

He owned his own small business and also drove a truck for a living for a period of time. Anna is no longer in prison for scamming. All the while, she falsely told financial institutions she had a 60 million trust fund back at home so that they'd loan her money for the Anna Delvey Foundation, a Soho House-like business plan she had concocted. Her father, Vadim Sorokin moved the family to Germany from Russia. Using the name Anna Delvey, she latched onto wealthy socialites and entrepreneurs in New York. While it was widely believed that she came from a wealthy family and had a large inheritance coming to her, her roots were much more meager. She also said the part of the Netflix show Inventing Anna that showed her attempting suicide was completely made up for the show. During the podcast she said she never claimed she was a German heiress. She appeared over a video call from the ICE detention center. Anna Delvey on Call Her Daddy podcastĪnna ‘Delvey’ Sorokin was recently interviewed on Alex Cooper's Call Her Daddy podcast. The agency said it does not discuss future removal operations due to operational security. "I don't see a reason why I should be banned forever while so many violent offenders get released by ICE on daily basis."Īn ICE spokesperson told FOX 5 NY in March that its Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) "granted Sorokin’s emergency stay request" in November 2021, pending removal.

"I lived out most of my adult life in NY and a lot of my friends and support system are based in the US," Anna Sorokin told Fox News Digital in an emailed statement. Levin told Fox News Digital that, "if the conviction was overturned and she's successful, then there's no basis to deport her."
Anna delvey parents trial#
Sorokin served less than two years of a sentence that carried a minimum of four years behind bars before being released on a "merit release" in February 2021 but ICE quickly took her into custody for deportation.Īttorney Duncan Levin says he is planning to appeal for a new trial in the state supreme court on the conviction that is the basis for Sorokin's deportation. The next month, Judge Diane Kiesel, saying she was "stunned by the depth of the defendant's deception," sentenced Sorokin to between four and 12 years. A Manhattan jury found the Sorokin guilty in April 2019 of grand larceny and other charges.
