Nicki Clyne facts for kids
Quick facts for kids
Nicki Clyne
|
|
---|---|
Clyne at the 2011 New York Comic Con
|
|
Born | 1982 or 1983 (age 41–42) Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
|
Occupation | Actress |
Years active | 2000–present |
Notable work
|
Battlestar Galactica |
Spouse(s) |
Nicki Clyne is a Canadian actress, known for her role as Cally Henderson on the SyFy television series Battlestar Galactica. Clyne was a member of NXIVM, a multi-level marketing company founded by Keith Raniere that has been described by former members, the media, and cult experts as a cult.
Contents
Career
Clyne is known for her role as Cally Henderson in the 2003 reimagining of Battlestar Galactica. Like several members of the cast, she was originally cast in a minor, non-recurring role but, having impressed the showrunners, became a major part of the series until her character's death in season four. Prior to BSG, she had guest parts on sci-fi and supernatural shows including Dark Angel, Smallville, The Twilight Zone, and The Dead Zone. In 2018, she appeared with fellow Battlestar alumnus Richard Hatch in the web series Personal Space.
She was also featured in two episodes of the podcast Tiki Bar TV, and presented an episode of HypaSpace. She stars alongside Lance Henriksen, Danielle Harris, Bill Moseley, and AFI's Davey Havok in the "illustrated film" series Godkiller. Clyne hosted two seasons of Syfy's Blastr TV, covering science fiction pop culture and events. She appeared in the independent film Lunamancer.
NXIVM
Clyne was a member of NXIVM, a now defunct multi-level marketing large-group awareness training company founded by Keith Raniere and headquartered in Albany, New York. By her own account, she attended her first NXIVM event In November 2005, an "intensive with Executive Success Programs (ESP)," one of several NXIVM companies. It has been reported that Clyne left Battlestar Galactica in 2008 to focus on being a full-time member of NXIVM. Clyne denies the claim.
Prosecutors dismantled NXIVM's corporation structures in 2020 by seizing First Principles Inc., the company with title to NXIVM and Keith Raniere's intellectual property. Nevertheless, Clyne and a small group of NXIVM members continue to proclaim Raniere's innocence and are described in media as NXIVM "dead-enders," or "loyalists."
..... Clyne was part of the remaining NXIVM members and continued to defend NXIVM and its practice. On March 27, 2023, the Frank Report published a statement from Clyne stating that she would no longer defend Keith Raniere.
Relationships with Keith Raniere and Allison Mack
..... The marriage was little discussed until Mack was arrested in 2018. In 2020 Allison Mack filed paperwork in Orange County, California to divorce Clyne.
Fox News, quoting Frank Parlato, Jr. reported that the marriage was an immigration-related sham to keep Clyne (a Canadian citizen) in the United States. The New York Times, citing prosecutors from the United States Attorney for the Eastern District of New York, have said similar.
The Knife of Aristotle and DOS
In 2014, NXIVM adherent Rosa Laura Junco (daughter of Alejandro Junco de la Vega) founded the media organization The Knife of Aristotle, later shortened to The Knife. Clyne was given a job with the organization, and was credited as its "Executive Producer".
By Clyne's own account, she helped Keith Raniere found a "secret sisterhood" that started in 2015 called "DOS" (also known as "the Sorority", and "the Vow"). The United States Attorney for the Eastern District of New York said that DOS was arranged as a pyramidal organization with Raniere at the apex and subordinates Clyne, Mack and others as its "First Line". The First Line were Raniere's direct slaves, instructed to become "masters" by recruiting slaves of their own. The slaves of the First Line (and below) were to treat Raniere as "Grandmaster," but were not allowed at first to know of Raniere's participation.
..... Members were instructed to provide humiliating photos and derogatory information about themselves as "collateral" used to blackmail them into obedience. ..... The group also practiced forms of corporal punishment ("penances") as well as severe caloric restriction and sleep deprivation.
In October 2017 the New York Times ran an expose of Raniere, NXIVM and its relationship to DOS. The article featured Sarah Edmondson who gave her account of the branding ceremony. Raniere fled to Mexico in November 2017. Clyne later accidentally revealed his location on her Instagram, sharing a photo of a Puerto Vallarta landmark revealing his whereabouts to the FBI. In March 2018, Mexican police raided the vacation home where Raniere and DOS members Clyne, Mack, and Lauren Salzman were staying. The Mexican government deported Raniere as persona non grata, and he was arrested by the United States. .....
Revelations from USA v. Raniere
After Raniere's arrest, a grand jury in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York continued investigating Raniere and his associates, including Clyne. In addition to Keith Raniere, prosecutors charged Allison Mack, Clare Bronfman and several others for activities involving either DOS or NXIVM. ..... In the course of the investigation, the government subpoenaed Clyne to testify before the grand jury. She invoked her Fifth Amendment rights against self-incrimination, and was not indicted.
At Raniere's trial, cooperating witness Lauren Salzman (a fellow DOS "First Line" member) testified that Clyne joined her in editing the recording of Sarah Edmondson's branding in a failed bid to preempt the October 2017 New York Times report.
.....
An FBI agent's affidavit supporting asset forfeiture indicates that while Rosa Laura Junco provided funds and owned the LLC that bought the DOS Sorority House, Clyne was Managing Member of the LLC and her passport included in purchase paperwork. After the DOS Sorority House was sold in 2018, proceeds were deposited into a trust account held by Clyne's lawyer, Edward Sapone. After Raniere's conviction, a magistrate judge authorized the seizure of the funds in August 2019.
In a 2020 prosecution memorandum opposing the retrial of Keith Raniere, prosecutors stated their position that "the cache of DOS materials, including collateral, in Clyne’s possession is the product of fraud and extortion, as was demonstrated at trial." Devising restitution for the victims of Raniere, Judge Nicholas Garaufis ordered that as restitution, "all lower-ranking DOS members are statutorily entitled to the return of their collateral." Due to Fifth Amendment concerns, this order was stayed until 60 days after the ruling on Raniere's appeal to the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. The Circuit ruled Raniere's appeal was "without merit" on December 9, 2022.
Activities since the conviction of Keith Raniere
Following Raniere's conviction, Clyne and other NXIVM members launched an activist group We Are As You and accompanying website WeAreTheForgottenOnes.org. The members of the organization danced outside of Metropolitan Detention Center, Brooklyn, where Raniere was detained. The group faced backlash from former NXIVM members for using the #BlackLivesMatter hashtag on its social media posts and questioning why it only targeted the prison where Raniere is located, and how it could serve as a possible attempt to recruit new members.
In August 2020, the government filed exhibits ahead of Raniere's sentencing indicating that he sent messages to Clyne through the Federal Bureau of Prisons-monitored TRULINCS email system, the contents of which include messages condemning government witnesses for having "broken vows," and calling them "apostate sorority sisters."
In September 2020, one month before Raniere was sentenced to 120 years in prison, Clyne spoke out in his defence in an interview with CBS News This Morning. Footage of Clyne was used in season one of the HBO documentary series The Vow. In the show's second season, she is interviewed on camera, continuing to defend Raniere despite others, particularly Sarah Edmondson, expressing regret for having enticed her into NXIVM.
Clyne has a verified Twitter account. ..... In April 2022, Clyne used her account to share a copy of a motion related to Keith Raniere's appeal, which claims that the FBI framed Keith Raniere.
Clyne appears on a number of social media outlets expressing support for causes célèbres of conservatism in the United States in addition to stating Raniere's innocence. She has appeared on video in conversation with Scott Adams, Destiny, and James A. Lindsay. Clyne's comments in support of Kyle Rittenhouse were shared by Rep. Claudia Tenney (R-NY).
Through a filing by the U.S. Attorney, the Bureau maintains that, "[Raniere] circumvented mail monitoring by communicating with Ms. Clyne through another inmate and using her to communicate with Clare Bronfman, a NXIVM associate and co-defendant of Plaintiff who is serving time in federal prison."
Civil lawsuit
Clyne, Allison Mack, and other NXIVM associates were named as defendants in a civil lawsuit filed in federal court by 80 former NXIVM members in January 2020. The lawsuit charges the NXIVM organization of being a pyramid scheme, exploitation of its recruits and conducting illegal human experiments and making it "physically and psychologically difficult, and in some cases impossible, to leave the coercive community." Clyne is defending herself pro se and in a statement says, "I do not have any assets that would grant any relief or compensation for the Plaintiffs’ alleged hardships… I have a 2011 Subaru to my name."
Filmography
Film
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
2004 | Saved! | Guitar Player | |
2004 | Ill Fated | Barb | |
2006 | John Tucker Must Die | Beautiful Girl #2 | |
2010 | Godkiller | Soledad (voice) | |
2010 | Godkiller: Walk Among Us | Soledad (voice) |
Television
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
2000 | Just Deal | Girl Student #2 | Episode: "Homecoming" |
2001 | Level 9 | Alesha | Episode: "Avatar" |
2001 | Hostage Negotiator | Alicia | TV film |
2001 | Dark Angel | Fixit / X6 | Episode: "Bag 'Em" |
2002 | Smallville | Talon Waitress | Episode: "Nicodemus" |
2002 | Mysterious Ways | June Grissom | Episode: "Listen" |
2002 | Due East | Stacy | TV film |
2002 | Damaged Care | Bryanna's College Friend | TV film |
2002 | I Was a Teenage Faust | Heather | TV film |
2002 | The Twilight Zone | Theresa | Episode: "Night Route" |
2003 | The Dead Zone | Erin Salkowe | Episode: "Descent" |
2003 | Battlestar Galactica | Cally | TV miniseries |
2004 | The L Word | Delilah | Episode: "Losing It" |
2004 | Zolar | Keiko | TV film |
2004 | Dead Like Me | Janelle | Episode: "In Escrow" |
2004–2008 | Battlestar Galactica | Cally Henderson Tyrol | Recurring role (36 episodes) |
2005 | Tiki Bar TV | Space Cadet | TV series |
2006 | Battlestar Galactica: The Resistance | Crewman Specialist Cally Tyrol | TV miniseries |
2006 | Totally Awesome | Billie | TV film |
Audio books
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
2013 | World War Z | Sharon |
Web videos
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
2018 | Personal Space | Gail Gartner | Published through Prime Video Direct |
See also
In Spanish: Nicki Clyne para niños In Spanish: Nicki Clyne para niños