
Looks like the Hot Girl Coach is heading back to court — but this time, it’s not about Tory. It’s about talking too much online.
Megan Thee Stallion’s defamation lawsuit against commentator Milagro Cooper (better known as Milagro Gramz) is officially going to trial. 👩🏽⚖️
And baby, the tea is scalding. Court documents show jurors will be instructed that Milagro deleted thousands of text messages after being told not to. Yes, you read that right — deleted evidence after receiving a written notice to preserve it.
🧾 What the Legal Docs Say
According to recent filings and rulings:
A federal judge sanctioned Milagro for erasing thousands of text messages and removing WhatsApp from her phone, even after being told to preserve them. (Rap-Up) The court ruled jurors may infer the deleted messages were damaging to her defense. (The Jasmine Brand) She’s already been ordered to pay $5,000 in attorney’s fees for discovery violations. (Hot 97) The case, filed in the Southern District of Florida, accuses Milagro of acting as a “mouthpiece and puppet” for Tory Lanez and his father. (BET) Megan’s legal team is seeking forensic access to Milagro’s iMessage, Instagram, Discord, and WhatsApp accounts to retrieve deleted content. (HotNewHipHop) The court has restricted public statements in the case to prevent online harassment. (Law360) Legal experts say the court found Megan’s complaint properly alleges false statements made with reckless disregard for the truth — the exact threshold for defamation. (Reason)
⚖️ Why This Case Matters
This lawsuit isn’t just another celebrity beef — it’s shaping up to be a landmark case for how courts handle defamation and digital evidence.
If juries can assume deleted texts equal guilt, that sets a precedent for bloggers, influencers, and gossip commentators everywhere. 💻
And with whispers that names like Kylie Jenner and Joe Budden could appear as witnesses, this trial might get messier than a Hot Girl Summer group chat. (HotNewHipHop)
🫖 AGP Take
Megan said it best — “I’m still that b***h.”
But this time, she’s letting the legal system do the talking.
Milagro’s online commentary may have started as “media,” but when the screenshots hit the courtroom, the shade gets real.
Either way, we’ll be watching from the front row — mug in hand, pearls clutched.
Stay Nosey. Stay Anonymous