Allison Mack, 42, a former actress convicted for her role in the NXIVM cult, married a man named Frank during a private ceremony in Los Angeles. No one seems to have reported his last name.
She met him at a dog park. The dog liked her. So did Frank.
After all the madness, all the mistakes—after branding women for a man who called himself “Vanguard”—she finds Frank.
From Keith Raniere to Frank.
In 2018, federal prosecutors charged Mack in connection with DOS, a secret sorority of 108 women and one man. Raniere branded the women with his initials and held “collateral” to ensure obedience.
I happened to break that story.
A group of women, coerced under the illusion of self-empowerment, followed a man called Vanguard—a name as laughable now as it was once feared. Mack became both disciple and recruiter, helping build DOS: a totalitarian microstate ruled by secrecy.

Keith Raniere and Allison Mack
He said he was the world’s smartest man. He took a home IQ test in 1989 and scored it himself.
In 2019, Mack pled guilty to racketeering and racketeering conspiracy. Sentencing guidelines suggested 14 years. Prosecutors cited her cooperation.
She wept. She said she was sorry. Judge Nicholas Garaufis believed her. Maybe he saw something still human in her.
Allison got a three-year sentence. She served 21 months. In July 2023, she walked out of FCI Dublin. She remains under supervised release until July 2026.
Raniere, 64, is still at USP Tucson. His release date is June 27, 2120. He’ll be 159. His release will be followed by five years of supervised release. He is considered the smartest inmate in the federal system.
The architect remains imprisoned. She got 21 months. There’s symmetry in that.
There’s also disproportionate hate toward Mack.

Allison Mack as Chloe in SMALLVILLE
Maybe it’s because she used to be on TV. She smiled at people from their living rooms. Then she turned up branding women.
Still—she got a reduced sentence. Freedom. A dog. Then Frank.
Years earlier, Allison was fooled by a narcissist with a volleyball and called it growth. She helped him hurt people. Then she woke up.

Allison Mack and Keith Raniere on the day they met in 2006.
In the end, she was the smiling face for a nightmare. She followed a bad idea with good intentions.
Now: maybe a comeback. She could write a book. Start a podcast. Rescue animals. Return to acting—maybe as someone who escapes a cult.
She might outlast the headlines.
People see Allison Mack now, not as Chloe from Smallville, not as lieutenant in a pyramid scheme, but as a woman who turned left instead of right and walked off a cliff.
A woman standing in her own shadow. But still—she finds a dog. A ring. And maybe—a little grace.
If others are called victims for believing in Raniere, where is the line between them and Mack?
She believed too. Maybe more. And maybe she’s paid enough to be free.

Allison Mack marries June 2025

