Megan Thee Stallion already told the truth, a jury believed her, and a court sentenced Tory Lanez to ten years. But somehow, three years later, the internet is still gaslighting her. Now, new rumors are making rounds claiming her former friend Kelsey Harris — not Tory — pulled the trigger. And Megan has stopped staying quiet over this lie.

Megan Speaks – Again, With Pain and Clarity

In a raw, unfiltered post, Megan called out fans, blogs, and trolls trying to rewrite her trauma for clicks:

Screenshot of Megan Thee Stallion’s Threads post where she forcefully rejects new claims that Tory Lanez didn’t shoot her. In the post, she defends herself against ongoing online harassment, emphasizes that the shooting was proven in court, and calls Tory Lanez a “demon” for continuing to torment her.

She reminded the world that the case wasn’t hypothetical. The court heard the case. Lawyers presented the evidence. The jury delivered a guilty verdict. The court handed down a sentence.

Facts are facts. He did it. It was proven in court. F*** the hate campaign on the internet.

Related | Megan Thee Stallion Legal Team Debunked “New Evidence”

A Familiar Pattern: Blame the Black Woman

Megan isn’t just speaking for herself. She’s naming what Black women know too well, that even when they survive the violence, they still have to survive the smear campaign. Ask Halle Bailey. Look at what Cassie endured. Listen to Skai Jackson’s story. These women have shared experiences that expose a deeper pattern. The moment they say this hurt me, someone shouts back prove it — and keeps shouting even after they do.

While Tory’s fans rally celebrities to sign petitions for his release, trolls flood Megan with lies and mockery. The same industry that once supported her now stays silent as the internet retraumatizes her. Again.

Related | How the Hip-Hop Industry Protects Tory Lanez and Silences Black Women

Our Take – Believe Black Women the First Time

This moment is bigger than Megan. It’s about how society treats women who survive violence — especially when they’re young, Black, and successful. Megan doesn’t owe us another defense. She deserves peace. Privacy is not too much to ask. People need to stop treating court cases, trauma, and truth like they’re part of an online cycle meant for clicks.

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