Hot Bank Clerk In Sicily Fired For Saucy Clips Posted Online Decides To Make P0rn

An attractive bank clerk in Sicily who was fired from her job after posting saucy clips of herself in lingerie online has decided to make a porn film.

The woman has been named as Benedetta D’Anna, 40, with the stage name ‘Benny Green’, and she used to be a bank clerk in Syracuse, in Sicily, in southern Italy before she was fired.

The woman, who is reportedly from Piedmont in northern Italy, but who has lived in Syracuse for 17 years, was fired from the bank where she worked, at first receiving a warning letter, followed by a suspension letter, and then finally receiving a letter notifying her of her dismissal for just cause.

Benedetta D’Anna in the porn movie called ‘La bancaria’. (Newsflash)

Benny Green then reportedly made an adult film called ‘La Bancaria’ (‘The Bank Clerk’). She is also appealing her dismissal and claiming that it is linked to images that she took in her private life, arguing that they have no bearing on her professionalism at work.

She said: “I have always been discriminated against. I have always posed as a model, and since September 2020 I have been signed up to a private platform where I post more explicit content. Then from last year, on my social networks, I have advertised some soirees. But I’ve always done everything outside of my working hours. For me it was abuse. I am a woman who intends to challenge false morality.”

The bank, meanwhile, has reportedly said that it disputes her “unjustified absence from service by failing to advise of absence, and then performance of non-bank work during absence from service motivated by illness, and performance of professional activity in violation of the national labour contract.”

Benedetta D’Anna, a bank employee in Syracuse for 17 years. (@seredanna8/Newsflash)

But the woman’s lawyer, who has been named as Piero Ortisi, said that the bank is bullying her. He said: “The circumstances relating to the worker’s own life have no relevance, especially where they are extraneous to the professional context.”