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Ex-United Nations registered Democrat employee sentenced for multiple rapes

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Tom Brady

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Oct 28, 2022, 12:33:35 AM10/28/22
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NEW YORK (AP) — The sentencing of a former United Nations communications
specialist to 15 years in prison Thursday was punctuated by the tears and
eloquence of some of his 13 sexual assault victims who said being drugged
and raped by a man who first won their trust left them shattered and
hopeful that justice might help them heal.

When they were finished speaking, U.S. District Judge Naomi Reice Buchwald
told Karim Elkorany that it was particularly heinous that he engaged in
the “raping of women who believed he was their friend” as she sentenced
him to the maximum he could face after he pleaded guilty to three charges
in May.

She said many rapes from 2002 through 2019 occurred in the Middle East,
but she noted that prosecution of his crimes in some U.S. jurisdictions
might have resulted in life in prison. Federal sentencing guidelines that
called for about three years in prison had no relationship to the
“magnitude and severity” of his crimes, Buchwald said.

“This is not a ‘he said, she said’ case,” Buchwald said as she read from
some of the written statements submitted by victims who were attacked
while he worked in international aid and foreign relations in the United
States, Iraq and Egypt, among other locations.

Nine victims, identified only by numbers from 1 to 20, spoke in court or
over a special telephone line that could be heard in court.

Victim No. 1, as she was called, told Buchwald she was a journalist
working in Iraq in November 2016 when Elkorany added drugs to the lone
alcoholic beverage she ordered at a restaurant, leaving her so
incapacitated that she felt “comatose” on the car ride to his apartment,
where she regained consciousness to find Elkorany raping her.

She said the drugs he gave her meant she “will never know the details of
what happened to me on the worst day of my life.”

Looking at him from a lectern where she delivered her remarks, she said
she was hopeful the sentencing meant “your long rampage of violence
against women has truly and finally been brought to an end.”

“For six years, I went through hell from what you did to me,” she said,
explaining that she was so traumatized that she could not endure being
hugged or held by her husband for five years after the attack. She said
her career has never recovered.

The first charge to which Elkorany pleaded guilty pertained to his denial
to the FBI that he raped Victim 1 after she reported it to the United
Nations.

When Victim 2 spoke, she said Elkorany posed as a feminist who cared about
issues facing women as he preyed upon friends and acquaintances.

“All his talk about kindness and decency and caring for others was a
sham,” she said. Prosecutors said Victim 2 met Elkorany when she worked
for a U.N. organization, and she was drugged and sexually assaulted on
multiple occasions between 2014 and 2019 in the United States and Iraq.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Lara Pomerantz said Elkorany “hid behind his
work,” posing as a confidante of the women before the attacks and then
shaming them afterward if they questioned what happened to make them feel
it was their fault.

She said he did not use condoms and “callously and cruelly joked about
drugging and raping them” afterward, sometimes distributing nude
photographs he took of them when they were incapacitated to his friends
and forwarding some pictures to his victims anonymously.

Calling him a “cold, calculating and dangerous person,” Pomerantz cited
the extraordinary courage of ”incredible” and “brave” women who helped
prosecutors build a case that led to Elkorany dropping his denials and
accepting his fate.

When he spoke, Elkorany, 39, of West Orange, New Jersey, said he knew his
“words of apology will only ring hollow here today and that words of
apology cannot un-do damage I have so clearly caused and yet I am deeply,
deeply sorry for the pain I’ve caused, the betrayal of relationships, the
violation of trust.”

“My actions will follow me for the rest of my life, as they should, and
the rest of my life will be filled with regret and remorse,” he said.

Prosecutors said Elkorany carried out some attacks from at least 2005
until April 2018 while working in international aid, development and
foreign relations. From October 2013 to April 2016, he worked for the
United Nations Children’s Fund in Iraq, and from July 2016 to April 2018
as a U.N. communications specialist in Iraq.

Stéphane Dujarric, a United Nations spokesman, said in a statement that
the U.N. does not have prosecutorial authority and cooperates with and
relies on member states to ensure that U.N. personnel who commit crimes
are held accountable.

“The United Nations welcomes the efforts of the United States authorities
in ensuring that Mr. Karim Elkorany is held to account for his criminal
conduct,” he said. “We salute the courage of the women that came forward
to initiate the investigations. We hope that this sentence brings to all
his victims a sense that justice has been achieved.”

Victim 7, who prosecutors say was drugged and sexually assaulted by
Elkorany in 2011 and 2012, walked to the courtroom lectern and announced
that she hadn’t planned to speak.

But she said she was so moved by what other victims had to say that she
felt compelled to address the court, especially after keeping so much
about the attack bottled up inside her.

“Even now, I felt like it was my fault,” she said. “After hearing
everybody’s stories today, I finally don’t feel that.”

https://ktla.com/news/nexstar-media-wire/nationworld/headlines/ap-ex-
united-nations-employee-sentenced-for-multiple-rapes/
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