Court documents allege Rebel Wilson participated in creating websites designed to damage the reputations of the producers of her movie, “The Deb,” after they sued her for defamation.
Rebel Wilson, 46, is facing a lawsuit from the producers of Pitch Perfect – Gregor Cameron, Vince Holden, and Amanda Ghost. This legal action follows Wilson’s claims about difficulties during the film’s production, which she made in Los Angeles County Superior Court.
A newly submitted court document reveals that Katherine Case, a Vice President at the public relations firm The Agency Group, reportedly claimed Rebel was involved in a plan to build websites intended to damage Ghost’s reputation.
Court records show the initial lawsuit against Ghost for breaking their agreement included links to the websites amandaghost.com and amandaghostsucks.com.
According to a deposition Case gave to Samuel Moniz, Ghost’s lawyer, her boss, Melissa Nathan, mentioned that ‘Rebel wanted one of those websites’.
Case stated she responded by saying she expected a combination of the document Carolina found regarding Amanda Ghost, and the voice recording the intern had obtained.
Case testified that Nathan emailed her a Word document named ‘Amanda Ghost website.doc.’ Court records show the document’s creation and last editing were linked to Camp Sugar, Rebel Wilson’s production company.
A document submitted to the court as evidence revealed a screenshot of the file in question, clearly showing it was last saved by someone using the account ‘Camp Sugar’.
According to the legal documents, Case said she returned an edited copy of the Word document to Melissa.
This website aims to expose what its creators believe is Amanda Ghost’s pattern of intentionally harming the careers and lives of many artists.
She’s been called the Indian Ghislaine Maxwell, and her only known friend is the convicted singer Boy George.
The court also received an audio message from Jed Wallace, a crisis communications expert in Texas, which suggests Rebel was involved in having the website created.
The court also received screenshots of text messages exchanged between Wilson and Carolina Hurley, a Rebel representative from The Agency Group.
The recordings seem to capture the actress voicing her frustration that not enough negative press was appearing about Ghost.
I’m extremely frustrated by this situation. You didn’t share the damaging information about Ghost as requested, and now Amanda has successfully published several articles repeating the false claims from their unfounded lawsuit.
According to court documents, Rebel claims he wasn’t involved with the two websites accused of spreading false information about Ghost.
According to Allyson Thompson, a lawyer at HKP representing Rebel Wilson in the US, the testimony from Ms. Case demonstrates she has no real proof and cannot confirm that Rebel Wilson ever requested the creation of a whistleblower website targeting Ms. Ghost.
Ms. Case stated in court that she never had any conversations with Ms. Wilson and couldn’t say who originally wrote the document she edited. She explained that she received instructions for the website content from Jed Wallace, not Ms. Wilson.
Ms. Case stated that Ms. Nathan told her “Rebel wants one of those sites.” However, as Ms. Case’s testimony revealed, Ms. Nathan never said that Rebel specifically asked for a damaging website, or which site Rebel supposedly wanted.
Ms. Case didn’t directly state that Ms. Wilson was the one who wanted “one of those sites.” She also explained that anyone could create a document and use the name “Camp Sugar.” Furthermore, Ms. Case didn’t confirm the screenshot was genuine metadata, and no expert has determined that Ms. Wilson actually created the document in question.
Because the matter is currently in court, Ms. Wilson can’t say who she thinks approved the whistleblower websites instead of Ms. Ghost. However, she is willing to testify in court about who she believes was responsible for the websites’ purpose, development, and actual content. Testimony from Katherine Case supports her position.
Melissa Nathan is now involved in the public legal dispute between Justin Baldoni and Blake Lively.
The actress from Gossip Girl alleges that a co-star from her movie, It Ends With Us, worked with publicists to spread negative stories about her. Both the actor and the publicists named – Melissa Nathan and Jennifer Abel – have refuted these claims.
Rebel had previously spoken out about alleged wrongdoing, including claims of financial mismanagement, sexual harassment against her film’s lead actor, Charlotte MacInnes, intimidation related to the harassment claims, and efforts to prevent the film from being released.
Amanda Ghost, Gregor Cameron, and Vince Holden, the producers, have since filed a defamation lawsuit against the artist in California.
As a lifestyle expert, I’ve been following this situation closely, and it’s really upsetting. The actress from Pitch Perfect has strongly denied the accusations made against her, and she’s actually taken legal action herself. In her lawsuit, she’s detailing what she describes as a deeply concerning history of inappropriate behavior, including things like theft, bullying, and even sexual misconduct. It’s a serious situation, and she’s clearly standing up for herself.
A Los Angeles judge recently trimmed parts of a lawsuit filed by Wilson, removing accusations that producer Ghost had a pattern of ‘shady and unethical behavior,’ as reported by The Hollywood Reporter.
According to the report, Judge Thomas Long determined that many of Wilson’s arguments, such as the claim that the producer improperly took credit for part of the hit song ‘You’re Beautiful’ by James Blunt, didn’t relate to the current legal issue.
‘That’s not the kind of stuff I would be letting in at trial,’ the judge said.
We don’t have time to revisit the very start of this person’s career.
The judge rejected Wilson’s claims, calling them distractions from the core of the case.
According to the report, Wilson’s issues largely began with claims that Ghost had promised the actress certain benefits in exchange for her agreement to work with AI Film and Unigram on an upcoming, unreleased film.
He reportedly promised a co-writing credit, a recording contract with Warner Music, the ability to sign Australian musicians to the label, and ownership of the movie’s soundtrack.
However, Judge Long rejected Wilson’s claims, finding that Wilson didn’t provide enough specific information about how, when, where, and through what methods the statements were made.
Wilson’s attorneys asked the judge if they could revise their lawsuit, but the judge denied the request because they didn’t explain what changes they wanted to make.
The court dismissed six of Wilson’s accusations, specifically claims of fraud, failing to act in the best interest of others, past wrongdoing, and breaking contract terms.
Okay, so here’s the deal. Even though that awful lawsuit for emotional distress is still hanging over Ghost (and the other producers, ugh), the judge basically said he wasn’t actually part of the original deal – the verbal agreement between Wilson, AI Film, and Unigram. It’s like, he wasn’t even in the room when they made the promise! It’s… complicated, but honestly, it feels like a tiny win for Ghost, even with everything else going on. I’ve read the ruling like five times now, and that’s what I’m getting from it!
The producers requested the removal of claims about Ghost’s past misconduct and unethical behavior, her improper relationship with MacInnes, and Cameron’s tendency to use threats and force people to do things.
Despite Wilson claiming the allegations were relevant to the case, the court disagreed.
This news follows a setback for Wilson in her legal fight with the production companies led by her fellow producers, after a recent court decision in Australia.
Justice Elisabeth Peden, in her ruling for the New South Wales Supreme Court, expressed concern that allowing a portion of Wilson’s counterclaim to proceed could lead to contradictory decisions from the courts in California and New South Wales.
The lawsuit previously involved claims that Cameron and Holden stole $900,000 from the movie’s funds. It also claimed Wilson was pressured into signing agreements against their will.
However, the court upheld Wilson’s ability to pursue other legal action in California.
The US case is one of several separate lawsuits that have erupted after filming wrapped in 2023.
Actor MacInnes is suing Wilson in federal court because Wilson posted on social media that MacInnes had shared she experienced sexual harassment.
Despite MacInnes’s denials of any wrongdoing, Wilson continues to support the allegations made against him.
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2026-03-13 15:50