SF tech exec forced assistant to sign sex ‘slave contract,’ lawsuit alleges
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SAN FRANCISCO (KRON) — A San Francisco technology company’s former CEO, Christian Lanng, was slapped with a bombshell lawsuit accusing him of sadomasochistic-style rapes and torture.
Lanng’s accuser is identified in court documents as “Jane Doe.” She claims Lanng hired her as his executive assistant at Tradeshift, manipulated her into signing a sex “slave contract,” and sent her life down into a “dark abyss” of “sexual horrors.”
The lawsuit states, “This is a case about Christian Lanng, who was the powerful CEO of a billion-dollar market cap ‘unicorn’ Tradeshift, a cloud-based supply-chain software tech company—entering into a slave contract with a female employee, Jane Doe.”
The lawsuit, filed Thursday in San Francisco Superior Court, accuses Lanng, Tradeshift, and other Tradeshift executives of sex trafficking, intentional infliction of emotional distress, and sexual assault.
A Tradeshift spokesperson told KRON4 on Tuesday, “Tradeshift denies the allegations in the claim insofar as they are made against the company.”
Lanng, who co-founded the business software tech company, was fired in September for committing “serious allegations of sexual assault and harassment,” Tradeshift wrote in a press release.
Lurid and shocking details were described by Jane Doe in the 56-page suit. She said she entered a “24/7 slave relationship” with her “Master.”
According to the lawsuit, the contract’s rules included:
- “Always be sexually available for her Master when he needs sex and to never refuse him sex even when not wearing the collar.”
- “Worship her Master and all of his body.”
- “Every morning to read these rules as her waking ritual to remind the Slave of her ownership and submission.”
- “To give the Master full insight into any aspect of her life, including her phone, computer, finances and anything else.”
- “She will endure any pleasure or pain the Master gives her while wearing the collar.”
- “At work the slave will have freedom to use her own name and act independently as long as she remembers she is her Masters property and she is there to please him and for no other reason.”
- “She will look pretty and inspiring to her co-workers and dress as feminine as possible, preferably in dresses or skirts.”
Jane Doe is represented by attorneys Bryan Freedman and Miles Cooley. The attorneys said Jane Doe was required to maintain a weight between 130-155 pounds and uphold a public appearance “as a high-end, beautiful woman.”
According to the suit, she endured years of violent rapes involving bondage. Lanng is also accused of sexually trafficking his executive assistant around the world.
Lanng took his assistant to foreign countries “under the guise of various trips for Tradeshift business,” the suit states. Tradeshift has offices in San Francisco, Denmark, Malaysia, China, Tokyo, Paris, London, and Australia.
Freedman and Cooley wrote that executives at Tradeshift knew about the abuse.
“Lanng’s horrific treatment of Jane Doe was known by and tacitly approved of by Tradeshift’s other founders,” the lawsuit claims. The alleged abuse turned “Tradeshift into a literal house of sexual horrors for her.”
Jane Doe claims that when she made complaints to the company’s human resources department, she was “ignored, isolated, marginalized and ultimately terminated with no explanation over the phone,” her attorneys wrote.
Lanng’s accuser believes he victimized more women who were “perversely” transported around the world. The former CEO allegedly “used his power, wealth and influence to traffic various women around the world by coercive means to satisfy his perverse, misogynistic, depraved and sexually violent proclivities.”
The lawsuit demands a jury trial.
On September 3, two days after he was fired from Tradeshift, Lanng wrote that he was leaving after 14 years with the company because of burnout.
Lanng wrote on LinkedIn, “I have spent the last four years, as many CEOs have, in constant fire drills, including Covid, down markets, and new financing rounds. I refused to quit, always finding a way, sometimes at great expense for my family or me. The result was the most severe burnout of my life. I have finally decided it is time for me to be doing something new, and in the meanwhile, spend more time with my family and myself,” Lanng wrote.
His post does not mention any sexual assault allegations.
According to Lanng’s LinkedIn page, he is currently working in London for a company building AI native software. His biography states, “I’m unstoppably curious, a serial entrepreneur, an incurable nerd, and always think about the big picture. I’m a Sociologist by training, and a rebel by nature.”
In the wake of the CEO’s firing, Tradeshift pledged to address employees’ complaints of workplace misconduct. The company’s website states, “Ensuring a safe and supportive working environment for our team is our paramount priority. Our company handbook and code of conduct outline clear behavioral expectations and policies, and all employees participate in mandatory annual training on the prevention of workplace harassment.”
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