Just when you thought the Vince McMahon legal saga couldn’t get any more shocking, the latest amendment to Janel Grant’s lawsuit has kicked in the door like a Brock Lesnar German suplex. New evidence, previously concealed identities, and explicit allegations have surfaced, and it’s as ugly as a botched table spot.
Grant’s legal team has officially expanded the case with 104 pages of damning details, now explicitly naming Brock Lesnar, WWE President Nick Khan, former COO Brad Blum, former co-CEO Stephanie McMahon, and longtime WWE producer Michael Hayes, among others. Previously unreleased text messages, emails, and transcripts are also included—because why settle for just one bombshell when you can set off an entire fireworks factory?
The Allegations Just Got Even Worse
The lawsuit now directly accuses McMahon of sharing explicit images of Grant with others, including Lesnar and Laurinaitis, during WWE production meetings, live broadcasts, and even on corporate flights. Apparently, while WWE was busy scripting its “PG Era,” McMahon was running something straight out of a corporate horror movie behind the scenes.
In one particularly horrifying allegation, Grant claims McMahon attempted to traffic her to Lesnar in March 2022—because when McMahon said “Brock is the next big thing,” this is definitely not what anyone had in mind.
And then there’s Michael Hayes, the man behind so many WWE storylines, who allegedly was on the receiving end of customized explicit content ordered by McMahon himself. At this point, even the most unhinged Attitude Era storylines are starting to look tame compared to WWE’s real-life drama.
Triple H, Nick Khan, and More Caught in the Fallout
The lawsuit states that Paul “Triple H” Levesque’s office was right next to the one Laurinaitis allegedly used for abuse, while Khan and Blum helped oversee its development. Whether or not they were aware of what was going on remains unclear, but this revelation places even more top WWE executives uncomfortably close to the controversy.
The Netflix Connection?
In what sounds like a deleted scene from Black Mirror, the lawsuit even alleges that the recent Netflix documentary, “Mr. McMahon,” includes footage of McMahon receiving explicit images of Grant during a production meeting. If that’s true, the streaming giant might have accidentally aired its own Exhibit A.
McMahon’s Legal Team Claps Back
Vince McMahon’s lead attorney, Jessica Rosenberg, has already brushed off the amended complaint as “the latest publicity stunt in an ongoing smear campaign.” Because, clearly, 104 pages of detailed allegations, messages, and evidence are just another slow news day in WWE world.
What’s Next?
With new names, new evidence, and a legal battle that keeps growing faster than Roman Reigns’ title reign, WWE’s attempt to move the case to arbitration is looking shakier than a Jeff Hardy ladder spot. Whether or not Grant’s allegations will hold up in court, this is the biggest scandal in wrestling history—and it’s far from over.