Finance Bro Refused To Take $1M Settlement After Female Boss Harassed Him

A former JPMorgan banker who accused a top executive of workplace harassment and turning him into a personal servant has taken a dramatic legal turn, dropping his entire state lawsuit and arriving at court with five new attorneys ready to file a sweeping federal case.

The saga began when the banker, identified as Chirayu Rana, made allegations against former JPMorgan executive Lorna Hajdini. JPMorgan reportedly offered him $1 million to settle and stay quiet, but Rana reportedly had eyes on $12 million, pushing the dispute into the courts instead.

The original lawsuit included allegations that Hajini threatened his career and treated him as a servant, claims that JPMorgan’s internal investigation found to have no merit.

Things were not trending in Rana’s favor. His previous attorney, Daniel Kaiser, attempted to withdraw from the case hours before a major hearing. Hajini had filed a defamation countersuit of her own after the case turned her into a public figure and led to her receiving threatening emails. Rana also lost his bid to keep the lawsuit anonymous.

Then, in a surprising reversal, Rana reappeared in court with an entirely new legal team of five attorneys. Rather than amending the original state lawsuit, they announced plans to drop it entirely and file a new federal complaint by the end of June. The new case is expected to include allegations of racial discrimination, retaliation, and interference with family and medical leave protections, broadening the fight well beyond the original claims that made headlines.

His attorneys insist this is not a retreat. They argue the original lawsuit was incomplete and that federal court is the appropriate venue for the full scope of claims. One attorney stated that the public has been fed a distorted version of events and that the story is about to change significantly.

Central to that promise is what the legal team describes as substantial new evidence, though no details have been made public. Earlier in the case, Rana’s team introduced an anonymous witness, described as a family friend, who claimed to have been present during a late-night encounter involving Hajini and Rana.

According to court filings, the witness alleged he woke to find Hajini behaving erratically and later claimed she pressured him to join her and Rana. The witness said Rana told her to stop and leave, and afterward expressed concerns she was pressuring him. JPMorgan and Hajini continued to deny the allegations even after the witness came forward.

Now, with a second front opening in federal court while Hajini’s defamation countersuit remains active in state court, Rana faces a complicated and costly legal path ahead. A state court hearing is still scheduled for June 23rd, meaning the legal battle on that front is not yet closed.

Both sides remain far apart, with each accusing the other of fabricating the entire situation. Until the federal complaint is actually filed and reviewed, the case rests on promises rather than proof.