A lawyer representing a former WWE employee who claims she was sexually abused and trafficked by Vince McMahon says the “evil” his client has endured is “in a class of his own.”
Ann Callis, an attorney for former WWE staffer Janel Grant, said she previously worked for nine years as a felony criminal judge overseeing murder and sexual assault cases, but the horrors her client endured at the hands of McMahon could not be compared to anything she had experienced. find in himself. career.
“The sexual slavery that he endured, the terrible consequences that happened to him physically and mentally when he went through this and still suffering through this with PTSD – he had suicidal thoughts,” Callis told NewsNation’s Ashleigh Banfield.
“This is in a class of its own in terms of the depravity he had to endure.”
Grant, who works in the company’s legal and talent division, claims that McMahon forced her to have sex with WWE icons and executives, defecated on her during a threesome and aggressively used a sex toy on her named after the wrestling star, which led to his injury. , according to a bombshell lawsuit filed Thursday in Connecticut federal court.
In addition to McMahon, Grant, 43, also named John Laurinaitis, the company’s former head of talent relations and general manager, in the 67-page suit, alleging the pair took turns holding her for each other while sexually assaulting her at the WWE offices in June 2021.
Ann Callis, an attorney for Janel Grant who was previously a felony criminal judge, said the sexual abuse her client suffered at the hands of McMahon was in a “class of its own.” Getty Images Janel Grant has PTSD and is suicidal, according to her attorney. McMahon allegedly forced Grant to have sex with the WWE icon and executive and defecated on him after a threesome. Getty Images
The explosive court filing follows a Wall Street Journal report last year that WWE was investigating an alleged $3 million payment McMahon gave to a female employee who left after a consensual affair.
Grant, who was not named in the report, claims in the suit that he received a $1 million installment after signing the NDA, but no further payments.
A subsequent investigation found that McMahon paid $14.6 million to various women who accused him of sexual misconduct.
McMahon has denied the allegations in the suit, but announced Friday that he is stepping down as executive chairman of WWE’s parent company, TKO Group Holdings.
The TKO Group, which was created in September when the UFC and WWE merged, said it took the allegations seriously and was dealing with them internally.
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Source: thtrangdai.edu.vn/en/