March 10, 2026 NEW YORK, NY The "Asshole Awards" weren't enough to save them.

After a month of stomach-churning testimony that pulled back the velvet curtain on a world of high-stakes real estate and low-life depravity, a jury has finally spoken. On Monday, brothers Alon, Oren, and Tal Alexander—once the untouchable titans of the New York and Miami luxury markets—were convicted on all 10 counts of sex trafficking, sexual assault, and exploitation.

For over a decade, the brothers allegedly used their sprawling wealth and influence not just to close multi-million dollar deals, but to hunt.

A Decade of Deception and Drugging

The trial laid bare a predatory "playbook" that spanned from 2008 to 2022. Jurors listened to 11 women describe a nightmare cycle of lavish Hamptons getaways, private jets, and penthouse parties that ended in brutal violence.

The testimony was nothing short of horrific:

  • The Colorado Trip: One victim recounted being raped by Alon Alexander at just 17 years old, describing the sheer terror and physical trauma that left her bleeding on a bathroom floor.

  • The "Gym" Incident: Another woman detailed a sadistic scene in a Hamptons home gym where Tal Alexander and another man mocked her while she was too drugged to move, before physically forcing themselves on her.

  • The Cruise Ship: Testimony revealed how Alon and Oren allegedly worked in tandem, drugging a woman on a cruise ship and taking turns raping her while she remained powerless to resist.

The Smoking Gun on Film

While the defense team attempted to paint the trio as merely "crass womanizers" who made "poor choices," the evidence suggested a far more sinister reality.

One of the most damning pieces of evidence presented was a video involving Oren Alexander. The jury viewed footage of Oren filming himself raping a 17-year-old girl—a victim who testified she had absolutely no memory of the event because she had been incapacitated by drugs.

From Penthouses to Prison Cells: The Sickening Fall of the Alexander Real Estate Empire
Courtroom sketch: REUTERS/Jane Rosenberg

Intimidation and the Final Fall

The road to the verdict wasn't without drama. Prosecutors were forced to drop two charges mid-trial after witnesses reportedly backed off due to "intimidation" from the defense. However, the remaining 10 counts were more than enough to seal their fate.

The brothers, who have been trading designer suits for prison jumpsuits at the Metropolitan Detention Center since January 2025, now face the very real possibility of spending the rest of their lives behind bars. U.S. Judge Valerie Caproni is expected to hand down the official sentences in the coming weeks. For the victims, it is a long-overdue reckoning. For the real estate world, it is the final, ugly end to a dynasty built on a foundation of abuse.

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