Megan Thee Stallion sobs while testifying about deepfake porn of her in Florida civil trial

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The artist is pressing a civil lawsuit accusing Milagro Gramz of being a “puppet” for Tory Lanez, the rapper convicted of shooting Megan.

Megan Thee Stallion in New York in April 2024.Dia Dipasupil / Getty Images file
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MIAMI — An emotional Megan Thee Stallion told a court Thursday she feels "defeated" and struggles with mental health issues because of sexually explicit deepfake video a blogger is alleged to have encouraged followers to watch.

The Grammy-winning artist took the witness stand in her lawsuit against blogger Milagro Gramz, who is accused of being a “mouthpiece,” a “puppet” and a “paid surrogate” for rapper Tory Lanez during and after his high-profile criminal trial.

Gramz is accused of encouraging her thousands of followers on X and Instagram to view an unauthorized, sexually explicit deepfake video of Megan that had been circulating on social media.

“I feel like ... to this day, I feel a little, like, defeated," Megan testified, often sobbing as she talked about the artificial intelligence porn bearing her image. "Because no matter what, no matter if the video was fake or not ... [Gramz] wanted it to be real."

Lanez, whose real name is Daystar Peterson, was convicted of shooting Megan in the foot after the pair left a Los Angeles party in 2020. He has been sentenced to 10 years.

Megan, whose real name is Megan Pete, accused Gramz, whose real name is Milagro Cooper, in the civil trial of seeking to “denigrate, belittle, insult, and spread false statements about Ms. Pete on her online social media platforms, for no other reason than to bully, harass and punish Ms. Pete for Mr. Peterson’s conviction and to tarnish her reputation, causing emotional distress."

Megan said falsehoods allegedly being spread by Gramz are taking a toll.

"It’s really embarrassing to have to look at what the people don’t know," she said. "See, in a position like that, like, I know it’s not me, but to be in front of everybody else and they have to watch it — it’s really embarrassing."

Gramz was also accused of sharing false misinformation about the criminal trial, including claims that Megan hadn't really been shot and that she had a drinking problem.

The lawsuit doesn’t accuse Gramz of creating or posting the video, but it suggests she “willfully and maliciously promoted” it to her followers by pointing them to a post that had directly shared it.

Carlos Carie and Erika Angulo reported from Miami and David K. Li from New York City.

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