Jennifer Lawrence New Nude Pictures Leaked In Second Wave Of Shocking Hacking Scandal
More alleged nude photos of Jennifer Lawrence have come to surface in the second wave of massive hacking scandal. The new naked photos of the Oscar Winning actress appeared on various Internet sites on September 20, according to the reports by Hollywoodlife.
The first set of actress' controversial photos had appeared in August. The second set of the photos appeared on the infamous forums 4chan and Reddit, but they were later removed from both the forums, according to reports by TMZ. However, by then the photos had already circulated in social media.
Other celebs who have become victim to this second hack include, Kim Kardashian, Aubrey Plaza, Hayden Panettiere, Leelee Sobieski, Mary-Kate Olsen. The photos are said to be stolen from the iCloud accounts of the celeb and have raised a major privacy breach debate.
Even Kaley Cuoco became the victim of this infamous hack for the second time. Cuoco also revealed in her recent interview to Jimmy Kimmel she was horrified to see her nude photos being shared on online.
"I totally have Google alerts that come to my phone...so, every day there's like 30 'Kaley Cuoco nude photos,' [but] it's been going on for years. It's all these fake ones," she dished. "So then, this one came up, and I was like, 'Oh, it's another fake one...," she said according to Fox News.
Cuoco even said that she notified her family about the leak that very day. She reportedly told them that he fake nude photos leak has happened. She also told them that, contrary to the rumours, she is not getting divorced and is not pregnant.
The leak is currently being investigated by FBI and Apple. The FBI has also probed previous leaks of nude celebrity images, including Scarlett Johansson, Mila Kunis, Christina Aguilera and Erin Andrews. In these cases the convicts have been punished with imprisonment.
It is speculated that the person responsible for this infamous leak on 4Chan website would also be prosecuted. The lawyers of celebrities involved have already called this act a 'privacy breach.'