
immigration judge allowed her to go from ICE detention to house arrest - a one-bedroom apartment in New York’s East Village, the New York Times reported - with the budding outsider artist forced to wear an ankle monitor as part of her release, the Associated Press reported, Delvey was also barred from posting on social media. Anna Sorokin, who pretended to be a wealthy socialite named Anna Delvey, was released from prison on Thursday, according to US media reports. Immigration and Customs Enforcement center in New York, where where. While Delvey still faces deportation, a U.S. The fake German heiresswho became the subject of the Netflix hit, Inventing Anna will be released from the custody of an U.S. The con artist, whose real name is Anna Sorokin, was arrested in 2018 and found guilty in May 2019. immigration officials, who kept her in ICE custody since last year as Delvey - who overstayed her visa, among the other crimes - fought deportation to Germany. Anna Sorokin was sentenced to four to 12 years in prison. However, soon after her prison release, Delvey was detained by U.S. She was released from state prison in February 2021 but was swiftly back in jail again after Immigrant and Customs Enforcement (ICE) took her into custody. Socialite scammer Anna Delvey, real name: Anna Sorokin, was released from ICE detention on October 7 after more than 17 months.

#ANNA DELVEY RELEASED PRISON SERIES#
She was later sentenced to four to 12 years in prison, ultimately serving three years. The spree eventually saw her sentenced to four to 12 years and was the subject of the hit Netflix series Inventing Anna. Anna Sorokin, aka Anna Delvey, the convicted scam artist who inspired the Netflix scripted series Inventing Anna, has been released from a federal detention center after a judge granted her a.

Fake socialite and convicted fraudster Anna Delvey, whose story recently featured on the small screen as Netflix’s Inventing Anna, was released from an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention center Friday.ĭubbed “the Soho Grifter” after stealing up to $250,000 from banks and hotels in New York City, Delvey (born Anna Sorokin) was found guilty in April 2019 of eight of the 10 charges against her, including theft of services, second-degree grand larceny, and one count of first-degree attempted larceny.
