Illustrative image related to WWE's Jordynne Grace Addresses AI-Forged Image Leak, Saying It Originated From a Data Breach, Not Her OnlyFans Content.

WWE’s Jordynne Grace Addresses AI-Forged Image Leak, Saying It Originated From a Data Breach, Not Her OnlyFans Content

WWE SmackDown star Jordynne Grace on May 8 publicly addressed the circulation of private images on social media, saying the material was the product of a data breach and artificial intelligence forgeries rather than content from her paid subscription platforms. Grace told followers the images were stolen from a hacked account and never intended for public viewing, correcting what she called mistaken assumptions linking the material to her former OnlyFans presence.

Grace — who signed with WWE in January 2025 after a successful run in TNA and who deactivated her OnlyFans before joining the company — said the content she once shared on paid platforms was limited to bikini and lingerie photos. Reporting by Heavy and Sescoops says the newly circulated files include a mixture of hacked personal files and digitally fabricated images. “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,” Grace wrote in response to social media comments.

The wrestler’s statement sought to draw a clear line between her professional and private lives as she navigates fallout from the leak. Grace has been responding directly on social platforms to correct misinformation and to assert that she is the victim of an illegal invasion of privacy rather than a subject of consensual public content. WWE has continued to promote her scheduled appearances on SmackDown; media reports indicate the company is not expected to discipline or suspend her for the matter.

Legal protections for victims of non-consensual intimate-image publication have tightened in recent years. The federal Take It Down Act, enacted in 2025, makes it a crime to knowingly publish intimate depictions without consent when the conduct causes identifiable harm — psychological, financial or reputational — or when publication was intended to cause such harm. Congress has said defendants can face prison time for publication-related offenses that meet those standards. Observers point to past precedents, such as the 2012 conviction of hacker Christopher Chaney, who received a decade-long sentence for breaking into celebrity accounts and distributing private materials.

The leak has drawn comparisons to earlier WWE controversies over non-consensual releases of private material, most notably the scandal involving former Divas Champion Paige. Paige has publicly described the emotional toll and long recovery after private videos were shared without her consent, saying she feared losing family and her husband before receiving support from her inner circle and eventually returning to wrestling. Grace’s case differs in that WWE has, for now, treated her as a victim and kept her active on the roster.

Grace remains in good standing with WWE as the company and fans digest the incident. Outside reporting has not provided details about any suspects or law-enforcement action connected to the May 8 breach; Grace’s social feeds continue to feature her career activities even as she addresses the personal breach publicly.

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