The judge also ruled that Delvey - who has 1 million Instagram followers - cannot post on social media “either directly or by a third party.” Delvey has found an apartment and a guarantor. She’ll have to find another way to promote her work now that she’s out. Delvey - who had a solo show in NYC in May titled “Allegedly” - has been selling pieces by posting them on her Instagram. Her rep, Juda Engelmayer, tells Page Six that Delvey,, had the money for bond from selling her artwork online. Socialite scammer Anna Delvey is out on bond using money from her online art sales, Page Six is told exclusively.Īfter being granted $10,000 bond by US Immigration Judge Charles Conroy on Wednesday, the fake heiress was out of ICE detention on Friday evening after hitting all the conditions for her release. On April 25, Anna was found guilty of four counts of theft of services, three counts of grand larceny and one count of attempted grand larceny, but was acquitted of conning Rachel out of £50,000.Scammer Anna Delvey to sell signed prison panties as part of NFT project She was smirking and I thought she might have been trying to unnerve me. “Describing such a personal ordeal that still felt incredibly raw was extremely difficult,” recalled Rachel, “The assistant district attorney asked me whether I saw the person who had committed the crime against me anywhere in the room. Rachel testified on April 17, identifying Anna in front of a judge and jury as the woman who had duped her out of thousands of pounds. Her defence lawyer Todd Spodek had brought in a personal stylist to dress her in a number of designer outfits – including Victoria Beckham, Michael Kors and Chloé – in an attempt to give the jury the impression that she, like many before her, simply dreamed of taking a sizeable bite out of the Big Apple. She splashed all of this money on her lavish lifestyle, spending thousands on personal training sessions with a celebrity trainer, as well as flash dinners and shopping sprees at Apple and Net-a-Porter.Īfter pleading not guilty, Anna appeared in New York State Supreme Court on Mafor her month-long trial. Her attempt to get the loan ultimately failed, however she did get a temporary £78,000 overdraft with City National Bank, based on forged proof of foreign assets. The police were called and Anna was arrested before being released without bail restrictions.Īccording to court documents, Anna had also forged bank statements showing £45million in assets to try to get a bank loan of £16million for her foundation. Later that month, there was also an embarrassing episode at the Le Parker Meridien hotel restaurant, where she had run out without paying the £150 bill when her credit cards were declined. That June, Anna had stayed at the Beekman, a hotel in Lower Manhattan, for three weeks without paying her £9,000 tab, and she owed £380 to the swanky W New York for a two-night stay in July. Her deft use of social media made that possible because we tend to see social media as legitimate and con artists are very, very good at exploiting that.”ġ2 The fake heiress was leaving a trail of financial chaos across the city Credit: Instagram/Anna Sorokin “Anna was, in a sense, pretending to be social royalty. “Anna’s social media postings and her carefully posed and planned photographs were all there to establish her story as a wealthy heiress,” explained psychologist Maria Konnikova, author of The Confidence Game. Her Instagram account backed up her claims with regular posts from exotic locations, ranging from the Côte d’Azur to Miami Beach, as well as designer clothes and handbags. She’d often talk about the huge fortune she was set to inherit and spoke passionately about her plans to start an exclusive art centre, which she hoped to call the Anna Delvey Foundation. Soon Anna started appearing at every art gallery opening and event launch, and was always out for dinner, partying and drinking in the cocktail bars favoured by Manhattan’s in-crowd. 12 Rebecca DeLoache explains how Anna Delvey became a conwoman Credit: Nick Rogers
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