The glamorous leader of infamous alleged “orgasm cult” OneTaste was hit with a nine-year prison sentence Monday for coercing employees into sex acts — as a judge slammed her over the “egregious, insidious” scheme.

Nicole Daedone, 58, stood in a beige jail jumpsuit to learn her fate after a Brooklyn federal jury convicted her of grooming workers and members at her wellness company to have sex with clients and investors.

OneTaste leader Nicole Daedone, 58, was hit with a nine-year sentence Monday. Gregory P. Mango

Daedone was convicted of grooming workers and members at her wellness company into sex with clients.

“Ms. Daedone took actions that stripped victims of their dignity,” Judge Diane Gujarati told the court, adding that “she does not appear to be remorseful.”

The sentencing came after nine former OneTaste employees testified about Daedone and the company’s former of head of sales, Rachel Cherwitz, running the business like a cult and manipulating them into performing a slew of sexual acts.

Cherwitz was sentenced Monday afternoon to 6.5 years in prison.

The outcome capped a fall from grace for the San Francisco-based company that once gained acclaim — and an endorsement from Gwyneth Paltrow’s Goop website — for promoting controversial group pleasuring sessions she dubbed “orgasmic meditation.”

But the purportedly sex-positive guru “was not seeking enlightenment or operating on a different dimension,” Gujarati said Monday.

“Ms. Daedone took actions that stripped victims of their dignity,” Judge Diane Gujarati told the court. Gregory P. Mango

 “It wasn’t a game or a show. It wasn’t Harry Potter or the Matrix. It was criminal,” the judge said.

Daedone was also ordered by Gujarati to forfeit $12 million — the amount for which she sold her sex-focused company — and pay nearly $900,000 to ex-employees who said they were coerced into sex acts and forced to work for little to no pay for more than a decade.

One ex-employee, Michal, told the court Monday that her harrowing experiences at OneTaste left her in financial tatters and suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder.

Daedone has maintained a loyal following following despite her June conviction, which she is expected to appeal. Gregory P. Mango

“I trusted Nicole … in reality, I fell into Nicole’s trap,”  said Michal, who asked that her last name not be published. “I was a perfect target because I was a vulnerable woman looking to improve my life.”

Federal prosecutors had asked the judge to sentence Daedone to a whopping 20 years in prison, accusing her of recruiting victims who had suffered past traumas by claiming she could help fix their sexual suffering.

The company enlisted one employee, a rape victim, to “reenact” the incident before a crowd for a taboo course — performing oral sex on a partner while being told “I love you,” as her real rapist had, prosecutors said.

She was forced to wear drab beige jail clothes at the hearing after Judge Gujarati rejected her bid to wear a civilian outfit. Gregory P. Mango

“Hers was a crime of exploitation masquerading as empowerment,” the feds wrote to the court.

Daedone has maintained a loyal following despite her June conviction, which she is expected to appeal. More than 200 people submitted letters to the court before her sentencing, including Van Jones, a CNN correspondent and former adviser to President Barack Obama, who called her “a woman of uncommon wisdom, grace and moral courage.”

Daedone’s lawyer, Jennifer Bonjean, stressed Monday that none of the accusers described being the victim of physical violence, and that her client was charged and convicted only of forced labor conspiracy, and not sex trafficking or sexual assault.

More than two dozen of her supporters attended the packed sentencing hearing in Brooklyn federal court. Gabriella Bass

“There are still many people today who see Nicole Daedone as a transformative force,” Bonjean said in court.

More than two dozen members of OneTaste — which has been rebranded as the Institute of OM — attended the packed sentencing hearing in Brooklyn federal court, including Anjuli Ayer, the company’s current CEO.

“This is a terrifying day for freedom,” Ayer told reporters outside the courthouse. “Once persuasion becomes a crime, anyone can be a defendant, and anyone can be a victim. We must correct the record or everyone will suffer.”

Daedone declined to address the court, leaning over to the microphone and saying “no, thank you” when asked if she would like to speak before learning her sentence.