All dressed up with nowhere to go — unless meeting with a parole officer counts?
Fake German heiress Anna Sorokin got all dolled up Tuesday morning as she stepped out from house arrest in Manhattan for the first time to see her parole officer.
The 31-year-old con artist — who went by Anna Delvey before her infamous arrest — donned heavy eye makeup, high heels and a black trench coat for the rare outing.
She swapped her trademark thick-rimmed glasses for black shades and covered her blow-out with a black head scarf, which was brazenly secured with a broach emblazoned with the initials ‘AD’.
The socialite scammer, whose court-ordered ankle monitor was briefly visible under her pants as she stepped out of her new East Village apartment, ignored questions before being whisked away in a waiting black SUV.
Her spokesperson confirmed to The Post that she was heading to Brooklyn to meet her probation officer ahead of a check in with immigration officials later Tuesday.
Anna Sorokin, 31, stepped out of her East Village apartment early Tuesday for a meeting with her parole officer. Gabriella Bass
The 31-year-old con artist wore high heels and a black trench coat for the parole meeting in Brooklyn. William Farrington
The socialite scammer swapped her trademark black-rimmed glasses for dark shades as she broke cover Tuesday morning. William FarringtonSorokin, whose years-long con bilking New York’s elite was the subject of the Netflix show “Inventing Anna,” was ordered to remain under 24-hour house arrest with electronic monitoring following her release from an upstate prison last week.
After making an immediate beeline to Manhattan, she was spotted over the weekend posing for photos in her new East Village pad and strutting around on her rooftop.
The notorious scam artist had served four years in prison after being convicted in 2019 of swindling $200,000 from banks and businesses as she partied her way through New York’s society circles, pretending she was a wealthy heiress.
A dolled-up Sorokin covered her blow-out with a black head scarf. William Farrington
The socialite scammer’s court-ordered ankle monitor was briefly visible under her pants. William Farrington
As part of her release, Sorokin has been banned from all social media. Gabriella BassJust weeks after being released on good behavior, Sorokin was picked up by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers and thrown into the Orange County Correctional Facility.
She won her release from the upstate prison last Friday as she continues to fight her deportation to her native Germany.
The brazen grifter met with immigration officials in a federal building in Lower Manhattan later on Tuesday, and was there for about an hour before slinking out through a back door.
“Anna had a scheduled check in with immigration officers this afternoon,” her attorney Timothy Sini told The Post in a statement. “Anna is fully cooperating with authorities and remains in full compliance with the conditions of her release.”
As part of her release, Sorokin has been banned from all social media.
When asked by The Post last week if she would struggle to stay off social media, Sorokin said, “No.”
Questioned about whether she’d be tempted to step outside, she added: “Of course not.”
Netflix controversially paid Sorokin about $320,000 for the rights to her life story and for consulting work on “Inventing Anna,” Shonda Rhimes-produced show about her crimes, which was released in February and starred actress Julia Garner in the title role. About $199,000 of that was paid in restitution to the banks she scammed, with another $24,000 going toward state fines.
Sorokin’s funds were initially frozen in May 2019 under New York’s “Son of Sam” law — designed to stop criminals from making money from their crimes. The accounts were unfrozen after she started paying off her victims.






