Megan Thee Stallion is navigating a courtroom minefield that keeps expanding with each filing.
The Houston rapper’s legal calendar is packed with battles on multiple fronts, and she’s not backing down from any of them.
Her latest challenge involves a $1.2 million dispute with stylists Six K and Eric Archibald, who claim she owes them for wardrobe and styling services rendered over a 12-month stretch.
The invoices in question span from January 2025 through January 2026, totaling $1,243,501.98 for work they say they completed.
Megan’s response has been direct and unambiguous. She’s calling the entire bill fraudulent and refusing to pay what she views as inflated charges for services she disputes receiving or needing.
According to People Magazine, the stylists filed their complaint seeking full payment plus additional damages.
The rapper’s team has pushed back hard, questioning both the legitimacy of the invoices and the scope of work allegedly performed.
“My finance team conducted a comprehensive audit of Eric Archibald’s wardrobe expenses and uncovered fraudulent invoices, unsupported charges, and styling shipments tied to addresses that could not be verified,” Megan Thee Stallion. “Those findings raised serious concerns about the legitimacy of expenses that we repeatedly tried to resolve privately with Eric’s team. Rather than address the issues from the audit, Eric and his team chose to file a lawsuit. The facts are on our side and I won’t be coerced into paying charges that can’t be substantiated.”
This financial dispute represents just one piece of a much larger legal puzzle that’s been consuming her time and resources.
Megan secured a major win when a federal judge reinstated her defamation case against blogger Milagro Gramz and awarded her $75,000 in damages.
The court found Gramz liable for defamation, intentional infliction of emotional distress, and amplifying a sexually explicit deepfake video.
Evidence revealed that Gramz had been commissioned by Tory Lanez and his father, Sonstar Peterson, to publish false statements attacking Megan’s credibility.
The judge determined that Gramz received payments from Peterson, obtained information from the Peterson team before other media outlets, and sent materials to assist Lanez’s criminal defense.
Gramz is now representing herself in the case and has filed motions claiming she lacks the financial resources to pay the judgment.
She’s asked the court to pause payment requirements while her appeal proceeds, arguing that immediate payment would cause severe hardship for her household and two minor children.
