
Behind the Scenes: What Really Happened the Night Megan Was Shot?
The night of July 12, 2020, changed the trajectory of Megan Thee Stallion’s life, career, and how the music industry handles violence against Black women. What began as a night out in the Hollywood Hills ended with sirens, blood on the pavement, and one of hip-hop’s biggest stars being shot in the foot. For nearly four years, the public has been fed conflicting stories, twisted narratives, and now alleged “new evidence” — but the facts, as laid out in court, paint a much clearer picture.
Megan, Tory Lanez, her former best friend Kelsey Harris, and a driver were leaving a party at Kylie Jenner’s house in the early hours of the morning. According to Megan, an argument broke out in the SUV, and tensions escalated. She asked to get out of the car, and as she walked away, Lanez allegedly leaned out of the vehicle and fired a gun at her feet, shouting “Dance, b****.” Megan was later treated at Cedars-Sinai hospital where doctors confirmed she had bullet fragments in both feet.
At first, Megan told police she had stepped on glass — a decision she later explained came from a fear of how police might respond if they discovered a Black man with a gun during a heated moment in the middle of Los Angeles. Days later, she publicly confirmed via Instagram Live that Tory Lanez was the shooter. The internet didn’t take her word seriously. Memes and doubt spread fast. Lanez denied it all through cryptic tweets, lyrics, and a full-length album defending himself. Megan was labeled a liar, attention-seeker, even a “snitch,” despite having done everything she could to protect everyone involved — until silence became too costly.
When the case finally went to trial in late 2022, the courtroom became a battleground for truth versus spectacle. Megan testified, detailing how Lanez’s actions and the aftermath nearly broke her spirit. Kelsey Harris, once seen as a key witness, delivered a confusing, inconsistent testimony. She denied seeing Lanez shoot the gun but also denied pulling the trigger herself, even after her immunity deal. Despite the fog, the evidence was damning. Gunshot residue was found on both Lanez and Harris, but only Lanez had motive, opportunity, and a confirmed violent outburst that night. Forensic analysis showed that Megan’s injuries were from bullet fragments, not glass, as was initially claimed. And perhaps most compelling: the jury heard a recorded jail phone call from Lanez to Kelsey hours after the incident, in which he apologized repeatedly. While he never explicitly admitted to shooting Megan, the subtext wasn’t lost on anyone.
Lanez was ultimately convicted of assault with a semi-automatic firearm, carrying a loaded unregistered firearm in a vehicle, and discharging a firearm with gross negligence. He was sentenced to 10 years in prison. But for some, especially his loyal fanbase and certain celebrities, the verdict didn’t end the discussion—it only fueled their suspicions. In 2024, new headlines resurfaced when Megan’s former bodyguard Bradley James allegedly claimed that he overheard Kelsey Harris admit to shooting Megan. Lanez’s team quickly labeled this “new evidence,” hoping to shift the public tide. But this wasn’t eyewitness testimony. It was secondhand hearsay, never formally submitted in court, and legally unlikely to trigger a retrial. For Megan, it was a familiar pattern: more deflection, more pain, more re-litigation of a trauma she’s already been forced to publicly explain again and again.
What’s often overlooked in the sensational coverage is the cost Megan continues to pay. The physical wounds may have healed, but the mental scars from being mocked, disbelieved, and harassed online haven’t. She’s expressed in interviews and on social media how the shooting changed her, how the betrayal cut deeper than the bullets, and how the industry’s silence spoke volumes. Through it all, she kept making music, building her brand, and using her platform to speak about protecting Black women — even when she wasn’t protected herself.
The night Megan was shot was not just a tragic accident. It was a flashpoint that exposed the fault lines in hip-hop, in media, and in how we treat women who refuse to stay silent. The trial laid bare the evidence, but the aftermath revealed a culture more interested in gossip than justice. And now, years later, as some still try to rewrite that night’s events, Megan’s truth stands firm. Not because it’s the loudest — but because it’s the one that was tested, scrutinized, and ultimately believed where it mattered most: in a court of law.
Editorial Note: Tory Lanez, born Daystar Peterson, was convicted in December 2022 and sentenced to 10 years in prison. All post-trial claims, including those involving Megan Thee Stallion’s former bodyguard, have not resulted in any legal changes to the case at the time of publication. Megan testified under oath and continues to maintain that Lanez was the shooter.







