Allison Mack breaks silence on NXIVM, life after prison in new podcast
Allison Mack is addressing βthe bad things sheβs doneβ as a high-profile member of the βsex cultβ NXIVM in a new podcast.
Released Monday, βAllison After NXIVMβ is a seven-episode series that features the former βSmallvilleβ star detailing her time as a young actor and how she became involved in the purported self-improvement group, as well as her role in manipulating women into becoming sex slaves for NXIVM leader Keith Raniere and the eventual criminal fallout.
βI donβt see myself as innocent,β Mack says in an early episode as she acknowledges using her success as an actor as βa power tool … to get people to do what I wantedβ and that she was βvery effective in moving Keithβs vision forward.β
In a later episode, she accepts claims that she was a βharsh monsterβ during her time at NXIVM.
βI was not kind and I was aggressive and I was abusive,β Mack says. βI was harsh and I was callous and I was aggressive and forceful in ways that were painful for people. [I] did make people feel like they had no choice and was incredibly abusive to people, traumatic for people.β
In 2019, Mack pleaded guilty to racketeering charges related to her role in NXIVM and its subgroup DOS, a so-called βsecret societyβ of women who were branded with Raniereβs initials and forced to have sex with him. Mack was among one of the βmastersβ in the group, a lieutenant tasked by Raniere with recruiting and coercing other women. She was sentenced to three years in federal prison in 2021 and was released in 2023. (Raniere is currently serving a 120-year sentence after being convicted of sex-trafficking and other charges.)
But while she acknowledges that β100% all those allegations are true,β she also contends that she is βsomeone who cares deeply and wanted very much to grow and wanted very much for everybody that I was involved with to grow. … [B]oth of those things are true about me.
βI definitely recognize and admit that I was abusing my power,β Mack says. βBut I also canβt negate the fact that there was a part of me that was altruistic and was desperate to help people. [I] wanted to be better, and I was willing to do anything to be better in myself and to help other people be better.β
The podcast series also touches on what Mack has been up to since being released from prison. She is pursuing a masterβs in social work and looking into PhD programs in expressive arts therapy. She is also working at a nonprofit to help bring creative arts such as music, theater and poetry to prisons.
Over the summer, Mack got married to Frank Meeink, a prominent former neo-Nazi who now speaks out in support of racial diversity and acceptance. The couple met in a dog park not long after Mackβs release from prison in 2023. According to the podcastβs host, Natalie Robehmed, Mack now goes by Allison Meeink.
Robehmed also mentions that βAllison After NXIVM,β which is the latest installment of the true crime podcast βUncover,β came to be after Mack reached out to journalist Vanessa Grigoriadis following her release from prison, hoping to tell her own story for the first time. Grigoriadis, who serves as an executive producer on the series, had interviewed Mack before her arrest.
NXIVM also has been the subject of the 2020 documentary series βThe Vowβ and βSeduced: Inside the NXIVM Cult.β