Thursday, April 30, 2026

Female JPMorgan Executive Allegedly Drugged and Sexually Abused Employee, Made Him Her ‘Office Sex Slave’: LAWSUIT

Professional woman with shoulder-length blonde hair smiling in a black outfit against a blurred background.
Lorna Hajdini 

If you think only males sexually prey on underlings in the workspace, think again.

A female JPMorgan executive, described in the MSK as ‘glamorous’, is facing a lawsuit in which she is accused of ‘sexually assaulting, racially abusing and drugging’ a male junior employee.

The Irish Sun reported:

“Lorna Hajdini, 37, allegedly coerced a married banker into ‘non-consensual and humiliating sex acts’ over a series of months, according to a lawsuit.

The accuser, known only as John Doe, claims he was even verbally abused by Hajdini after he broke down in tears during one of the alleged unwanted sexual encounters.”

Lawsuit filed against JPMorgan Chase executive Lorna Hajdini for alleged sexual harassment and abuse of a junior male employee, with the bank accused of enabling misconduct.

He claims his career was threatened when he tried to refuse her advances.

“Hajdini, an executive director in JPMorgan Chase’s Leveraged Finance division, also allegedly admitted to drugging Doe with a date rape drug on multiple occasions.

The lawsuit claims Doe was given ‘an erection-enabling pharmaceutical substance’ on at least one occasion. Hajdini is yet to respond to the allegations.”

Read more:

https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2026/04/female-jpmorgan-executive-allegedly-drugged-sexually-abused-employee/ 

The Wisconsin Brewery Post That Triggered a Firing

A single viral social media post set off a chain reaction that ended a high-level career in Wisconsin.

Brian Kellar served as senior vice president and president of regional markets for Aspirus Health, a major regional health system operating in Wisconsin, Minnesota, and Michigan.

He lost that position after commenting on a social media post tied to Minocqua Brewing Company following the failed assassination attempt on President Donald Trump.

I'd love to tell you about Kellar's long career with Aspirus — decades of dedicated service to an organization working to improve the health of Americans — and how shocking his removal was to people who worked with him for a long, long time.

Eh? Not so much: Brian Kellar started working at Aspirus Health on March 30. He wasn't around long enough to earn a coffee mug.

Aspirus Health President and CEO Matt Heywood confirmed the organization parted ways with Kellar.

Heywood issued a statement saying the organization has parted ways with an employee after learning the worker’s social media activity did not align with the health system’s values.

In a statement, Heywood said Aspirus is committed to “safe, respectful and compassionate care” and expects those standards from every member of the organization.

Heywood said the employee “is no longer with our organization.” The statement did not identify the employee or detail the social media activity.

Heywood’s statement said the incident has drawn significant public attention, but he explained the decision was made independently of outside commentary and instead reflects Aspirus’ commitment to its culture and to meeting patient and community expectations.

Heywood expressed the organization's expectation that employees, especially executives, reflect standards tied to safe, respectful, and compassionate care.

Kellar didn't just leave a quiet comment and move on. He had already posted a photo of himself wearing an anti-Trump shirt at a Notre Dame football game, bragging about the attention it drew and directing others to buy the same merchandise.

He then commented on a post tied to the brewery's messaging after the assassination attempt. The original post joked about “almost” reaching a goal of providing free beer. Teammate Matt Margolis correctly called out the company's depravity.

That was their tone.

Now comes the lecture.

Minocqua Brewing Company sits one hour and 45 minutes from my front door — we stare up at the same sky, so Kirk Bangstad and I live on the same planet. Yet the guy is totally whacked.

He swears Kellar lost his job not for the anti-Trump shirt comment, but because the hate group Libs of TikTok shared the picture and then Russian bots plus MAGA mouth breathers swarmed the company pages. Heywood caved in hours and tossed the longtime (29 days!) healthcare leader under the bus.

I've been a home brewer for over 25 years. Every once in a while, a brew turns skunky, when I didn't sanitize nearly as well as I should have, resulting in a terrible brew. I'm shiver-cringing at my memory of sipping such a skunky result. 

I say that to say this: I think Mr. Bangstad has been drinking not only his bathwater but also several pints of skunky beer.

He's a half a bubble off plumb, not the brightest bulb in the obra, not the sharpest crayon in the drawer. You get what I'm saying.

The man is completely off his rocker.

And lastly, I wanted to bring you this story of a healthcare executive who was fired for sharing a picture in our comments section on Facebook for wearing one of our shirts. 

 Let’s be honest, he wasn’t fired for wearing that t-shirt, he was fired because a hate group called Libs of Tik Tock posted his picture on their site, and then a wild world of Russian bots and MAGA mouth-breathers descended on Aspirus’ social media accounts and demanded that he be fired. 

From the story released Tuesday by WSAW, the ABC affiliate in Central Wisconsin, Aspirus’ CEO couldn’t take the heat and instead of waiting 24 hours for the Russian bots to go to sleep, he decided to throw a committed longtime nonprofit healthcare leader under the bus. 

Folks, let me reiterate. The day we’re not allowed to legally express our thoughts about what our government is doing to us is the day we no longer live in a free society. 

You may not like or agree with a single thing I say, but BY GOD, IF YOU’RE AN AMERICAN, YOU MUST STAND BY MY FIRST AMENDMENT RIGHT TO SAY IT!

So let’s get this straight.

A social media post flirts with violence toward a sitting president. The follow-up dismisses the event and points fingers in every direction except inward. Then the same voice starts assigning labels and demanding moral clarity from everyone else.

And people wonder why there were such strong reactions. Kellar stepped into that mess and signed his name to it.

Defenders “pounced” with a familiar argument, claiming his First Amendment rights took a hit. They treated the firing as a constitutional crisis instead of what it actually was. Free speech exists.

Contracts exist too.

Kellar signed an agreement that included a morality clause addressing social media activity, especially around controversial topics. Executives carry added responsibility because they represent their organization whether they intend to or not.

He wasn't singled out; he was held to the standard he agreed to follow.

Aspirus didn't need a lecture from social media. It operates as a private organization, where private employers set expectations while deciding who represents their brand and who doesn't.

When a senior executive drags the organization into a political firestorm, leadership has every right to respond. It's not complicated.

The speed of the decision tells its own story; leadership didn't hesitate. They moved to shut down the distraction and returned focus to patient care, which remains the core mission of any health system.

Online outrage followed right on cue. Some insisted Kellar got punished for his views, while others ignored the contract entirely and framed the situation as censorship. There were a few that even defended the original brewery message while calling opposing voices dangerous.

It's a pattern that keeps repeating.

People push the boundaries in public, then act shocked when consequences show up. They sign agreements, ignore them, and expect exceptions when things go sideways, demanding accountability from everyone else while dodging it themselves.

Kellar made a choice, while Aspirus made one too.

Executives don't get the luxury of pretending their words stay personal when they post in public. Every comment carries weight, and every interaction reflects on the organization tied to their name. That reality doesn't disappear because somebody types from a phone instead of a podium.

Leaders across every industry closely watch situations like this. Social media turns private opinion into public liabilities in seconds. Contracts exist to draw a line before damage spreads.

Aspirus enforced a line that Kellar crossed.

I can't speak for you, but when consequences of actions by lefties happen, it's fun to watch.

https://pjmedia.com/david-manney/2026/04/30/the-wisconsin-brewery-post-that-triggered-a-firing-n4952377

Ouch: Big Blow to Chuck Schumer in Maine Senate Race

We have an update on the Maine Senate Democrat primary, and it's not good news for Sen. Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY).

Newcomer Graham Platner and the state's governor, Janet Mills, were the top two candidates in the race, with Platner being endorsed by twice-failed presidential candidate and Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) as a humble, purported working-class guy who would buck Schumer and the Democrat establishment and would be a "fighter" against President Trump's America First agenda.

Mills had the backing of Schumer and the Democrat Senatorial Campaign Committee (DSCC), with the belief that her popularity in the state and her standoff with Trump over the issue of men in women's sports elevated her profile enough to the point she'd be a shoo-in for the nomination.

But though the Platner campaign was rocked by one scandal after another, including the people of Maine finding out that he had a Nazi-themed tattoo, he comfortably remained at the top of the leaderboard in the race, something that, along with a lack of financial resources, prompted Mills to suspend her campaign on Thursday.


SEE ALSO: Janet Mills Opens Can of Worms on Joe Biden Issue As Age Takes Center Stage in Maine Senate Primary Race


In her statement, Mills stopped short of endorsing Platner, saying that "I very simply do not have the one thing that political campaigns unfortunately require today: the financial resources," while adding that she had, "unending love, admiration, and hope for Maine people — a people whose hearts are filled with love and whose integrity and humility is surpassed only by their kindness, generosity, and compassion."

The DSCC responded to the news by getting behind Platner, saying in a lukewarm statement that "After years of allowing Trump’s abuses of power, Senator Collins has never been more vulnerable and we will work with the presumptive Democratic nominee Graham Platner to defeat her."

For her part, Sen. Collins (R-ME) was making good use of all the oppo dumps against Platner during the primary prior to Mills dropping out:

Susan Collins has also pivoted to the general election. Last week, the senator responded to negative ads from Schumer-aligned groups by referencing the chest tattoo Platner covered up after it was identified last year as a Nazi symbol. 

Susan Collins: Chuck is trying to cover up Democrats’ bad ideas by attacking others. You know, when I think about it, his approach is like trying to cover up an outrageous tattoo. You can paint over it, but we all know what’s underneath."

When I say there is a large volume of material on Platner for Collins to work with during the general election, it's an understatement (we've documented a lot of it here).  Here's a summary of sorts:

While Platner might have coasted through the primary, the general campaign season is a different matter, as both he and Collins will be pursuing more than just the votes of their respective political parties but also independents, who comprise 36 percent of the state's voting base, according to Independent Voting Project:

Total Registered Voters: 965,085

Democrats: 325,974 (33.78%)

Republicans: 287,858 (29.83%)

Other/Independent: 351,253 (36.40%)

Democrats view the seat as a top pick-up opportunity, but Platner is mistake-prone, and Collins is a seasoned campaigner who has survived previous challenges and who is not going to go quietly into the night. This one should be interesting to watch.

https://redstate.com/sister-toldjah/2026/04/30/janet-mills-exits-maine-democrat-senate-primary-whats-next-graham-platner-n2201870

‘Maniac’ passenger assaults airport crew after arriving late to flight

She missed her flight and was ready to fight. 

Pushing, kicking and shouting are the typical makings of a temper tantrum — those emotional outbursts often exhibited by teething tots. 

But an enraged adult woman at Mexico City International Airport, in Mexico, recently threw a hissy fit of epic — and possibly criminal — proportions after arriving late to her flight gate and being denied entry onto an Aeromexico aircraft. 

Video footage shows the peeved passenger pushing airport workers and kicking over bins after missing her flight.

Startling footage of the unnamed traveler, donning a flowy white skirt and top, brownish blazer and black fanny pack, shows her shoving security staffers upon being barred from the plane, per Creatorzine.com

The would-be passenger allegedly reached her gate at 5:27 p.m., seven minutes after the flight’s scheduled 5:20 p.m. departure. The boarding process had already concluded, and airline personnel reportedly refused to resume it despite the hothead’s demands. 

Representatives for Aeromexico did not immediately respond to The Post’s request for a comment. 

Neither the airline nor the airport authorities have issued an official statement regarding the incident. 

The unnamed woman allegedly arrived seven minutes late to her flight gate and caused a scene upon being denied admittance onto the plane.

Airport authorities, however, have confirmed that security protocols were followed to ensure the safety of other passengers and staff during the disruption, according to reports. 

The explosive episode is all the rage online, making the blowup a trending topic across social media. 

“Ridiculous old hag!,” a digital detractor tweeted, labeling the woman with the epithet, similar to other X users who called her a “f- -king idiot” and “a dumbass.”

“Where are the police?” a stunned spectator wondered aloud. “There are rules that must be respected. The airline workers don’t have to put up with this, and expose themselves to physical harm.”

Airport authorities reportedly followed proper security protocols to ensure the safety of other passengers and staff.

“Why do they allow this kind of maniac to assault the staff?” a separate onlooker asked. “Apply the law as it should be and ban her from traveling on that airline. Arrest her and fine her.”

Unruly behavior, such as that displayed by the livid lady, certainly does not fly in the US  

In fact, the Federal Aviation Administration recently established a “zero tolerance” policy vowing to pursue legal enforcement action against unhinged passengers who “assault, threaten, intimidate, or interfere with” airline employees. 

A California man, 33, was federally charged after allegedly attacking two Transportation Security Administration (TSA) officers and seriously injuring a Dallas police officer at Dallas Love Field Airport last month. 

He faces up to 20 years in prison for the offense. 

Out of control trippers have been arrested and charged with high crimes for misbehaving in airports and on planes.

Jordan Langston, 25, was arrested and charged with interference with flight crew members and attendants after allegedly punching a flight attendant in the face on a plane en route to Salt Lake City, Utah, in December. 

He was ordered to remain behind bars pending trial, with a judge citing substance abuse and potential mental health issues.

It remains unclear whether the Aeromexico passenger will face any legal action, fines or bans.

https://nypost.com/2026/04/30/lifestyle/unhinged-traveler-assaults-airport-crew-after-missing-plane/

Female JPMorgan Executive Allegedly Drugged and Sexually Abused Employee, Made Him Her ‘Office Sex Slave’: LAWSUIT

Lorna Hajdini  If you think only males sexually prey on underlings in the workspace, think again. A female JPMorgan executive, described in ...