Woman claims she was secretly filmed by hotel employee, then blackmailed

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Thursday, December 6, 2018
Woman claims she was spied on then blackmailed at a hotel
A woman filed a $100 million lawsuit after she alleges that she was recorded without her consent at a Hampton Inn & Suites in downtown Albany.

ALBANY, New York -- A Chicago area woman, who alleges that she was video recorded while taking a shower at a hotel and then blackmailed, has filed a $100 million lawsuit.

The lawsuit, which does not identify the woman, claims that an unidentified employee had secretly recorded her at the Hilton's Hampton Inn & Suites in downtown Albany, New York, in 2015.

She did not realize she was recorded until September when she received an email with a link to the shower video on an X-rated website with her full name in the video's title. The message read: "This is you right?"

"All I could think is, 'My life is over. If this gets out, my life is absolutely over,'" said the woman, who fears for her safety.

According to the complaint, the next day, the extorter threatened to post videos of her on other sites unless she sent a new private video in exchange. The message said: "You have until midnight to send me something good. Or I will post videos, your name, info everywhere. Then I send to people you know. You can enjoy being famous."

She alleges when she did not respond, over the next couple of weeks the extorter posted the video on more sites and then created an email address using her name, and emailed the video to her friends, family and colleagues, along with this message that read, in part, "Dear friends, I am trying to recruit some friends to help out a friend's art project (for which i got to be the model!) It's a little daring. Let me know what you think."

"It was just absolutely traumatizing because these are people I went to law school with. They're friends, they're coworkers. And they were sent a link to what looks like an email I sent," the woman said.

The woman alleges the person then sent another email demanding she send thousands of dollars to a bitcoin address in exchange for pulling the video. "You're buying peace. Easy right?" the message said.

"You don't go into a hotel room and think something like this can happen to you. And it happened to me," she said. "If we can spare one more person from this happening to, that would make it worth it."

She also thinks that she might not be the only victim.

"We investigated extensively -- kind of as far as we can go without Hilton's help at this point -- and that investigation has revealed at least there is another victim," said Roland Christiansen, an attorney for the woman.

"The safety and security of our guests is our highest priority," a hotel spokesperson told ABC News. "We will continue to work with the authorities to discover the perpetrator and see that she/he is held accountable."

The hotel said it recently underwent a complete renovation and that during that process, no recording devices of any kind were uncovered.

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