Veteran Hollywood actor who shoot up to fame for portraying the character Kang-The Conqueror- Jonathan Majors' legal worries does not seem to stop. Yes! you heard it right. Variety reported that multiple alleged abuse victims of Majors have come forward following his March arrest and are cooperating with the Manhattan district attorney’s office. Jonathan Majors will be appearing in the court on May 8 as he is facing charges of domestic violence after his own girlfriend reported him to the NYPD. However, Jonathan Majors' legal team denied the domestic violence allegation and also shared chats of his girlfriend who was seen apologising for reporting the actor as she did not know that he will be arrested. Coming back to Jonathan Majors' abused victims, here's what the prominent US media portal says-
The prospect of more women waiting in the wings would mark a dramatic turn in the case and comes on the heels of Majors’ publicists and management firm cutting ties with the embattled actor earlier this week.“Jonathan Majors is innocent and has not abused anyone. We have provided irrefutable evidence to the District Attorney that the charges are false. We are confident that he will be fully exonerated,” said Majors’ attorney Priya Chaudhry was quoted saying in a statement.
For the unversed, Jonathan was arrested on March 25 in the Chelsea neighborhood of Manhattan on charges of strangulation, assault and harassment. At the time, an NYPD spokesperson said in a statement that a 30-year-old woman told police she had been assaulted by Majors, 33, and that she “sustained minor injuries to her head and neck and was removed to an area hospital in stable condition.” But Chaudhry mounted an immediate and aggressive response, insisting that the actor “is provably the victim of an altercation with a woman he knows” and suggested the woman was having “an emotional crisis.”
'It was my fault': Jonathan Majors girlfriend's chat shared by Marvel actor's attorney
Not only this, Chaudhry’s husband, Andrew Bourke, is serving as Majors’ crisis publicist and doubled down on the narrative that Majors was the victim when he released a series of text messages on March 30 that were intended to be exonerating. In the text exchange, which has not been independently verified, the woman wrote to Majors, “I told them it was my fault for trying to grab your phone” and stressed that she told police “this was not an attack.” The woman allegedly wrote