Founder's Messy Divorce Collides With Fraud Allegations at Qyral

A bitter lawsuit between Qyral founder Hanieh Sigari and her husband Dariusz Banasik has exposed serious legal problems at the supplement company—and it's getting personal fast.

Banasik fired off a "legal update" email from the official Qyral Corporate account right after news of the lawsuit broke. The message accused Sigari of fiduciary breaches and alleged that Qyral leadership had administered prescription-grade products like Semaglutide and Tirzepatide to consultants and customers in public settings. That's practicing medicine without a license.

The allegations don't stop there. Banasik claimed Sigari enlisted consultants to create dummy accounts and funnel commissions to company leaders. He named Hanzel Corella, Elisa Kurzban, Brittany Buckley, and Maureen LeBau when he removed Sigari from the company—suggesting these leaders may have been personally enriching themselves through fake consultant accounts.

The injection scandal likely would have stayed quiet if the two weren't splitting up. That's the real problem here.

Multiple Qyral consultants have circulated emails between Banasik and a woman named Suzanne Lehman. In a December 17, 2023 message, Lehman disclosed an alleged affair between Sigari and her husband, Steve Lehman. Steve is in his 70s. Suzanne says they've been married for 42 years since she was 18. She described Sigari as roughly her daughter's age.

"I just found out he and your soon to be ex wife have been having an affair," Lehman wrote to Banasik. "I am devastated."

I can't confirm who leaked these emails, but multiple sources contacted me about them independently. The messages are now circulating widely among Qyral's consultant base.

The timing is suspicious. A federal lawsuit that directly cites the divorce. A termination that appears motivated by personal conflict rather than legitimate business concerns. And now private emails about infidelity floating through the company's ranks.

This isn't a divorce story—at least not primarily. But when a founder's personal drama directly affects the grounds for firing her, and when allegations of unlicensed medical practice and financial fraud emerge in the same breath, the personal becomes business. It becomes relevant. It becomes news.

The question now is whether regulators care about the motive behind these allegations or just the allegations themselves. Practicing medicine without a license isn't less serious because it happened during a divorce. Neither is skimming money through fake accounts.

Qyral's consultants are watching. They're the ones whose livelihoods depend on whether this company survives the fallout.


🤖 Quick Answer

What legal issues emerged from the Qyral founder's personal dispute?
A divorce lawsuit between founder Hanieh Sigari and husband Dariusz Banasik exposed allegations of unlicensed medical practice involving prescription medications like Semaglutide and Tirzepatide administered to consultants and customers, plus claims of fiduciary breaches and fraudulent commission schemes involving dummy accounts and company leadership.

How did Banasik publicly disclose the allegations?
Banasik sent a "legal update" email through Qyral's official corporate account immediately following news of the lawsuit, detailing accusations of fiduciary misconduct and unauthorized medical administration practices against company leadership and the founder.

What specific fraudulent practices were alleged at Qyral?
Allegations included the creation of dummy accounts by consultants to funnel commissions to company leaders, unauthorized administration of prescription-grade pharmaceutical


🔗 Related Articles

- BitConnect’s Craig Grant on the run from US authorities
- JRJR33 and Youngevity settle Spice Jazz fraud lawsuit
- $90,000 secret backroom affiliate deals @ Jeunesse (lawsuit)
- Ernest Ganz plays dumb with Receiver, cops entry of default
- Exp Realty dismissed from “drug & sexual assault” case