Account
Andrew Tate Thought He Was Above the Law. Romania
Proved Him Wrong.
The online influencer, popular with young men, is
facing charges of human trafficking and rape, after seeking out a place where
“corruption is accessible to everybody.”
Andrew
Higgins
By Andrew
Higgins
Reporting
from Bucharest, Romania
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/05/22/world/europe/andrew-tate-arrest-romania.html
May 22,
2023, 5:00 a.m. ET
Andrew
Tate, a pugilistic online influencer and self-crowned “king of toxic
masculinity,” never made any secret of why he had chosen Romania as his home
and business base.
“I like
living in a society where my money, my influence and my power mean that I’m not
below or beholden” to any laws, Mr. Tate told his fans.
But, like
much of what the former kickboxer has told his millions of mostly young male
followers on social media — including claims that he is a trillionaire and has
19 passports — Mr. Tate’s proclamation of faith in Romania as a risk-free haven
for antisocial behavior reflected more fantasy than reality.
The
Romanian authorities arrested Mr. Tate, a citizen of both the United States and
Britain, and his younger brother, Tristan, in December on charges of human
trafficking, rape and forming an organized criminal group. Held for three
months in a jail in Bucharest, the capital, both men, who deny any wrongdoing,
are now under house arrest, awaiting trial.
Their home
is a sprawling compound down a dingy dead-end street in Voluntari, a town next
to Bucharest that is dotted with shiny new office towers and derelict empty
lots. It looks more like an industrial warehouse than the lair of a man who
boasted of immense wealth and posted videos of himself hanging out in private
jets with beautiful women and driving fast cars.
The
high-end cars that once crowded the courtyard, including a Rolls-Royce, a
Porsche, an Aston Martin and a BMW, are all gone, confiscated by the Romanian
authorities. The only vehicle left is a clunky Russian Lada. It was not worth
impounding.
Romania
still ranks far below most fellow members of the European Union in
clean-government rankings. In last year’s Corruption Perceptions Index from
Transparency International, only Bulgaria and Hungary were lower. And Romania,
according to the State Department’s 2022 report on human trafficking, remains
“a primary source country for sex trafficking” in Europe.
But Romania
has in recent years made a serious effort to tackle the endemic graft and
general lawlessness that long blighted the country — and that apparently
attracted Mr. Tate. Before his arrest, he said he liked “living in countries
where corruption is accessible to everybody,” and where anybody can pay a $50
bribe to get out of a speeding ticket.
Eugen
Vidineac, the Romanian lawyer defending Mr. Tate, said that his client had
“said many stupid things,” but that after his arrest, “he stopped thinking
about Romania being so corrupt.”
Since Mr.
Tate established Romania as his base around 2016, the country’s
anti-trafficking agency has expanded its staff and launched a messaging blitz
on billboards, television and online, warning women against “lover boys,”
traffickers who use seduction as a recruiting technique. Mr. Tate is accused of
using this tactic to lure vulnerable women to his compound to perform in sex
videos online.
The State
Department report said that while Romania did “not fully meet the minimum
standards for the elimination of trafficking,” it was “making significant
efforts to do so.”
The Tate
brothers’ home in Voluntari, Romania. Most of the high-end cars that once sat
in the building’s courtyard have been confiscated by the authorities.Credit...Andreea
Campeanu for The New York Times
It cited
legal changes, a sharp increase in the number of prosecutions for trafficking,
stepped up cooperation with other European countries and the establishment in
2021 of a dedicated unit to combat sex trafficking by Romania’s Organized Crime
and Terrorism Investigation Directorate, the agency leading the investigation
into Mr. Tate.
The
directorate last year opened 1,246 new trafficking investigations, double the
number in 2021.
Monica
Boseff, the president of the Open Door Foundation, a private group that runs a
shelter for women fleeing the sex trade, said that Mr. Tate was “not the only
misogynist making creepy statements on social media related to women.” But she
said he had “miscalculated” in his belief that anything goes in Romania.
“We still
have big problems that we need to solve, but there has been real improvement
and we finally have hope” that the abuse and exploitation of women are slowly
being seen by society and officials as crimes, Ms. Boseff said.
For Silvia
Tabusca, a law lecturer at the Romanian-American University in Bucharest who
has worked with prosecutors on trafficking cases, Mr. Tate’s big mistake was
not so much that he misjudged Romania’s changing legal and social climate, but
that he included a young American woman among his alleged victims.
Without
pressure from the United States to investigate Mr. Tate, Ms. Tabusca said, “I’m
not sure Romanian prosecutors would ever have touched him.”
Monica
Boseff is the president of the Open Door Foundation, a group that runs a
shelter for women fleeing the sex trade.Credit...Andreea Campeanu for The New
York Times
The United
States Embassy in Bucharest, citing “privacy considerations,” had no comment on
whether the American authorities had intervened on behalf of a U.S. citizen.
The Romanian agency leading the investigation also declined to comment.
Like Ms.
Tabusca, Mr. Tate’s lawyer attributed what he described as the unexpected zeal
of the Romanian authorities against his client to American intervention, which
he said had begun last year after the mother of a young woman from Florida
started worrying that Mr. Tate had taken her daughter captive and asked the
State Department to do something.
The
mother’s appeal, the lawyer said, led the American authorities to request help
from Romania and prompted the opening of a criminal investigation in April last
year — soon after the daughter told her mother that she was in Romania and
living in Mr. Tate’s compound. Investigators bugged the compound, tapped his
telephone, and monitored his movements and online communications.
The details
of what they found are still secret and, according to the lawyer, who has
access to the case file, provide no evidence of criminal wrongdoing, only of
debauchery. “My client’s problem,” he said, “is his lifestyle. But lifestyle is
not a crime. What matters is what is illegal, not what is immoral.”
Mr. Tate,
for his part, offered a characteristically melodramatic explanation for his
arrest. A day after armed police officers stormed his compound, he told his
followers on Twitter, who now number 6.6 million, that “the matrix sent their
agents.” The “matrix” is Mr. Tate’s catchall designation for what he sees as a
conspiracy by “woke” corporate elites, mainstream politicians and feminists to
emasculate men.
Prosecutors
accuse Mr. Tate of luring women to his compound and then putting them to work
under duress as performers on pornographic webcams. The lawyer said that Mr.
Tate’s residence had no webcam studios and that his client had never coerced
anyone into staying or working there. The Tate brothers, he said, “are famous;
they are rich; they are young and beautiful,” adding: “What would be their
interest in forcing women to act as slaves?”
The only
people living in the compound, the lawyer said, were the brothers and their
various girlfriends. He acknowledged that some of the women had appeared in
videos released by Mr. Tate, but said they had done so of their own free will
in the hope that this would help them gain followers on social media. “He never
took money from the girls,” the lawyer said.
The now
defunct website for one of Mr. Tate’s business ventures — an online academy
offering a “Ph.D. Program” in “techniques for getting girls” — gave a different
story. It boasted that Mr. Tate “owns and operates strip clubs and webcam
studios” and has “TOP QUALITY women living with him and making him money full
time.”
The sales
pitch for the program, which charged more than $400 for enrollment, promised to
teach students “how to build an army of women who are so loyal to you that they
allow you to have as many girls as you want.”
Two women
whom prosecutors described as victims have insisted that they associated with
Mr. Tate of their own accord and were not coerced. A clinical psychologist’s
report prepared as part of the case said they had been brainwashed into
believing they had a genuine romantic relationship with Mr. Tate.
Eugen
Vidineac, the lawyer defending Mr. Tate against accusations of human
trafficking and other crimes, said that his client had “said many stupid things,”
but that after his arrest, “he stopped thinking about Romania being so
corrupt.”Credit...Andreea Campeanu for The New York Times
Ms. Boseff,
the Open Door Foundation head, said that most of the more than 1,200 women who
had passed through her group’s shelter over the past decade had been entrapped
by traffickers masquerading as “lover boys,” and often felt affection and
loyalty to them despite being pushed into working as prostitutes.
Mr. Tate,
she said, understood that “everybody craves to be loved, to be cared for and to
hear words of encouragement” — needs that can make young women who have
turbulent home lives particularly vulnerable to exploitation.
Statistics
compiled by the anti-trafficking agency show that 74 percent of victims are
recruited by acquaintances, friends, neighbors or even relatives.
Since his
release from jail into house arrest at the end of March, Mr. Tate has recast
himself as a philanthropist, claiming that he has set up a shelter for dogs,
rebuilt a Romanian orphanage and is “going to save the world.”
Unconvinced
by his newfound commitment to good works, a Bucharest court on Friday extended
the Tate brothers’ house arrest for another month.
“Romania is
not as corrupt as Tate had thought and hoped,” said Mihaela Dragus, a police
officer with Romania’s National Agency Against Trafficking in Persons.
Delia
Marinescu contributed reporting from Bucharest.
Andrew
Higgins
Andrew
Higgins is the bureau chief for East and Central Europe based in Warsaw.
Previously a correspondent and bureau chief in Moscow for The Times, he was on
the team awarded the 2017 Pulitzer Prize in International Reporting, and led a
team that won the same prize in 1999 while he was Moscow bureau chief for The
Wall Street Journal. More about
Andrew Higgins
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