Close Menu
Fin Street NewsFin Street News
  • Home
  • Business
  • Finance
    • Banking
    • Stocks
    • Commodities & Futures
    • ETFs & Mutual Funds
    • Funds
    • Currencies
    • Crypto
  • Markets
  • Investing
  • Personal Finance
    • Loans
    • Credit Cards
    • Dept Management
    • Retirement
    • Mortgages
    • Saving
    • Taxes
  • Fintech

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest finance and business news and updates directly to your inbox.

Trending
A new lawsuit calls for ‘immediate’ student-loan forgiveness for borrowers enrolled in Biden’s affordable repayment plan

A new lawsuit calls for ‘immediate’ student-loan forgiveness for borrowers enrolled in Biden’s affordable repayment plan

March 9, 2026
The company behind one of Trump’s oft-worn shoe brands is suing his administration over tariffs

The company behind one of Trump’s oft-worn shoe brands is suing his administration over tariffs

March 9, 2026
Guilty, all counts: Alexander brothers shake their heads ‘no’ as the verdict is read

Guilty, all counts: Alexander brothers shake their heads ‘no’ as the verdict is read

March 9, 2026
Meet Jay Graber, who is stepping down as Bluesky’s CEO to return to ‘building new things’ as chief innovation officer

Meet Jay Graber, who is stepping down as Bluesky’s CEO to return to ‘building new things’ as chief innovation officer

March 9, 2026
11 Places Where You Can Inflate Your Tires for Free

11 Places Where You Can Inflate Your Tires for Free

March 9, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Press Release
  • Advertise
  • Contact
March 9, 2026 9:44 pm EDT
|
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  Market Data
Fin Street NewsFin Street News
Newsletter Login
  • Home
  • Business
  • Finance
    • Banking
    • Stocks
    • Commodities & Futures
    • ETFs & Mutual Funds
    • Funds
    • Currencies
    • Crypto
  • Markets
  • Investing
  • Personal Finance
    • Loans
    • Credit Cards
    • Dept Management
    • Retirement
    • Mortgages
    • Saving
    • Taxes
  • Fintech
Fin Street NewsFin Street News
Home » Guilty, all counts: Alexander brothers shake their heads ‘no’ as the verdict is read
Guilty, all counts: Alexander brothers shake their heads ‘no’ as the verdict is read
Finance

Guilty, all counts: Alexander brothers shake their heads ‘no’ as the verdict is read

News RoomBy News RoomMarch 9, 20261 ViewsNo Comments

A trio of wealthy brothers was found guilty of federal sex-trafficking charges in Manhattan on Monday in a grand-slam verdict convicting them of each count they faced in a 10-count indictment.

The jury deliberated for three days before announcing a verdict for former luxury real estate brokers Tal Alexander, 39, and Oren Alexander, 38, as well as for Oren’s twin, Alon Alexander, a former executive in his parents’ private security firm.

The three brothers sat at the defense tables, shaking their heads “no” as the forewoman read the verdict.

As their sons were led out of the courtroom, their parents bowed their heads, then hugged briefly in the audience, as Alon’s wife held her head in her hand in her seat beside them.

Sentencing for the brothers, who have been held at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn since last year, was set for August 6. They intend to appeal, said Marc Agnifilo, Oren Alexander’s lead lawyer.

Before their 2024 arrests, Tal and Oren Alexander were among the nation’s most successful luxury real estate brokers — in 2019, they helped sell a $240 million condo — and their brother was a wealthy executive.

Once the owners of multimillion-dollar properties in Manhattan and Miami, the three now face a potential lifetime in federal prison.

Any single sex trafficking conviction, including for the top count of sex-trafficking conspiracy, carries a potential maximum life sentence.

The verdict follows a five-week trial in which prosecutors called 10 rape victims and an eleventh sexual-assault victim to testify, none of whom had reported their incidents to police.

“They bravely overcame the pain of reliving the abuses inflicted upon them and, as a result, prevented others from becoming victims,” said Jay Clayton, the US Attorney for the Southern District of New York.

The women gave compelling, sometimes tearful testimony about attacks in luxe locations in Manhattan, the Hamptons, Aspen, and Tel Aviv stretching back to 2008, when the brothers were in their early 20s.

They said the brothers used false promises of “afterparties” or fun weekend getaways to lure them into the worst experiences of their lives — being sexually violated through violence or a drugged drink.

Two women told jurors that they were drugged and then attacked by two of the brothers at the same time.

One said the twins took turns raping her inside a cruise ship cabin in 2012. The other said she was attacked by Tal and Alon Alexander and two other men in the bedroom of a Southampton vacation home in 2009, when she was 16 years old.

“I was wondering why they hated me,” the woman recalled thinking as she fell in and out of consciousness on a bed.

All 11 women told jurors that in the hours and days after they were attacked, shame and fear kept them from telling anyone but their closest friends.

Only when they saw that the brothers were being sued and arrested — over allegations like their own — did they find the courage to step forward, the women testified.

“Because this feels bigger than me,” one accuser explained of coming forward now, fourteen years after she said she was drugged and raped at age 20 after a party at the Manhattan penthouse of actor Zac Efron.

“I’m 34 years old now, and I know who I am,” another accuser explained of coming forward. “And I wanted someone to be held accountable for what happened to me.”

Defense lawyers maintained that any sex was consensual and that the accusations were the product of regret and faulty memories.

They pointed to inconsistencies about timing and the women’s failure to take drug tests or report the incidents to law enforcement, and noted that many of the women communicated with the brothers in the hours and days afterward.

The defense also challenged whether the accounts the women described added up to sex trafficking, the charge behind half the counts in the ten-count indictment.

“We’re going to keep fighting,” Agnifilo said as he left the courthouse. “We believe in our clients’ innocence.”

To convict on sex trafficking, jurors needed to find that the brothers used force, fraud, or coercion — including by secretly drugging drinks — to cause a commercial sex act, defined as sex in return for something of value.

Prosecutors said that the “something of value” was the brothers’ promise of a beach weekend at a Hamptons mansion, or an invite to go from a club to a hotel room for a fun “after-party.”

Defense lawyers countered that what was described in testimony was not sex trafficking because, in their view, there was no quid-pro-quo relationship proven between the lure — the “something of value” — and the alleged sex.

“The commerce — the thing of value — must be a result of the sex,” argued Agnifilo, defense attorney for Oren Alexander.

In July, Agnifilo won a partial acquittal in another high-profile Manhattan sex trafficking case, that of entertainment and lifestyle entrepreneur Sean “Diddy” Combs.

In that trial, Agnifilo similarly argued that the federal sex-trafficking statute was being stretched beyond its original purpose of protecting sex workers.

Combs was also acquitted of racketeering; he was convicted of transporting for purposes of prostitution and is serving a four-year prison term.



Read the full article here

Alexander Brothers counts guilty heads Read Shake verdict
Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram WhatsApp Email

Keep Reading

A new lawsuit calls for ‘immediate’ student-loan forgiveness for borrowers enrolled in Biden’s affordable repayment plan

A new lawsuit calls for ‘immediate’ student-loan forgiveness for borrowers enrolled in Biden’s affordable repayment plan

TSA is a mess at several airports — but most others are just fine

TSA is a mess at several airports — but most others are just fine

Brazilian AI startup fund Shiva raised  million, and it’s betting on tiny teams. Read its pitch deck.

Brazilian AI startup fund Shiva raised $10 million, and it’s betting on tiny teams. Read its pitch deck.

The US airports where you should brace for long security lines as unpaid TSA agents stop showing up for work

The US airports where you should brace for long security lines as unpaid TSA agents stop showing up for work

Photos show TSA lines clogging airports and snaking into parking garages during partial government shutdown delays

Photos show TSA lines clogging airports and snaking into parking garages during partial government shutdown delays

Every US state’s fastest-growing small town or city

Every US state’s fastest-growing small town or city

Here are 3 big ways that parents and youth differ on AI

Here are 3 big ways that parents and youth differ on AI

Anthropic sues Defense Department over the Pentagon’s effective blacklisting

Anthropic sues Defense Department over the Pentagon’s effective blacklisting

2 big UK car associations are telling drivers to ditch non-essential journeys as oil soars above 0 a barrel

2 big UK car associations are telling drivers to ditch non-essential journeys as oil soars above $100 a barrel

Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Editors Picks

The company behind one of Trump’s oft-worn shoe brands is suing his administration over tariffs

The company behind one of Trump’s oft-worn shoe brands is suing his administration over tariffs

March 9, 2026
Guilty, all counts: Alexander brothers shake their heads ‘no’ as the verdict is read

Guilty, all counts: Alexander brothers shake their heads ‘no’ as the verdict is read

March 9, 2026
Meet Jay Graber, who is stepping down as Bluesky’s CEO to return to ‘building new things’ as chief innovation officer

Meet Jay Graber, who is stepping down as Bluesky’s CEO to return to ‘building new things’ as chief innovation officer

March 9, 2026
11 Places Where You Can Inflate Your Tires for Free

11 Places Where You Can Inflate Your Tires for Free

March 9, 2026
TSA is a mess at several airports — but most others are just fine

TSA is a mess at several airports — but most others are just fine

March 9, 2026

Latest News

Millions of student-loan borrowers are kicked off of Biden’s key affordable repayment plan in a surprise court reversal

Millions of student-loan borrowers are kicked off of Biden’s key affordable repayment plan in a surprise court reversal

March 9, 2026
8 Ivy League Colleges That Offer Free Online Courses

8 Ivy League Colleges That Offer Free Online Courses

March 9, 2026
Brazilian AI startup fund Shiva raised  million, and it’s betting on tiny teams. Read its pitch deck.

Brazilian AI startup fund Shiva raised $10 million, and it’s betting on tiny teams. Read its pitch deck.

March 9, 2026

Subscribe to News

Get the latest finance and business news and updates directly to your inbox.

Advertisement
Demo
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest TikTok Instagram
2026 © Prices.com LLC. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • For Advertisers
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.