logo
Four new lawsuits filed against Miami real estate brothers as more women come forward

Four new lawsuits filed against Miami real estate brothers as more women come forward

Miami Herald28-02-2025

In March 2010, Laura Buck tried to warn women about the brothers who she said had assaulted her. She reported it to police. She went to a local hospital. She sent messages to multiple women. She contacted the Alexander brothers' mother.
Then she took a red lipstick to the hallway walls of their apartment building, scrawling in big bold letters 'Tal Alexander is a Rapist' and 'Oren Alexander is a Rapist.'
This week, Buck filed a civil lawsuit against the two brothers – best known for selling high-end real estate in Miami and New York – for compensatory and punitive damages in the New York Supreme Court.
Along with Oren's twin brother Alon Alexander, the men have been charged with a slew of state and federal assault, rape and sex-trafficking charges. Federal prosecutors say about 60 women have come forward. The four lawsuits filed this week – including Buck's – brings the number of civil lawsuits against one or more of the Alexander brothers to 21.
Their attorneys have maintained the brothers' innocence.
'We haven't been able to read the newest lawsuits, but no need, we're assuming they claim they had non concensual[sic] sex a decade or two ago with the Brothers and decided to report it to a PI lawyer to sue before the new Statute of limitations expires,' said Joel Denaro and Edward O'Donnell IV, who represent the twins, in a statement to the Miami Herald.
The first civil suits were filed in March 2024 by two women against twins, Oren and Alon. In December 2024, the FBI and Miami-Dade authorities arrested the three brothers. Allegations in the civil and criminal cases span Florida, New York, Colorado, Mexico, and Russia.
The three brothers were arrested in their Miami Beach homes after being indicted by the FBI for sex trafficking charges. In Miami-Dade, Oren pled not guilty to three charges of sexual battery; Alon pled not guilty to one.
The Alexander brothers are being held in a Brooklyn federal detention center without bond. The window for victims to bring charges under a New York statute is set to close on Friday, Feb. 28th.
READ MORE: Do you know the Alexander brothers? We need your help
In another lawsuit filed Thursday, plaintiff Ti Goodwin, claims a party with Oren 'spiraled into darkness' after he gave her a drink on Feb. 13, 2011. He later raped her, the lawsuit says.
The other two women are identified only as 'Jane Doe.' One implicated all three brothers in a 2016 assault when she was 20-years-old, and said she experienced 'severe' disorientation after she was given a drink at their Manhattan apartment.
The other said she was drugged and assaulted repeatedly by Tal about 10 years ago.
'I know the Alexander brothers will call this a cash grab,' said Evan Torgan, a partner at the firm representing Buck and Goodwin. 'But what else can they say in the face of over 60 women reporting they've been raped or sexually assaulted to the FBI alone?'
The hospital, police, and FB messages in 2010
Buck was first introduced to Tal and Oren while she was a college student 'with limited experience living in New York City,' the lawsuit states. After a date with Tal on March 5, 2010, she agreed to go back to his and Oren's apartment.
There, she found Oren and another man referred to as 'Perpetrator 1.' Tal suggested they go to his room for privacy, and prepared a bong, adding what he described as 'resin' on top of the marijuana. Resin is a potent form of cannabis.
'It was not long until she began losing control over her muscles,' the complaint reads. She had smoked marijuana on other occasions, but 'this experience felt completely different from anything she had encountered before.'
Tal became 'more sexually aggressive' and Oren and 'Perpetrator 1' walked into the room naked 'seemingly ready to rape her,' the lawsuit states. The unnamed man pointed a camera at Buck. Tal held her down, and sexually assaulted her on the bed.
'She was in extreme fear for her life and safety,' the lawsuit reads.
She broke from his grip, the lawsuit states, and repeatedly said she needed to leave. Tal followed her to the hallway where she called the assault 'sick and incestuous.'
Disoriented, she struggled to walk, the lawsuit states. She made her way home, asking people on the street for directions.
The next day, she went to a local hospital, where she reported the assault, asked police to file a report, and requested a drug test. The police refused – and 'blaming' her 'for voluntarily smoking marijuana' – the lawsuit claims, and the hospital did not run a drug screen.
She confronted Tal, but when that 'proved unproductive,' she took her lipstick to the apartment hallway. Tal filed a police report for harassment, according to the lawsuit.
She also sent messages to the brothers' 'friends and acquaintances.' In one Facebook message about Tal that Buck sent on March 22, 2010, she wrote, 'I'm just writing to let you know if you're a girl and you know this guy you need to be really, really careful.' Oren, she wrote, had 'a history of alleged rape,' reads the message, which was obtained by the Herald.
She contacted their mother, Orly Alexander, to 'inform her that she had raised a bunch of rapists,' the lawsuit states.
In response, Tal told Buck his mother had terminal cancer. He then threatened to sue her, according to the lawsuit.
Later that year, on Nov. 8, 2010, Ti Goodwin met Oren when he approached her at a Gotham Magazine party at STK Steakhouse in the West Village, according to another lawsuit filed Thursday.
They communicated in the following weeks, and she saw him again at a Super Bowl party at his apartment on Feb. 6, 2011. A week later, he invited her to a Gotham Magazine party in celebration of New York Fashion Week that same day.
When she arrived at the party on Feb. 13, she was greeted by Oren, Alon and an unidentified woman. The group went to a bar, where Oren handed her a drink, according to the lawsuit, and she became 'significantly impaired.'
'Ti's final memory at the bar was falling to the ground and having to be helped to her feet,' the lawsuit reads.
The next thing she remembers is being in a bed and Oren raping her, the lawsuit states. The next morning, 'partially clothed, confused, and disoriented,' she woke up, and 'fled the apartment' while Oren was sleeping. She confided in a friend that Oren had raped her, the lawsuit states, purchased a Plan-B, and considered reporting – but was 'concerned about Oren's wealth, power and influence.'
Torgan, a partner at the firm representing Goodwin and Buck, said that many women are criticized for not reporting sexual assault, but 'the playbook was always to attack the victim. And it still is.'
Instagram and a party at Catch New York
Another woman, identified as 'Jane Doe,' was also 20 when she met one of the brothers in New York – this time, in 2016.
She connected with Alon, who was 28, on Instagram through a friend looking to set them up, according to May 2016 messages included in the lawsuit filed Tuesday. He invited her to a dinner date in Manhattan, but when she showed up at the address, there was no restaurant. He suggested a bar, but she said she was underage. He then told her to meet him at her apartment.
Alon 'immediately presented' her with a 'pre-prepared drink,' the lawsuit alleges, which left her with 'severe and unusual disorientation far beyond the effects of normal alcohol consumption.'
Tal, the older of the three brothers, was laying on a bed watching TV with another woman. According to the lawsuit, she went to greet him with a kiss on the cheek, and Tal forcibly kissed her on the lips. While sitting on a couch, Alon Alexander began to kiss and touch her. She responded by physically removing his hands from her body.
'She also told Alon to stop,' the suit reads, 'making clear that she did not want to engage in sexual activity with Alon.'
From that point on, her memory is hazy, according to the suit. But she remembers Alon and Oren Alexander simultaneously sexually assaulting and raping her on the bed. The twins left the room afterwards. 'In a state of shock and confusion,' the woman 'fled' the apartment, according to the suit.
'Our client has shown tremendous courage in coming forward to tell her story and seek justice for the egregious sexual violence she suffered,' Alexandra Walsh, a Philadelphia based law firm attorney, one of two representing both 'Jane Does' said in a statement.
O'Donnell IV and Denaro said in a statement that the complaint had 'no evidence or witnesses.'
'Another Grift looking for a free fortune because she heard of, knew or slept with the Alexander brothers,' the attorneys' statement read.
The fourth lawsuit, also filed Tuesday, accuses Tal of raping a woman multiple times about 10 years ago.
'Jane Doe' said she first met Tal at a birthday party at Catch New York, a restaurant in the Meatpacking District.
A few weeks later, she met him for dinner at Lur Fish Bar, after which they went to a now-closed nightclub called Provocateur. At the club, she had one or two drinks and 'began experiencing extreme and unusual intoxication far beyond what her limited alcohol consumption could explain.'
After that, she only remembers waking up in his bed, undressed and in pain, the lawsuit states. She had 'no doubt' that Tal Alexander had raped her while she was intoxicated the night before.
When she said she was going home, Tal 'refused to let her leave' and raped her again, according to the lawsuit. He then had his driver take her home.
'She lived with the weight of fear and trauma while he hid behind power and privilege,' said Kristen Gibbons Feden, whose Philadelphia law firm represents both unnamed women.
Deanna Paul, Tal's defense attorney, could not immediately respond to the Herald's request for comment, but has maintained in the past that her client is innocent.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Pearl Street attack suspect appears in federal court for hate crime charge
Pearl Street attack suspect appears in federal court for hate crime charge

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Pearl Street attack suspect appears in federal court for hate crime charge

DENVER (KDVR) — The man accused of throwing incendiary devices at people on Boulder's Pearl Street Mall appeared before a federal judge on Friday afternoon on a federal hate crime charge. The hearing took place on the heels of another state hearing that took place in Boulder on Thursday. Denver bar announces final day of business after nearly 30 years Mohamed Soliman sat in a jury box at the federal courthouse in downtown Denver for the entire hearing. He was told about the hate crime charge. Soliman said 'yes' in Arabic through a translator when he was asked if he understood the court process and why he was there. He was wearing a green jail uniform, and his hands and ankles were handcuffed. A United States Marshall sat behind him. The 45-year-old Egyptian national sat still and did not look at the full courtroom during the initial hearing. One of the first questions the judge asked was if he had a copy of the criminal complaint that detailed the crime he was accused of. Federal prosecutors outlined their case against Soliman in that complaint. The court record detailed why investigators believe the attack was a hate crime. 5 people and a dog were hurt in that attack. The incident happened on Sunday, when the Egyptian national allegedly threw makeshift incendiary devices at a group of demonstrators, were calling for the release of Hamas hostages. An FBI agent said, in the complaint, 'Soliman threw two lit Molotov cocktails at individuals participating in a pro-Israel gathering'. That agent went on to say, 'Soliman yelled 'Free Palestine!' and the Molotov cocktails ignited.' In the complaint, the agent also said, 'He (Soliman) stated that he wanted to kill all Zionist people and wished they were all dead. Soliman stated he would do it again.' Soliman stated that he hated the Zionist group and did this because he needed to stop them from taking over 'our land,' which he explained to be Palestine. FOX31 Legal Analyst Christopher Decker said prosecutors will have to dig deep into what motivated Soliman's alleged actions. Pothole that formed in under 30 minutes causes backups on I-70: CDOT 'Federal prosecutors in this case are going to be looking to uncover and present evidence of the motive and bias behind this criminal act and to prove, beyond a reasonable doubt, that it was based on his bias against the race, religion, or national origin of the victims involved,' Decker said. Just a day before, 118 charges were filed in state court in connection with this case. Those charges include attempted murder and assault charges. Soliman's next hearing is set for June 18. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Teen charged with killing boy, 16, is now charged in death of missing 15-year-old
Teen charged with killing boy, 16, is now charged in death of missing 15-year-old

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Teen charged with killing boy, 16, is now charged in death of missing 15-year-old

A 17-year-old previously charged with murder in the death of a 16-year-old boy was charged Friday with a second count of murder in the disappearance of a 15-year-old boy who is presumed dead, according to the Lexington Police Department. Lexington police have been looking for Aoun Ismail Basboos, 15, since May 11. The 17-year-old charged in his death Friday had already been charged with the killing of Ali Haider Naqvi, 16, whose body was found in Harrison County on May 17. The suspect's name has not been released because they are a juvenile. Aoun and Ali were last seen getting into the back seat of a car in the 3300 block of Spangler Drive in Lexington on May 11. 'At this time, Aoun Basboos has not been located and is presumed to be deceased,' police said in a news release Friday evening. 'In consultation with the FBI, Fayette County Coroner's Office, and the Commonwealth's Attorney's Office, adequate probable cause was determined to charge for the murder of Aoun Basboos.' The 17-year-old has been held in a juvenile detention center since May 14, police said. The car Aoun and Ali were seen getting into was later found at a market on Russell Cave Road in Lexington. Ali's body was found on Russell Cave Road in Harrison County. Both the 17-year-old who has been charged with murder and a 47-year-old man, Jesus Eduardo Reyes-Rodriguez, were charged with tampering with physical evidence in connection with the car. Detectives are still searching for Aoun, and anyone with information is asked to call the Lexington Police Department at 859-258-3600. Bluegrass Crime Stoppers is offering a $2,500 reward for information on Aoun's whereabouts. Anonymous tips can be submitted to Bluegrass Crime Stoppers by calling 859-253-2020, visiting or using the P3Tips app.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store