broadcast is the primary record; readers can verify on HBO Max at the cited timestamp.
  9. Sarah Edmondson, Scarred (Chronicle Prism, 2019), as quoted at length in the Daily Mail, May 2026. "I can feel each millimeter of my flesh singed open… I feel like I'm floating out of my body."
  10. Valerie Bauman, "Did the FBI Plant Evidence in the NXIVM Case?," Newsweek, December 23, 2024 An independent forensic expert retained by the magazine agreed with the prior expert finding that key digital evidence had been planted and falsified.
  11. Valerie Bauman, @valeriereports on X, post of January 6, 2025 (reproduced above). Reporter publicly notes the disappearance of the December 23, 2024 Newsweek article from Google search results. Searchable on X by handle and date.
  12. Joint Expert Report, EDNY 18-CR-204, Doc. 1253-1. Seven forensic experts, four of them former FBI examiners, jointly concluded that the involvement of government personnel in evidentiary fraud is "inescapable — an unprecedented finding in our combined 150+ years of forensic experience."
  13. On commercial structure. The Daily Mail piece closes with a purchase link for A Little Bit Culty on Amazon. The MSN/Metro piece closes with a purchase line and a Spotify reference for the same-titled podcast. This is observed, not imputed.

This piece compares two news articles against publicly available records. It is not a defense of any party; it is an argument for record-checking before retelling. Corrections welcome.