By 2014 she had moved to New York, often living out of expensive hotels — and skipping out on the bill, according to evidence presented at her trial.
By her mid-20s, she was moving in Manhattan’s elite social circles — and while she said in an interview at the Rikers Island jail complex with The New York Times that she never actually told anyone she was a German heiress, that’s what many people believed her to be.
Under the guise of creating the Anna Delvey Foundation, a private members-only arts club, she walked into banks with fake financial statements and asked for tens of millions of dollars for the project — and for a while, banks and hedge funds entertained her requests, according to prosecutors.
Her ploys ended in late 2017, when she was arrested after failing to pay a hotel lunch bill totaling about $200.
Days before Ms. Sorokin was released from the Orange County facility, even as she was quarantined for two days and tested for the coronavirus ahead of her removal, she avoided any direct reference to the possibility of deportation. Instead, in texts over the weekend, she railed against the immigration system.
“The system is predatory: You’re set up for failure,” Ms. Sorokin said in an interview last month, noting that many of the people she was housed with could not afford legal representation and that lawyers are not provided to people free of charge in immigration cases.
She said she preferred her pretrial detention at Rikers, adding, “When I was at Rikers, there was a clear schedule: I always had a next court date.” But in ICE detention, she rarely knew if or when her next court date would be, she said.