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Jordynne Grace Reveals Details After Hacked Images of Her Surface Online

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WWE superstar Jordynne Grace is speaking out after private images that she says were stolen from a hacked account have been spreading online. She has addressed the situation directly, pushing back on mistaken assumptions about the origins of the images that never should have been seen by the public.

How Jordynne Grace Addressed the Images Circulating Online

In May 2026, an X user published a since-deleted post expressing disgust at anyone who would publish stolen images of Jordynne Grace online. Another user commented on that post, first clarifying that they were not criticizing Grace or condoning the images being spread. The user then noted that it is common for images published on websites like OnlyFans to be leaked. It was in a direct response to that comment that Grace addressed the horrible situation.

Grace commented on that X post to clear up assumptions about where the images came from. She explained that she was the victim of someone who hacked her account and published the completely private images online without her consent. "None of that stuff is from my OF! Only ever bikini/lingerie there. Other stuff is AI and some from an old Snapchat account that was hacked and meant for my husband, unfortunately."

Jordynne Grace deserves to have her privacy respected. Her account being hacked and her private images being stolen and published online are a horrible violation of that.

The Criminal Nature of Hacking and Non-Consensual Distribution of Private Images

What Jordynne Grace stated happened to her is a serious crime that can result in jail time and fines if someone is caught and brought to justice.

In 2012, NBC News covered the sentencing of Christopher Chaney, a man who had been convicted of stealing and publishing the private images of several celebrities. Even though prosecutors only sought a six-year sentence, U.S. District Judge S. James Otero decided that wasn't enough and ordered him to spend 10 years in prison.

It is also important to note that simply publishing someone else's private images without consent can be illegal, even if the person sharing them didn't commit a crime to obtain them. In 2025, the Take it Down Act was passed, which makes it a federal crime to "knowingly publish" an "intimate visual depiction" or a "digital forgery" of an "identifiable individual" in certain circumstances. For cases involving adults, a conviction carries a maximum sentence of two years in prison and criminal fines. Congress' website details what has to be proven for someone to be found guilty of that crime.

"For the publication-related offenses involving depictions of adults, the government must show that, in addition to knowingly publishing the material, the defendant intended the publication to cause harm, or that the publication did cause the identifiable individual harm, 'including psychological, financial, or reputational harm.'"

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