A federal judge has refused Megan Thee Stallion’s request for a permanent injunction against blogger Milagro Gramz, also known as Milagro Cooper, following the rapper’s recent courtroom victory in their cyberstalking dispute.
New court filings show the judge denied Megan’s effort to secure future restrictions after a jury found Cooper liable for defamation, intentional infliction of emotional distress, and promoting a deepfake video involving the artist.
Jurors also awarded Megan $75,000 in damages tied to emotional distress and the circulation of the manipulated content.
Despite that verdict, the court said those findings did not automatically entitle Megan to an injunction blocking Cooper from future conduct. Megan argued harassment continued after the verdict, but the judge found the legal standard had not been met.
According to the ruling, there was no evidence Cooper attempted to physically track Megan, attend her performances, or directly contact her. The absence of those actions weighed heavily in the court’s analysis.
The judge also stated Megan had already received the remedy specifically available under the law through monetary damages. While courts may grant broader relief, the order said there was no sufficient basis here.
Addressing claims of ongoing harm, the court said Megan failed to show a real and immediate threat rather than speculation about future conduct.
The ruling further stated that granting the request would amount to a “prior restraint” on her First Amendment right to freedom of speech. The court therefore declined to impose prospective limits on Cooper’s expression rights now today while preserving the jury’s damages award and leaving Megan with her earlier monetary recovery from the civil case after trial proceedings this year in federal court records publicly filed on Monday afternoon in Texas district court docket.
