logo
Jared Leto accused of sexual misconduct and 'predatory, terrifying' behaviour by nine women

Jared Leto accused of sexual misconduct and 'predatory, terrifying' behaviour by nine women

Yahoo09-06-2025
Oscar-winning American actor and Thirty Seconds From Mars frontman Jared Leto has been accused of sexual misconduct by nine women.
In a report published by Air Mail, multiple women accused the 53-year-old star of Fight Club, Requiem For A Dream, Dallas Buyers Club and Suicide Squad of inappropriate behaviour.
The allegations date back to the early 2000s, with one woman calling it 'an open secret' that he texted sexual remarks to teenage models.
Allegations against Leto emerged last month, when DJ Allie Teilz shared an old Facebook post, written in 2012, on her Instagram Story.
'Youre [sic] not really in L.A. until Jared Leto tries to force himself on you backstage… In a kilt.. And a snow hat. I was assaulted and traumatized by this creep when I was 17,' she wrote. In separate story, she added: 'He knew my age and didn't care. What he did was predatory, terrifying and unacceptable.'
One woman told the publication that in 2006, when she was 16-years-old, Leto approached her outside a Los Angeles café. She claimed Leto was sat with fellow actor Ashley Olsen – who was then 19 – and he had grabbed her arm.
'I looked down and it was Jared Leto,' she told Air Mail, adding: 'We had a quick conversation, and he got my number.' She went on to say that Leto called her home a few days later, recalling: 'I don't know if he was on drugs or what … It was the weirdest, grossest voice … [but] for me, it's Jared, you know?'
'And the conversations turned sexual,' she continued. 'He'd ask things like: 'Have you ever had a boyfriend? Have you ever sucked a dick?''
Model Laura La Rue came forward with similar claims, saying that when she was 16-years-old in 2008, she was at an event in a private residence in Beverly Hills where Leto was 'watching her so intensely'.
'He asked how old I was. I said, 'I'm 16. How old are you?'' La Rue told Air Mail. Leto, who was 36 at the time, then reportedly asked for her number. The two began an email correspondence, which resulted in her visiting Leto's home in April 2009, the outlet alleges.
'I remember him teasing me the whole time I was there,' La Rue said, adding: 'He was flirting with me. He'd lean in close, then pull away, like it was a game.'
She described a separate visit when she was 17 years old, where she alleged Leto walked out of a room completely naked. 'He just walked out, dick out, like it was normal… I thought maybe this was just what adult men do,' she said.
Another woman who spoke to the outlet said that she and Leto began texting while she was still underage. She alleged he would ask her inappropriate questions during her visits to his house, including 'Do any of the little boys you hang out with fuck you?'
The woman alleged that once, when she was 18, Leto had 'suddenly pulled his penis out and started masturbating'. She told Air Mail: 'He walked over, grabbed my hand, and put it on him. He leaned in and said: 'I want you to spit on it.''
A representative of Leto has 'expressly denied' the multiple accusations reported in the Air Mail exposé, saying the claims were 'demonstrably false'.
This is not the first time that Leto's behaviour has been questioned and called out.
Similar claims were made in 2005, when The New York Post shared a story with the opening line: 'Jared Leto likes 'em young' after he had been spotted with Olsen and Lindsay Lohan. At the time, sources told the publication he had been 'aggressively pursuing many of the teen models shacked up at the Maritime Hotel'.
In 2018, Metro reported on a Twitter post made by Dylan Sprouse, who is married to model Barbara Palvin. The post read: 'Yo @JaredLeto now that you've slid into the DMs of every female model aged 18–25, what would you say your success rate is?'
Guardians Of The Galaxy and Superman director James Gunn replied to Sprouse's tweet at the time, saying: 'He starts at 18 on the internet?'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Jelly Roll's Wife Shares Honest Thoughts on His Dramatic Weight-Loss Transformation
Jelly Roll's Wife Shares Honest Thoughts on His Dramatic Weight-Loss Transformation

Yahoo

time14 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Jelly Roll's Wife Shares Honest Thoughts on His Dramatic Weight-Loss Transformation

Jelly Roll's Wife Shares Honest Thoughts on His Dramatic Weight-Loss Transformation originally appeared on Men's Fitness. Jelly Roll's wife prefers him on the squishy side. Jelly Roll's wife, Alyssa DeFord—known online as Bunnie XO—playfully poked fun at her trimmed-down husband on TikTok. "When you have to check and make sure he's still your squish after all the weight loss," she wrote, referencing Jelly Roll's impressive weight loss. The clip shows Jelly Roll leaning against a rock wall as Bunnie stood in front of him. She lunged forward, slamming her chest against his, prompting a surprised look from Jelly Roll before he joked with her to do it again. After the second slam, Jelly Roll showed a playful look of pain before pulling Bunnie into an embrace. The couple tied the knot in 2016 and renewed their vows in 2023. While their love has stayed strong, Jelly Roll's appearance has significantly changed since they married nearly a decade ago. His weight-loss journey has been public, with updates shared periodically on his progress. At his heaviest, he weighed over 500 pounds, but he's committed to a lifestyle recently, he revealed he was about to drop below 300 pounds for the first time since middle school. As he checks off his weight-loss milestones, Jelly Roll has his sights set on reaching 250 pounds and eventually doing a shirtless magazine cover. "For the non-fluffy people in the world, I would give y'all some educational course here—to do all the fun stuff in life, you've got to be under 250. I want to skydive, I want to ride a roller coaster. I want to ride a bull," Jelly Roll said on an episode of Jimmy Kimmel Live earlier this Roll's Wife Shares Honest Thoughts on His Dramatic Weight-Loss Transformation first appeared on Men's Fitness on Aug 19, 2025 This story was originally reported by Men's Fitness on Aug 19, 2025, where it first appeared. Solve the daily Crossword

DOD to offer new medal for personnel deployed to Southern Border
DOD to offer new medal for personnel deployed to Southern Border

Yahoo

time14 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

DOD to offer new medal for personnel deployed to Southern Border

The Pentagon announced a new military decoration that will recognize service members stationed at the U.S.-Mexico border as part of the Trump administration's effort to bolster border security. A U.S. defense official confirmed to Military Times the veracity of a memorandum regarding the medal that began circulating online several days ago. 'Effective immediately, the Mexican Border Defense Medal (MBDM), is hereby established to recognize Service members deployed to the U.S. international border with Mexico for DoD support to United States Customs and Border Protection (CBP),' a memo uploaded to the Navy subreddit reads. Previously, service members collaborating with CBP were awarded the Armed Forces Service Medal, but the Mexican Border Defense Medal will take its place, according to the memo. Military personnel qualify for the medal if they have been 'permanently assigned, attached, or detailed to a unit that deployed' in support of a military operation supporting CBP within 100 nautical miles of the U.S.-Mexico border after Jan. 20, 2025, when President Trump assumed office. After chase, US Navy, Coast Guard intercept 1,296 pounds of cocaine Military personnel must have operated within Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, California or the adjacent U.S. waters out to 24 nautical miles, the memo said. Service members and veterans can apply to have their Armed Forces Service Medal swapped out with the Mexican Border Defense Medal, but they are not allowed to possess both at once. Trump signed an executive order on Jan. 20 to deter the 'unlawful mass migration' of illegal aliens into the United States by deploying supplemental military personnel along the Southern Border, among other strategies. Over the last eight months, the administration has ramped up its border security mission. U.S. Northern Command established Joint Task Force-Southern Border on March 14, 2025, to lead immigration enforcement efforts. As of July 2, approximately 8,500 military personnel were attached to the task force. The administration has also deployed the U.S. Navy to intercept and halt the flow of illicit drugs into the country. On Aug. 11, U.S. Navy Arleigh Burke-class guided missile destroyer Sampson, along with the U.S. Coast Guard, intercepted 1,296 pounds of cocaine from a drug smuggling vessel. Solve the daily Crossword

R.I. Ethics Commission wrestles with lawmaker's bid to rejoin list of attorneys hired by state
R.I. Ethics Commission wrestles with lawmaker's bid to rejoin list of attorneys hired by state

Yahoo

time14 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

R.I. Ethics Commission wrestles with lawmaker's bid to rejoin list of attorneys hired by state

Rep. Jason Knight, a Barrington Democrat, sits before the Rhode Island Ethics Commission on Aug. 19, 2025. (Photo by Christopher Shea/Rhode Island Current) Does a state lawmaker qualify as an independent contractor when hired by Rhode Island's court system to represent clients who can't otherwise rely on a public defender? That was the question that kept the Rhode Island Ethics Commission debating for more than 40 minutes as its members weighed Rep. Jason Knight's bid to rejoin the judiciary's roster of attorneys representing indigent clients. Commission staff say the state's ethics code clearly bars Knight from returning to the court's list because he's a lawmaker and thus an independent contractor that would be paid by the court. But the panel is now exploring whether there's a way to let him back without running afoul of its own 'revolving door' rule. Knight, a Barrington Democrat, had been on the list before his election to the Rhode Island House of Representatives in 2016. In 2019, he requested his name be removed because the rates the criminal courts paid were not high enough. 'The cases were basically practice killers,' he said in an interview after the ethics commission meeting. 'To do them correctly, you would have to set aside just about everything in your world and (as) criminal defense lawyers, we're solo outfits, you need to be thoughtful in what your two hands can do on any given day.' At the time, court-appointed lawyers were paid by the judiciary $90 an hour for representing clients facing Class 1 felony charges for crimes like rape, kidnapping and robbery. The rate was $60 an hour for Class 2 crimes such as breaking and entering, larceny, possession of a stolen motor vehicle and certain drug offenses. Lawyers representing someone accused of murder were paid $100 an hour. In April, the Rhode Island Supreme Court increased the range from $112 for most cases to $142 per hour for clients facing murder charges. Knight now says he wants to return to the court's rotating list as a way to gain some additional revenue as he 'thinks about what the future's going to bring.' 'I need to get back on the horse,' Knight told the Ethics Commission. There's just one problem: The state ethics code bars elected officials from taking state jobs until they've been out of the General Assembly for at least a year. That's the position staff attorney Lynn Radiches urged the commissioners to keep. 'Indigent clients do have a right to an attorney, they do not have a right to Mr. Knight as their attorney.' she said. 'I don't write the rules, but I've become pretty good at interpreting them.' Officials can work for the state if they held the position at the time of their election, but Radiches said because Knight withdrew from the court list in 2019 he is ineligible to return. But commissioners argue that just because Knight would be appointed by the court to a client does not mean he is necessarily working for the state. 'He is providing services, as an attorney, to his client — just like a private attorney would be,' said commissioner Frank Cenerini. 'And he, or any person providing indigent services, is still bound by the legal code of ethics.' That's not how John Marion, executive director of Common Cause Rhode Island and a longtime observer of the commission, sees it. 'The money is coming from the state of Rhode Island,' Marion said in an interview. 'That's the point of the rule.' Chairman Lauren E. Jones acknowledged that the court may cut Knight's checks, but said it's only in order to represent a third party. 'He's not representing the interest of his contractor,' Jones argued. The panel ultimately rejected its staff's advisory opinion but stopped short of ruling in Knight's favor. Instead, it directed staff to draft a new opinion on what legally defines an independent contractor in Rhode Island. Should the commission grant an exception for Knight, Marion warns it could set a dangerous precedent. 'If we start down that path, that only leads to a place where there is no enforceable code of ethics and that's not a good place,' Marion said. The new advisory opinion is expected to be complete by the time the panel reconvenes in September. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX Solve the daily Crossword

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store