Tech millionaire accused of traff!cking women onto luxury yachts before r@ping and giving them STIs

Tech millionaire accused of traff!cking women onto luxury yachts before r@ping and giving them STIs

A US tech millionaire has been accused of using funds from his federal government-contracted company to s3x traffic women.

 

 

According to Mail Online, Greg Brady, 64, allegedly cheated on his then-wife Claudia Brady, using an online dating website to procure ‘hundreds’ of women for trips on his luxury boats.

 

Tech millionaire accused of traff!cking women onto luxury yachts before r@ping and giving them STIs

 

Some of the women claim they were then r@ped or s3xually assaulted while aboard the vessels, according to legal documents filed by his ex-wife.

 

Greg Brady is not facing criminal charges and has categorically denied all of the accusations.

 

The lurid lawsuit emerged amid the fallout from his bitter divorce, which also saw him accuse ex-wife Claudia of stealing trade secrets from his former company, One Network.

 

The supply chain tech business is a Department of Defense contractor and was recently awarded a $62 million contract from the United States Air Force.

 

Claudia Brady’s new filing claims: ‘His pattern was to locate women online, often through a website designed to cover for such activities – millionairematch.com.

 

‘Mr. Brady’s pattern is to identify women he wants to have s3x with, pay using One Network funds to have them flown to the One Net (Mr. Brady’s yacht) in international waters.’

 

One Net is an 86ft yacht which can accommodate eight guests in three cabins. 

 

The process would be repeated, ‘three or four times’ over the course of a weekend, according to the document.

 

Some women, ‘stated that they were raped by Mr. Brady while on the One Net. Others managed to fight him off,’ the filing, seen by DailyMail.com, states.

 

The document contains a screenshot of a text purportedly from one of the women who met Brady on another of his yachts, Noble House, in which she claims she was r@ped at Brady’s $6 million penthouse home in Dallas. 

 

Noble House is a 177ft superyacht that boasts a gym, Jacuzzi, bar and baby grand piano among the accommodation for 12 people.

 

‘I feel like he used me,’ the message reads. ‘He raped me at the Azure. I was super angry about it. But I’m over it, lesson learned!

 

‘I’m pretty sure I was just one of many women he used and didn’t give two s***s about. But that’s gonna be his karma to deal with.’

 

The allegations appear in a petition for a Bill of Review filed by Claudia Brady to have her prenuptial agreement overturned.

 

Ms Brady claims the agreement was based on fraud since she had no knowledge of her ex-husband’s alleged infidelities at the time it was signed. 

 

The document claims that five women allegedly had a consensual or non-consensual s3xual relationship with Brady aboard his yachts. 

 

Among them was allegedly a Colombian national who, ‘personally contacted Ms. Brady to tell her about the fact that Mr. Brady had transmitted herpes to her’, the petition states.

 

It goes on to claim that Brady admitted he contracted genital herpes while in college. 

 

Another woman, referred to as Jane Doe 1, was an employee of billionaire Mark Cuban, according to the document.

 

The filing states her travel arrangements to the One Net were, ‘made by the secretary of One Network Enterprises using a company credit card’.

But once aboard the vessel, things took a turn for the worse, according to the petition, which states that Brady became paranoid that he was being surveilled by the FBI.

 

The petition narrates how the woman had given Cuban’s email to Brady with her boss’ consent, since the two had both attended the University of Indiana.

 

However, the document claims that Brady became ‘erratic’ and began screaming ‘violently’ at her, accusing his then-wife Claudia Brady of conspiring with Cuban and Oracle boss Larry Ellison to spy on him.

 

The woman was then flown away from the luxury vessel, according to the petition, before another woman referred to as Jane Doe 2 arrived the same day.

 

The second woman claimed that during her trip, she was ‘assaulted’ by Brady.

 

‘Had she known that Mr. Brady had engaged and would continue to engage in what is believed to be hundreds of acts of s3x trafficking, she never would entered into a premarital agreement with him,’ the petition states. ‘She was fraudulently induced into signing the agreement.’ 

 

The third Jane Doe is the woman who claimed she was r@ped at the Azure penthouse in Dallas.

 

The document alleges that she was given multiple checks as ‘hush money’ in the aftermath.

 

Meanwhile, a fourth unnamed woman is said to have signed an NDA following her encounter with Brady. 

 

Claudia Brady claims she is still owed $4 million as part of her divorce settlement after Brady sold his company for $850 million.

 

However, he has claimed that she violated confidentiality clauses in the agreement meaning she is no longer entitled to the money.

 

Brady also accused her of stealing One Network’s trade secrets by planting listening devices, accessing company phones and computers and leaking information to the media – all of which she denies.

 

His filing accuses his ex-wife Claudia of engaging in, ‘a nasty smear campaign’ against the company. 

 

Her lawyers argue that the litigation could be tantamount to malicious prosecution and has been brought to ‘bully, harass, and intimidate—indeed, to silence—Ms. Brady’.

 

Ms Brady’s petition claims the only inside knowledge she has is that her ex-husband’s company, ‘fraudulently overbilled on some of its government contracts’.

 

Her petition states that this allegation forms part of a ‘Qui Tam’ lawsuit filed in federal court. 

 

Qui Tam lawsuits allow whistleblowers to prosecute cases of fraud against the government on their behalf.

 

It is not the first time Brady has been dragged through the courts.

 

In 2005, the Securities and Exchange Commission filed suit in Dallas federal court charging Brady with insider trading and other federal securities law violations.

 

The SEC said that he and two former senior officers of Dallas-based technology company i2 Technologies, Inc. committed alleged accounting improprieties involving ‘materially misstated software license revenues’ to the tune of $1 billion.

 

The company agreed to pay a $10 million civil penalty and nominal $1 disgorgement but did not admit or deny the SEC’s findings.

 

Blue Yonder, which acquired One Network, said Brady stepped back following the sale.

 

‘Greg Brady separated from One Network in connection with the closing of Blue Yonder’s acquisition of the company on Aug 1, 2024, and he has no role at One Network, nor any employment or consulting relationship with Blue Yonder,’ a spokeswoman said.

 

Brady said in a statement to DailyMail: ‘We categorically deny all of these claims.’

 

 

The couple married in 2011 and share two daughters. They divorced in 2021.

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