Megan Thee Stallion fired back at blogger Milagro Gramz for lying about the judgment in the ongoing defamation lawsuit. After the jury's ruling on Sunday, Milagro's attorneys allegedly released a statement about the ruling. In their statement, Milagro's attorneys declared that the defendant wasn't found liable for defamation in the judgment."Final Judgment of the Court is that Ms. Cooper is not liable for Defamation. Ms. Cooper ultimately prevailed on Ms. Pete's leading accusation, Defamation, and the jury awarded a nominal amount of damages compared to millions of dollars Ms. Pete demanded from Ms. Cooper throughout the course of the litigation," a segement of the statement read. Meghann Cuniff, who has been covering the case and giving real-time updates on the court battle, clarified on her social media post that the case has only reached the jury ruling. The final judgement on the case would be ruled by the judge who hasn't happened. Megan Thee Stallion reposted the post on her X handle and accused Milagro and her team of lying. "Thank you… Here they go lying again AS USUAL," she wrote."If you want REAL MEDIA/NEWS know how to be Patient and know how to READ."Earlier, the jury ruled in favor of Stallion, awarding her a large amount in damages. However, the jury also ruled that Milagro should be treated as a "media defendant." If so, Stallion wouldn't receive the $15,000 that was awarded to her for the defamation lawsuit. The judgment is expected to come after post-verdict filings. How much did Megan Thee Stallion receive in compensation from the lawsuitMegan Thee Stallion received a total of $75,000 in damages. The jury found Milagro Gramz liable for defamation, causing emotional distress to the rapper and promoting a deep fake video of Stallion to increase her reach. According to Rolling Stone, the jury asked Milagro to pay the "Hot Girl Summer" rapper $15,000 in defamation, a total of $8000 for causing emotional stress and a total of $50,000 for promotion of a sexually explicit deep fake video of Stallion. Moreover, the jury also ruled that Milagro had to pay an extra $2000 to Stallion as a punitive amount for emotional distress and defamation. The jury ruled that the blogger "should be treated as a media defendant." If the judge goes along with the jurors' ruling, the defamation amount would be cut from the compensation. Milagro's attorneys said in the statement that Megan Thee Stallion had asked for an "astronomical amount of damages" to send a message to the community, but it was rejected by the jury.