Iggy Azalea has been named in a class-action lawsuit filed in New York over allegations that buyers of the Solana-based MOTHER meme token were misled by claims about utility, business integrations, and market support.
The complaint was filed in the Southern District of New York by plaintiff Kenneth Kolbrak through Burwick Law. It names Azalea, whose legal name is Amethyst Amelia Kelly, as the main defendant, along with 50 unidentified defendants allegedly connected to the project.

The lawsuit says MOTHER buyers were exposed to promotional statements that presented the token as part of a broader business ecosystem, rather than only a speculative meme asset. Kolbrak claims he purchased MOTHER after seeing statements about its use cases and suffered financial losses.
MOTHER launched on Solana in May 2024 after another token using Azalea’s name circulated without her permission. The token quickly drew attention and reached a market capitalization of about $200 million within weeks, according to market data cited in the complaint.
The lawsuit says the token was promoted through claims tied to real-world utility, payment functions, commercial partnerships, and continuing development.
Azalea linked MOTHER to a wider project called MOTHERLAND, described as an online casino and gaming platform. The complaint says buyers were led to believe MOTHER would serve as the native currency of that ecosystem.
The filing alleges that when MOTHERLAND launched in January 2025, wagering, bonuses, and settlement were handled in USDT rather than MOTHER. The complaint says this left the token without the recurring transactional role that buyers expected.
The complaint also refers to statements about Unreal Mobile. Azalea allegedly said users would be able to buy phones or monthly mobile plans using MOTHER or SOL.
The filing says no durable public MOTHER payment integration was visible on Unreal Mobile when the complaint was filed.
The lawsuit also examines public statements about market makers. Azalea allegedly announced relationships with Wintermute and DWF Labs and transferred personal token inventory to both firms.
The complaint argues that buyers were not told the full terms of those arrangements, including whether the market makers could sell, hedge, borrow, lend, short, or trade MOTHER in ways that could affect retail holders.
MOTHER has since fallen sharply from its early peak like Kanye West’s crypto. The complaint says the token declined about 99.5% from its high, reducing its market value to around $1 million.
The lawsuit does not argue that MOTHER is a security. Instead, it brings claims under consumer protection and common law theories tied to allegedly deceptive marketing.
Burwick Law is seeking damages and equitable relief under New York General Business Law Sections 349 and 350, along with claims for negligent misrepresentation and unjust enrichment.
The proposed class includes people and entities that bought or acquired MOTHER from May 28, 2024 through the filing date and suffered losses tied to the alleged conduct.
The case adds to wider scrutiny of celebrity-backed meme tokens. Several public-figure tokens have surged after launch and later dropped sharply, raising questions about marketing claims, token utility, and investor expectations.
Azalea has not yet been reported as filing a formal response in the case. The lawsuit will now move through the early stages of federal court proceedings.
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