Chloe Ayling Promised Captor Sex 'When Kidnapping Was Over'
British model Chloe Ayling who claimed she was kidnapped by a sex slave organization told Italian police she promised her captor sex once he released her, reported MailOnline Tuesday.
The 3,500-word statement Ayling delivered to Italian police was obtained by MailOnline. She alleged she was kidnapped July 11 by "Black Death," a criminal organization that operates on the Dark Web and advertises selling kidnapped women as sex slaves. The 20-year-old model said she was lured to a fake photo shoot in Italy when she was grabbed by two men, drugged with ketamine and stuffed in a suitcase.
Read: Disturbing Photos Of Abducted Model Chloe Ayling Released With Dark Web Advert
Ayling said she was taken to a remote farmhouse where she was held for six days by a Polish captor, Lukasz Herba. The 30-year-old man slept next to Ayling and asked her for sex multiple times.
“MD (Herba) tried various sexual advances with me but I always stopped it by putting it off to the future are more intimate knowledge of each other,” she said. “In effect I was leading him to believe that we would have become more intimate friends when this kidnapping was over.”
“On one occasion I remember that I was in the shower and he was watching me and he told me to stay in the shower and said that he couldn’t take it anymore and carried out a sex act,” she added.
Police questioned Ayling on why she did not attempt to escape while shoe shopping with Herba in Milan.
“For me Herba or better yet, MD, was the one that could save me and thanks to him I could gain my freedom,” she said. “This is the reason why I didn’t rebel and I did not ask help from the lady that was selling shoes.”
Read: Who Are Black Death? Dark Web Group Linked To British Model's Abduction
After six days in captivity, Herba took Ayling to the British Consulate in Milan. She was freed because of Black Death’s rule prohibiting the abduction of mothers or pregnant women.
“I wasn’t supposed to be taken because the boss had seen my Instagram profile and saw my full name and some photos which clearly showed that I was a mother with a small baby and this was against the rules of the organization,” Ayling said.
Herba denied any wrongdoing. He claimed he was hired to pose as a photographer and meet Ayling, but when he found out about the planned kidnapping, he backed out of the plan. Herba said he accepted the job to make money to pay for leukemia treatment. He did not provide any medical proof to back up his statements.
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