Read sick NEW emails in the JPMorgan 'sex slave' scandal as accuser finally breaks cover in first interview
A female JPMorgan Chase executive has revealed the sickening messages she received after a male colleague accused her of making him her ‘sex slave.’
Lorna Hajdini, 37, said the now-viral allegations made by Chirayu Rana, 35, in a lawsuit filed last month have turned her life into a daily ‘living nightmare.’
In a countersuit filed Tuesday in New York Supreme Court, Hajdini accused Rana of fabricating false sexual harassment and abuse claims designed to 'inflict maximum pain' and ruin her career and reputation.
She claimed the allegations were entirely fabricated and said the social media firestorm surrounding the case caused her lasting mental harm and cost her a volunteer position.
Now, Hajdini’s attorneys have entered three emails she recently received into the docket as exhibits to further illustrate the 'havoc' Rana’s claims continue to have on her life.
In one sickening message received on April 30, a sender whose name is redacted in the filing wished vicious harm on Hajdini and urged her to commit suicide.
‘I hope you get g**g r***d to the point you wanna kill yourself after cos you realise what a worthless w***e you are,’ reads the message.
‘You f**king piece of s**t. KILL YOURSELF. I sincerely hope your family all die slow, painful deaths from aggressive cancers.’
Lorna Hajdini, 37, an executive director in JPMorgan Chase's Leveraged Finance division, has filed a countersuit against former colleague Chirayu Rana in New York Supreme Court
On Thursday, Hajdini’s attorneys entered three emails she recently received into the docket as exhibits to further illustrate the impact Rana’s claims continue to have on her life
Two other emailers propositioned Hajdini for sex.
One message from May 1, with the subject line ‘Your new toy’, reads: ‘My name is [redacted] and if you are in need of a slave, I’ve been searching for a master. That Arab guy is a f**king p***y lol.
‘If all I had to [do] was f**k you and do it real good, id be the President of Chase lol… every man in America wants to f**k you now….I hope I get a turn.’
Another sent the same day and captioned ‘New Slave’, reads: ‘Omg you bad girl fly me out damn you got hips I wanna behind you over desk and tell you I want a new bonus and a f**king Christmas card cus I gotta Cannon for you and I dont snitch.’
In her countersuit, Hajdini says the public reaction has taken a significant toll on her life and she has received numerous threats to her personal safety.
‘Ms. Hajdini and members of her family have been mocked, ridiculed, and harassed around the clock, with Ms. Hajdini serving as the ongoing focal point of countless jokes, memes, and AI-generated images and videos of a persistently vile, degrading, and sexual nature - all a direct consequence of Plaintiff’s lies,’ the suit said.
Rana originally filed a lawsuit on April 27 under the pseudonym ‘John Doe’, accusing Hajdini of forcing him to engage in non-consensual and humiliating sex acts while working together in the bank's leveraged finance division.
In the weeks since, Rana’s allegations have been dissected relentlessly online, fueling both viral attention and growing skepticism.
Breaking his public silence for the first time on Thursday, the Nepali-American said he believed ‘gender inequality’ was to blame for the mounting doubt surrounding his allegations.
‘The biggest thing here is, if you call this fake, it’s just gender inequality,’ he told The Juggernaut, a New York-based news website that focuses on South Asian news.
‘If the roles were reversed, what do you think would happen?’
Rana's filing, which was first reported by the Daily Mail, also included claims of repeated drugging, racial abuse and coercion.
The suit included graphic details of his allegations - including quotations he claimed Hajdini made - quickly spread on social media, including: ‘If you don’t f*** my brains out tonight, I’m going to sabotage your promotion,’ and ‘I bet your little Asian, fish head, wife doesn’t have these cannons.’
In an email from May 1, with the subject line ‘Your new toy’, an anonymous author propositioned Hajdini for sex
A second sender, in a message sent the same day, was titled 'New Slave'
She accused Rana, 35, of defamation, saying he orchestrated a months-long campaign of false accusations that destroyed her career and damaged her reputation
Hajdini’s lawyers immediately refuted the claims, denying any inappropriate conduct.
JPMorgan also told the Daily Mail it conducted a thorough investigation after Rana first raised the claims internally in May 2025 and found no evidence of wrongdoing.
Sources say JPMorgan did offer Rana $1 million to settle his claims, but he rejected the offer because he was holding out for $20 million.
A spokesperson for the company voiced support for Hajdini’s countersuit on Tuesday, adding: ‘As we’ve said from the outset, we don’t believe the allegations against her or the firm have merit.’
As part of Rana’s initial filing, he accused the bank of enabling the alleged abuse and retaliating against him after he came forward with the claims.
JPMorgan issued its own legal response to Rana on Thursday, denying the allegations and insisting he has asserted a ‘series of sensational, false, and misleading allegations that do not reflect the reality of his employment with JPMC.’
The filing added additional context to the bank’s internal investigation into Rana’s claims last year.
Highlighting that Rana refused to cooperate with the probe, JPMorgan accused him of distorting ‘routine workplace interactions’ into wrongdoing by ‘repackaging an internet-meme reference as a sexual proposition and recasting an innocuous group text about a LinkedIn post as racial harassment.’
The company also accused Rana of having a documented history of misrepresenting facts and ‘shifting narratives’, claiming he once lied about his father’s death to get time off work.
Rana claimed in his own lawsuit that Hajdini started harassing him in May 2024
He was accused in Hajdini's lawsuit of lying about his father's death. Above, Rana with his parents
‘When he claimed he needed time away to focus on his family, his managers took him at his word and made the necessary arrangements. When he claimed his father died, the team sent flowers and well wishes,’ the document reads.
‘But his father, in fact, is alive, and Plaintiff now changes his story to refer to the passing of a “dad-like” figure. These misrepresentations and evolving facts are not isolated; they reflect a broader pattern of shifting narratives that has pervaded Plaintiff’s relationship with JPMC.’
Rana has continued to double down on his claims.
He pointed to JPMC’s attempts to settle with him, adding: ‘If it was fabricated, why did the settlement rise?’
In supporting exhibits filed at the beginning of the month, Rana claimed to be suffering from PTSD as a result of the alleged abuse.
He also claimed the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office had an active criminal investigation against Hajdini.
However, while the DA’s office did briefly look into Rana's claims, the inquiry was closed after investigators found no evidence of wrongdoing, two sources with knowledge of the matter exclusively told the Daily Mail.
One source said Rana was referred to a counselor by the DA's office only after investigators closed the case because it was determined he would benefit from continued psychological support.
Around the same time, a series of unusual online claims and posts linked to Rana surfaced, adding further scrutiny to his account.
The countersuit claims Hajdini and her family have 'been mocked, ridiculed and harassed around the clock' since Rana filed his lawsuit
A post purportedly made 10 months ago on the website Ask A Lawyer emerged, appearing to show a person named Chirayu Rana seeking advice from an AI chatbot on filing a lawsuit against a male boss at Morgan Stanley.
Although the post referred to a male superior at a different company, it included allegations strikingly similar to those made in Rana's lawsuit against Hajdini and JPMorgan.
The timing - if accurate - suggests the post was made more than a month after Rana says he raised similar allegations about Hajdini internally at JPMorgan in May 2025.
Rana was pressed about the post by The Juggernaut and denied any knowledge of it.
‘I have no idea what that is,’ he said, calling screenshots of the post ‘Deepfakes.’
During the interview, he also claimed to be in possession of extensive evidence supporting his allegations, including filings, messages, emails, forensic evidence and additional witness accounts.
He also referenced documentation tied to settlement negotiations, including that JPMorgan increased its offer ‘after more evidence was discovered,’ according to the outlet.
However, despite numerous follow-ups requesting access to the potentially crucial evidence, Rana reportedly refused to share it.
JPMorgan Chase in New York strongly denies all the claims against it. Rana alleged a culture within his team that was driven by racism and antipathy towards Asians
Then, in a later message, he allegedly claimed someone had hacked his account, suggesting his prior responses had been authored by someone else.
‘I think there has been a clear mistake here…I’ve never shared any information with you and your team. We are speaking with Verizon now. My account has been compromised,’ he said, before reportedly blocking the reporter's number.
A spokesperson for Rana definitively stated on Wednesday that, despite Hajdini’s counterclaims and the bank’s denial, Rana will still prevail in court.
‘[D]efamation requires the statement or statements must be false. Truth is an absolute defense. Mr. Rana’s statements are true. This will be proven in a court of law,’ they said.
Before joining JPMC in 2024, Rana held roles at several major financial firms, including Houlihan Lokey, Credit Suisse, Morgan Stanley and The Carlyle Group.
He departed JPMC in late 2025 and joined Bregal Sagemount. However, he left the company in April, three weeks before filing the lawsuit.
A spokesman for Sagemount confirmed Rana joined in October but was ‘no longer an employee’ as of April 2.
The reasons for his departure were not disclosed.


