The Spin

Kylie Jenner's representatives have not commented on the lawsuit. The family has long positioned itself as champions of female empowerment and hard work β€” a stark contrast to allegations that her household operations relied on exploiting Latina workers.

The Tea

Sources close to the situation say this is just the beginning. With two housekeepers now suing, former employees across Jenner's orbit are reportedly comparing notes. The mention of TimothΓ©e Chalamet's home being cleaned raises questions about what other household staff may have experienced.

The Receipts

Delgado Soto's pay was reduced from $41.66/hour to $35 following a complaint about harassment. She left her desperate note on August 6, 2025 β€” the same day she texted supervisors about anxiety and sleep disturbance before being effectively terminated. The 31-page lawsuit names Itzel Sibrian as staff supervisor alongside Tri Star Services and La Maison Family Services.

The Last Byte

Two housekeepers, same legal team, identical allegations of harassment and wage theft β€” this pattern is becoming impossible to dismiss as a one-off complaint.

Kylie Jenner is facing heat from a second former housekeeper who claims her employment with the reality star turned beauty mogul was nothing short of psychological warfare. Juana Delgado Soto filed a lawsuit Thursday alleging she worked for Jenner starting in 2019 and endured years of systematic abuse, including being denied meal and rest breaks, sick pay, holiday pay, and facing what her 31-page complaint describes as "severe and pervasive harassment." The suit, obtained by Rolling Stone, names not just Jenner but also Kylie Jenner Inc., staff supervisor Itzel Sibrian, Tri Star Services, and La Maison Family Services as defendants.

The most damning allegation? After Delgado Soto's brother died, her request to attend his funeral was denied. She claims she was asked to provide documentation of his death β€” proof that would have required navigating bureaucratic hurdles while grieving.

Instead of compassion, she says she was pressured to return to work immediately after the loss. When she finally reached a breaking point, Delgado Soto didn't storm out or cause a scene. According to the lawsuit, she left a handwritten note on Jenner's massage table β€” the very place where the billionaire was set to receive treatment.

"I need to express just how terribly I am mentally abused," the letter read, per court documents. "I really apologize for letting you know about all these situations, I know you wouldn't allow this to happen if you were aware of it." The note was a desperate plea from someone who believed her employer simply didn't know what was happening in her own home. It's unclear whether Jenner ever read the letter.

What followed, however, suggests she β€” or those managing her household β€” certainly knew something had shifted. The next day, Delgado Soto claims she was threatened with termination and explicitly instructed never to contact Jenner again. Two days later, she went to an emergency room where a doctor ordered her to rest for a week due to stress-related symptoms.

Her request for sick leave? Denied. And when she returned to work, supervisors allegedly laid out new rules: she was "no longer allowed" to look at Jenner, smile at Jenner, or even remain in any room if Jenner entered.

She was also required to photograph leftover food in the trash as proof she wasn't taking it home β€” a humiliating surveillance tactic that speaks to the level of distrust and control alleged in the lawsuit. The complaint also alleges Delgado Soto was "forced to clean defendant Jenner's boyfriend's house" without specifying who, though Jenner has been linked to actor TimothΓ©e Chalamet for three years. The suit asserts claims for whistleblower retaliation, race discrimination, failure to accommodate a disability, and failure to pay wages and overtime β€” seeking compensatory and punitive damages to be determined at trial.

This lawsuit comes just weeks after Angelica Hernandez Vasquez filed her own complaint against Jenner on April 17th, alleging supervisors at Jenner's Hidden Hills home shouted at her, snapped their fingers in her face, and treated her in a "demeaning and degrading manner" during roughly a year of employment beginning September 2024. Both women are represented by attorney Della Shaker, who signaled this is far from over. "No one is above the law, and there is enough evidence here to prove our client's claims," Shaker said in a statement. Jenner’s longtime spokesperson did not respond to Rolling Stone's request for comment β€” silence that, given the mounting allegations, is becoming increasingly difficult to maintain.

πŸ“° Sources

Rolling Stone

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