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Federal prosecutors have introduced a superseding indictment against the Alexanders, three luxury Miami entrepreneurs initially arrested in December for operating a highly intricate sex trafficking network.
This new indictment brings forth additional charges and victims, accusing Alon, Oren, and Tal Alexander of plotting to exploit susceptible women and minors for commercial sex through the use of force, deceit, and coercion.
The list of charges includes conspiracy to engage in sex trafficking, several counts of sex trafficking through force, deception, or coercion, and the inducement to travel for illegal sexual activities.
All three brothers are accused of participating in trafficking at least five adult victims, while two of the brothers, Tal and Alon Alexander, face additional charges of trafficking a minor.
The sordid accusations allege that the siblings used their wealth and positions to lure women to nightclubs and parties and other events before drugging them and sexually assaulting them.

Real Estate Brokers Tal Alexander and Oren Alexander at their home on Miami Beach on Feb. 1, 2019. (Patrick Farrell/Miami Herald/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)
Their trial date is set for Jan. 5, 2026, and their next hearing is July 15, 2025.
Oren and Tal Alexander co-founded the real estate firm Official, which offers luxury listings in places like New York City, the Hamptons, Miami and Los Angeles, in 2022 after rising through the ranks at Douglas Elliman, one of the largest real estate brokerages in the country, according to prosecutors.

Damian Williams, US attorney for the Southern District of New York, during a news conference in New York, US, on Wednesday, Dec. 11, 2024. (Yuki Iwamura/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
Their past clients include Kim Kardashian, Kanye West, Liam Gallagher and Lindsay Lohan, according to CBS News.
In a statement to Fox News Digital, Oren’s attorneys with Klugh Wilson LLC said that this was an “overzealous, unwarranted pursuit.”
“The government’s third try is no more sound than their first two. It is simply another swing-and-a-miss by a government that has gone off the rails in an overzealous, unwarranted pursuit.”
Tal’s attorneys, Deanna Paul and Milton Williams, said that the superseding indictment “changes nothing.”
“It’s a reheated version of the same case—and still does not include conduct that amounts to federal sex trafficking,” they told Fox News Digital. “The government is trying to stretch a statute beyond recognition to fit a narrative, not a crime.”
Fox News Digital reached out to attorneys for Alon.