Actress Allison Mack from “Smallville” gets freed from jail for her involvement in the NXIVM sex trafficking case

Photo of author

By Aquaman

TV actress, Allison Mack acknowledged that she led the head of the cult-like NXIVM to use women as sex slaves by manipulating them.

According to a government website, the television star Allison Mack, who entered a guilty plea for her participation in a sex trafficking case connected to the cult-like group NXIVM, has been freed from a California jail.

The Release Of Young Superman’s Close Friend, Allison Mack

Actress Allison Mack from "Smallville" gets freed from jail for her involvement in the NXIVM sex trafficking case

Mack, who is best known for playing a teenage Superman’s close friend on “Smallville,” pleaded guilty to allegations that she persuaded women to become sex slaves for NXIVM leader Keith Raniere two years earlier, and was given a three-year prison term in 2021.

Mack, 40, was reportedly freed from a federal prison in Dublin, California, close to San Francisco, according to online data kept by the Federal Bureau of Prisons. The Albany Times-Union was the first outlet to report on her release.

By helping federal investigators in their case accused Raniere, who eventually received a sentence to 120 years in jail after being found guilty of sex trafficking, Mack was able to escape a harsher prison term.

Mack assisted the prosecution in assembling evidence demonstrating how Raniere established a covert organization with indoctrinated women who were forced to have sex with him and brandished with his initials.

Along with Mack, the group also featured a daughter of “Dynasty” star Catherine Oxenberg and Clare Bronfman, an heiress to the Seagram’s liquor business.

Mack would eventually deny Raniere and admit “remorse and guilt” before to her being sentenced in federal court in Brooklyn, New York.