Following her legal win against Milagro Gramz, Megan Thee Stallion is now asking the court to stop the blogger from speaking about her altogether.
According to new court filings, the rapper’s legal team submitted a motion on Thursday (December 17) seeking a permanent injunction to block Gramz, whose real name is Milagro Cooper, from cyberstalking her. The three-time Grammy winner says the blogger’s content has caused her “substantial emotional distress” and created a “reasonable fear for her physical safety and health.”
If a judge approves the request, the injunction would come with several restrictions, including:
- Barring Gramz from contacting Megan in any form, written or in person.
- Requiring Gramz to stay at least 500 feet away from Megan for five years.
- Prohibiting Gramz from sharing any personal information about Megan.
- Blocking Gramz from reposting or circulating the deepfake video that surfaced during the trial.
- Preventing Gramz from making defamatory public statements about Megan’s trial testimony, mental state, “recreational use of alcohol,” or her family.
- Stopping Gramz from making statements meant to incite others against Megan.
- Barring any physical harassment or cyberstalking.
- Forcing Gramz to remove all statements about Megan that were central to the case.
Megan has accused Gramz of working alongside convicted R&B and hip-hop artist Tory Lanez, who is currently serving a 10-year prison sentence for shooting the rapper in July 2020.
“An injunction is essential to protect Ms. Pete against the threat of harm posed to her safety and well-being by Defendant’s conduct,” the filing states.
Attorneys for the “Bigger In Texas” rapper argue that without court intervention, Megan would continue to face “irreparable harm” fueled by the blogger and her online following.
Back in late November, Gramz was found liable on all three defamation claims brought by Megan, whose real name is Megan Pete, and was initially ordered to pay $75,000 in damages. In footage recorded by court reporter Meghann Cuniff, Megan said she was “happy” with the outcome. The final damages were later reduced to $59,000.
