New York Post

$10M ‘SHAKEDOWN’

Accused tech CEO ‘sex enslaver’ countersue­s

- By SHANNON THALER

A tech CEO who allegedly forced a former assistant to become his “sex slave” claims the accusation­s surfaced only after a powerful Hollywood lawyer attempted to shake him down for $10 million for a “quick payday,” The Post has learned.

Christian Lanng — who left the helm of San Francisco-based tech unicorn Tradeshift in October over allegation­s of “serious assault and harassment” — claims in an explosive countersui­t that a month earlier he was getting threatenin­g text messages from Bryan Freedman, a Los Angeles attorney whose celebrity clients include ex-CNN host Don Lemon and reality-TV star Bethenny Frankel.

“I have been asked by a major media outlet if you would appear to explain your side of the story this week in conjunctio­n with the claims being filed,” Freedman told Lanng in a Sept. 4 text message, according to the countersui­t filed in US Northern California District Court.

The media outlet was TMZ, where Freedman had appeared the previous month, holding up a copy of an alleged “slave contract” with the names blacked out, according to the Tuesday suit. TMZ is owned by Fox Corp., which shares common ownership with the New York Post.

Obviously, payment avoids the filing. . . . Our papers are ready to go.

— Bryan Freedman

‘A clear threat’

While Freedman purportedl­y appeared on TMZ for a separate case about his reality TV star clientele, he held up a copy of the redacted “slave contract” while on camera — “a clear threat to countercla­imant,” per Lanng’s camp, which has maintained Lanng and his accuser, known in court papers as Jane Doe, were in a consensual relationsh­ip.

The day after the initial Sept. 4 text, Freedman messaged Lanng again, writing, “Christian, I don’t control media as you know but once filed cases take on lives of their own,” according to court papers. “Obviously, payment avoids the filing. Is that happening today? Bruce offered 10m filed by 8/15.

“Let me know if you want to avoid this being much more difficult as our papers are ready to go,” Freedman added, according to the screenshot­s.

In response to the allegation­s, a spokespers­on for Freedman provided a brief, written statement from the power lawyer.

“It’s not a surprise that the enforcer of a slave contract would try to play the victim,” Freedman said. “It’s nothing but further abuse and a desperate attempt to deflect from his own illegal conduct.”

The alleged shakedown took place just one month after banking giant HSBC announced that it made a $35 million investment in Tradeshift as part of $70 million in funding to form a joint venture.

Lanng’s countersui­t against the LA lawyer comes after he had already agreed to pay Doe $10 million “despite his innocence” as part of a May 2022 settlement agreement that was reached “for the sake of trying to salvage the potential sale of Tradeshift,” according to the court documents.

Tradeshift told The Post Monday that more than a year later, “on Sept. 1, 2023, Mr. Lanng was dismissed for gross misconduct on multiple grounds. He has also resigned from the Tradeshift Board.”

Lanng claims in his countersui­t the shakedown began after he missed a deadline for an installmen­t on the $10 million, out-of-court settlement with Doe.

In response, he alleges that Freedman’s Los Angeles-based law firm Freedman Taitelman + Cooley LLP “hired third parties to develop fake websites and Twitter accounts to fabricate accounts of misconduct by Lanng in early 2023.”

‘Just the beginning’

A spokespers­on for Lanng claimed that one of those fake accounts operated on X with the handle @_ChristianL­anng, tweeting cryptic posts such as, “To Christian and the entire Tradeshift board: I’m not going anywhere. None of us are. This is just the beginning.”

The idea was “embarrassi­ng and intimidati­ng Lanng so that he would agree to pay even more money than the sum already paid,” per the countersui­t.

Doe’s shocking lawsuit filed in December claimed the depraved “slave contract” required her to “always be sexually available for her master when he needs sex and to never refuse him sex even when not wearing the [day] collar,” according to an alleged copy of the contract filed with her suit.

“Whenever she sees her master in private for the first time, she is to kneel and ask if there is anything she can do for him,” the purported contract added of Doe, who was fired from Tradeshift in 2020 “during one of several rounds of layoffs Tradeshift has unfortunat­ely had to undergo,” Lanng said late last year.

Doe, who worked as Lanng’s assistant at one point, was also supposed to keep a “diary” of his “subjugatio­n and enslavemen­t of her,” and had agreed to be beaten “with a cane if she did not write submissive entries,” according to her lawsuit.

In his countersui­t, however, Lanng included an alleged entry in which Doe gushed about her relationsh­ip with Lanng.

“I am so obsessed and IN LOVE and in AWE and so bubbling wanting desiring aching for CHRISTIAN! . . . I am so much more confident I’m also very much his sex slave lol.”

Attorneys for Lanng argued that “It is unreasonab­le to draw the conclusion that, ‘I’m very much his sex slave lol’ was written at the behest of her ‘master,’ ” adding that Doe’s allegation­s don’t have “any merit at all.”

In his countersui­t, Lanng claims the “slave contract” was “merely a sexual prop downloaded from the internet” after Lanng and Doe’s relationsh­ip came to include “elements of BDSM,” and was “by no means intended to be enforceabl­e,” especially in the workplace.

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