Rhea Chakraborty has finally broken her silence — not with denial, but with heartbreak.
In a gut-wrenching interview with CNBC TV18, the actress recounted the personal and professional destruction she and her brother Showik endured in the aftermath of Sushant Singh Rajput’s death in 2020. Accused, vilified, and jailed — their world collapsed overnight, long before the courts ever spoke.
“We both lost our careers,” Rhea said, her voice heavy with grief. “I stopped getting work. My brother, who had cracked 96 percentile in CAT and secured admission into a top B-school, was arrested before he could even begin. By the time he was released, the opportunity was gone. So was his dream.”
Even worse, Showik’s corporate future was erased by the tabloid feeding frenzy. “No company wanted to hire someone whose name had been dragged through headlines — even if he was innocent.”
While the world moved on, the Chakraborty siblings were left to rebuild from zero. That pain led to Chapter 2 Drip, a self-made fashion label rooted in expression and survival.
Nearly four years later, in May 2024, the CBI cleared both Rhea and Showik of all charges. But by then, the damage was already done — not just to their reputations, but to their right to dream.
Rhea’s story isn’t just about innocence. It’s a mirror held up to an industry and media ecosystem that forgot its humanity — until it was too late.