A glamorous high-flying lawyer who blew more than $10 million of her clients' cash in Las Vegas has finally broken her silence just months before she is set to be sentenced for her crimes.
Dubbed 'Lady Mafia', Sara Jacqueline King, 40, made headlines in 2023 after she was accused of swindling millions out of investors and friends to fund her lavish lifestyle of designer goods, jewelry, fast cars, luxury hotels and a shocking gambling habit.
Victims said she would regularly boast of her high-profile connections, with photos later emerging of her posing alongside celebrities including NFL stars Tom Brady and Patrick Mahomes in a subsequent lawsuit.
She was also caught on camera splashing her ill-gotten gains on a months-long gambling spree at the exclusive $300-a-night Wynn Resort in Sin City. During this time she posted pictures on social media of wads of cash and designer goods.
The Newport Beach attorney eventually pleaded guilty to money laundering and wire fraud, and faces up to 30 years in jail when she is sentenced in May next year.
Now, in a bombshell new podcast called Lady Mafia, King has broken her silence in her first interview since her arrest.
Speaking to the host Michele McPhee, King boasted how she could 'sell anything' - 'even fire to the devil' - and delighted in her Lady Mafia nickname.
'I love everything mafia. Always been fascinated by the mafia because I love the power moves. I always try to be the girl at the guy’s table,' she said.
Sara Jacqueline King, 40, made headlines in 2023 after she was accused of swindling millions out of investors and friends to fund her lavish lifestyle
The suit includes a series of photographs including one that shows King posing with notable NFL stars Aaron Rodgers, Tom Brady, Patrick Mahomes, and Josh Allen at The Match, a high-profile golf event
During the podcast King revealed she had become bored with life as a lawyer and was seeking something that would be more lucrative.
'I was looking for a way out of law. Law was so miserable. I hate being a lawyer, it makes no money whatsoever so let me invest. I need to make money,' she said on the podcast.
This, she claimed, is why she launched her company King Family Lending in 2018 - which is when her elaborate scheming began.
Federal officials said she had used this company to recruit investors to fund business loans between January 2022 and 2023, and would use her looks and charm to hobnob with celebrities as a way to inspire trust.
She promised to repay these loans, plus interest, and assured investors that any defaults would be covered by selling off collateral, which included yachts, luxury cars and watches.
But the business was a sham. Court documents stated that in reality, King did not fund any loans and she did not own any assets.
Lawyers also said that most of the vehicles King claimed were collateral were in fact cars she took pictures of while in Las Vegas or at a luxury rental car store.
She then used the victims' money to fund her wild lifestyle and gambled so much she even became known as the 'Slot Whisperer'.
But eventually the house of cards began to crumble and she claimed she even resorted to cutting off her own family in an attempt to hide her antics.
She was sued by LDR International after being accused of borrowing $10.2million over 97 loans by pledging expensive watches and high-end luxury automobiles.
Former friends then came forward to say they were swindled too.
King ultimately admitted to causing five investors to lose more than $8 million, and said she had withdrawn approximately $132,156 of investor money to purchase a Porsche Taycan electric sports car.
As part of a plea deal she agreed to pay restitution of at least $8,785,045 - but is yet to be put behind bars after her original January sentencing was postponed.
In the meantime, King revealed that she is laying low, with no shopping or gambling.
She said she is currently sharing a cramped studio apartment with her parents, grandmother and three dogs in Irvine, California - and joked that she takes 'Prozac' to get through it.
King, who was called the 'Slot Whisperer' is seen playing the slot machines in a Vegas casino
King is pictured during a shopping spree at Louis Vuitton that was posted to her social media
The lawyer turned fraudster lived at the Wynn Resort and gambled day and night
Speaking exclusively to DailyMail.com, podcast host McPhee said King 'became a willing patsy and wasn't embarrassed at all.'
'She wanted to embrace organized crime life rather than the fact that she was a super lawyer at one point,' she added.
After her escapades were made public, King was dubbed 'the female Bernie Madoff' and the 'Anna Delvey of the OC'.
But according to McPhee, she despises the latter comparison.
'Anna Delvey, in her words, was a fake and she wasn’t a fake as she actually did pull off a lot of accomplishments. She did pass the bar, she did become a lawyer, she did buy these two commercial buildings,' McPhee explained.
On the podcast, King continued to boast about her luxury lifestyle, regaling listeners with tales of staying in a $6,000 a night private villa for free - where staff even put a sign on her door that read 'The King.'
'The real amenity of being in a villa is the butler service. I started with champagne for breakfast. The white butlers would come in and feed my dog,' she continued.
'The bathtub was like an infinity pool that would pour over. You don't know where it is going but it is beautiful'.
Yet despite this, McPhee still believes King got an 'unfair shake'.
'She was ravaged in the headlines all over the world and wanted everyone to know what really happened, and is willing to risk her freedom for that,' she said.
'I think she just got in over her head and spiraled into a world of addiction and become attracted to danger,' McPhee added.
'She was more than a subject matter. It became a friendship and I met her family. I felt empathy for her and wanted to help her,' she continued.
But McPhee admitted that King has struggled to show remorse and 'grapples with her own truth'.
'She never ever said she wasn’t guilty until the last episode. I think she made a lot of excuses and I don’t think she necessarily embraced the damage.'
McPhee, who spent a decade covering New York's five Mafia families, added that King 'is the most unlikely criminal that I have come across in a long time.'
Yet many others have absolutely no sympathy for King.
Her estranged husband Kamran Pahlavi, who is the grandson of Iran's Princess Ashraf, the late twin sister of the country's last shah, branded her as 'sick'.
He 'fled to Morocco' and filed for divorce in late December 2023, citing irreconcilable differences, with the couple separating after just nine months together.
In an email read out on the podcast, Pahlavi, who had introduced King to a childhood friend who she went on to scam out of millions, said 'the shock of discovering the catastrophic situation still remains a trauma to this day'.
Many of her friends who lost huge sums of money also remain furious.
Marie Casillas Berger, 32, a former assistant, who worked for King in 2020 alleged that her boss stole $5,000 from her during a 'work trip' to Las Vegas before 'ghosting' her when she returned to California.
Berger said King instructed her to use her personal card for company expenses and was never repaid. One of the charges was a $3,000 first class plane ticket to Hawaii.
'She has no empathy for anybody,' Berger said. 'She doesn't care who she hurts or what happens in the process, as long as she has her Saint Laurent clothing and her money to gamble.'
Friends claimed King also had political ambitions. In 2017, she donated $29,000 to Republican candidates. King also appeared in a picture with former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, former VP Mike Pence and former Senator Ted Cruz and Rand Paul.
King posing in a car with her pet dog
King would share pictures of wads of cash on her social media, and send them to her prospective victims in a bid to earn their trust
Most of the vehicles King claimed were collateral were cars she took pictures of while in Las Vegas or at a luxury rental car store, lawyers said
King secured a $195,000 loan with photos of three watches including this Audemars Piguet Royal Oak with its rose gold band
King spoke for the first time to veteran reporter Michele McPhee, host of the new podcast Lady Mafia by Sony Music Entertainment which launched earlier this month
Beverly Hills attorney Ronald Richardson, who represents LDR International, told DailyMail.com that he does not completely understand why the initial January sentencing was postponed.
'We are hoping that the judge imposes a sentence consistent with the sentencing guidelines and orders restitution.’
He added: 'We are just hopeful that Ms. King recognizes that she hurt a lot of people with her conduct and that hopefully she will start figuring out a way to make restitution that will be ordered by the court'.
Sony Music Entertainment’s Lady Mafia is the latest series from The Binge, and is available on all major podcast platforms.