Megan Thee Stallion has expanded her legal battle against YouTuber Milagro Gramz, filing an updated lawsuit that adds new allegations. Originally filed in October, the lawsuit accuses Gramz of “churning out falsehoods” regarding the Tory Lanez shooting incident and running a campaign to “denigrate, belittle, insult, and spread false statements” about Megan. Her attorneys wrote, “Enough is enough,” emphasizing that Megan, “a victim of violent crime and champion of women’s rights,” will no longer tolerate the alleged harassment.
Last month, Gramz responded by filing a motion to dismiss, claiming Megan’s lawsuit seeks to stifle free speech. According to Meghann Cuniff, the motion stated, “Rather than rebut the allegations online, Plaintiff chose to use the Courts to intimidate and silence the Defendant from exercising her First Amendment rights… and also to serve as a warning to other critics.”
The revised lawsuit now alleges that Tory Lanez and his father, Sonstar Peterson, discussed paying Gramz to harass Megan during a recorded prison phone call. “In one phone call, the Petersons confidently asserted that Ms. Pete would be unable to prove that Mr. Peterson paid Defendant for attacking Ms. Pete,” the filing states.
At this time, Lanez’s legal team has not addressed these claims.
This development follows a judge’s order requiring Megan and Gramz to participate in court-mandated mediation. Scheduled for March 10 via Zoom, the session aims to resolve the dispute and requires both parties to submit mediation reports within a week of the meeting.
The case highlights ongoing tensions in the aftermath of the Tory Lanez shooting trial, as Megan continues to push back against what her team describes as targeted harassment campaigns.