An escalating legal battle has placed Rebel Wilson at the center of serious allegations. A young actor claims the Hollywood star orchestrated a deeply personal breach. Court documents reported by NewsWire on Friday, April 24, outline accusations of hacking, harassment, and reputational damage. As testimony unfolds in a high-profile defamation case, the claims have added a new layer of tension to an already contentious dispute.
Claims Of Hacked Account and Leaked Images
According to filings presented in court, actor Charlotte MacInnes alleges that her Snapchat account was compromised and used to distribute explicit images without her consent. The accusation is among the most serious claims raised in the lawsuit. There are broader disputes tied to Wilson’s directorial debut The Deb.
“Once I regained access to my account, I could see that whoever had hacked into the account had saved a nude photo of me that I had sent to my boyfriend and also uploaded a photo of a vagina (that wasn’t mine),” Ms MacInnes stated in her affidavit.
“They then sent these two photos to all of my contacts on Snapchat, including my family, as well as many strangers.”
The actor claims the incident occurred shortly after she initiated legal proceedings in September 2025. In her filing, she directly pointed to Wilson as the alleged orchestrator. “I believe that this was orchestrated by Rebel,” she alleged.
Describing the emotional toll, she added: “It was completely terrifying and caused me a new kind of anxiety. I was not myself for some time after.”
The lawsuit also touches on earlier tensions. There are claims that Wilson suggested MacInnes had withdrawn a sexual harassment complaint involving producer Amanda Ghost. MacInnes has strongly denied ever making such a complaint.
Rebel Wilson Dispute Deepens with Emotional Testimony
Beyond the hacking allegations, the court has heard claims of reputational harm and emotional distress tied to social media activity. MacInnes told the court she once admired Wilson but felt targeted by posts that allegedly portrayed her in a damaging light. “I remember crying every day for weeks (after the social media posts),” she said.
She further accused Wilson of hypocrisy in how the situation was handled publicly. “It was ‘sickening that Rebel presented herself as a whistleblower who spoke out to protect me’ when she ‘has only acted spitefully towards me with constant bullying and harassment’.”
Expanding on that sentiment, she added: “I was also angry that Rebel claims to be someone who stands up for women and young Australian talent but then was so maliciously and unfairly persisting with a narrative that painted me as a liar, prostitute, sell out, and whore.”
The actor described the fallout as isolating. According to her: “I was confused as to how she had ever been accepted by this industry as a respectful professional, as it felt to me that these actions were somehow comfortable to her.”
She also told the court it was “heartbreaking” to see others accept that narrative. “I continue to feel unsafe in the industry I had once dreamed of, as Rebel is so well known and I do not yet feel I have enough of a voice to fight back,” she said.
The case has also drawn in Wilson’s wife, Ramona Agruma. MacInnes alleges that a social media post referencing memory loss felt like a jab at her courtroom testimony. “I felt as though she was mocking the evidence that I gave,” she said.
Meanwhile, Ghost provided her own account during proceedings. She revealed to the court that she became frustrated only after hearing Wilson’s version of events. “I wasn’t annoyed at the beginning, I was annoyed after Rebel presented a case against her to me,” she said.
Text messages presented in court offered another perspective. Wilson was relaying that MacInnes had described the situation as harmless. “Charlotte says all good. She just meant ‘it was a bizarre situation’ not that she personally felt uncomfortable x,” Wilson wrote. The producer replied, “Oh thank f**k for that!!”
The trial, which continues to draw attention in entertainment circles, is expected to hear further testimony from Wilson and other key figures in the coming days.



