Jada Pinkett Smith is asking a federal judge to make Bilaal Salaam pay for the privilege of losing part of his lawsuit against her. Court documents filed this week show the actress and producer is seeking $48,975 in attorney fees from Salaam, a man who describes himself as a former associate of her husband, Will Smith. The request follows a judge’s decision to dismiss significant portions of Salaam’s $3 million emotional distress claim against her.
The legal saga stretches back to the aftermath of one of the most scrutinized moments in recent awards show history. In March 2022, Will Smith walked onto the stage at the Academy Awards and slapped comedian Chris Rock during the live broadcast. The moment set off a media firestorm and, according to subsequent court filings, triggered a chain of events that eventually landed Pinkett Smith in court.
How Salaam entered the picture
Salaam alleged in his original complaint that he had a longstanding personal and professional relationship with the Smith family, and that he was enlisted to help manage the public fallout following the Oscars incident. He described himself as someone trusted by the Smiths during a period of intense scrutiny, brought in specifically to navigate the reputational damage that followed.
The relationship reportedly soured when Salaam began writing a memoir. According to his filings, Pinkett Smith and several people in her orbit made threats once they learned of the book. He claimed those alleged threats caused him serious emotional harm, including the end of a romantic relationship, forced relocation out of the country, and significant weight loss. Those claims formed the emotional core of his $3 million lawsuit.
What the court decided
Pinkett Smith’s legal team pushed back forcefully. Her attorneys argued that Salaam had not produced credible evidence to support his allegations. They further contended his lawsuit was not a genuine legal dispute but a calculated move designed to generate publicity as part of what they described as a sustained campaign of harassment directed at her and Will.
A judge agreed, at least in part, and dismissed several of Salaam’s claims before the case reached trial. That ruling gave Pinkett Smith the opening she needed to pursue what is known as a fee-shifting motion, where the prevailing party asks the court to make the losing side cover their legal costs.
Salaam and the $49K question
Her attorneys are now arguing that because the dismissed claims lacked merit, Salaam should bear the financial burden they created. The $48,975 figure reflects what Pinkett Smith says she spent defending herself against the portions of the case that were thrown out.
The broader lawsuit has not been fully resolved. Other claims between the parties remain active and are still working their way through the legal process. A final judgment has not been entered, meaning this dispute is far from over.
What happens next depends largely on how the court responds to the fee motion. Judges have discretion in these rulings, and the outcome could shape how both sides approach the remaining claims. If the court sides with Pinkett Smith, Salaam would owe her attorneys’ fees on top of whatever costs he continues to accumulate fighting the rest of the case.
Neither Pinkett Smith nor Salaam had issued any public statement about the latest development as of publication. For now, the matter sits with the judge, and both parties wait.

