On Wednesday, T.I. and Tiny returned to court as part of their copyright infringement lawsuit against MGA Entertainment. They are suing the doll maker for allegedly stealing the name, likeness and trade dress of the OMG Girlz, a girl group founded in 2009, Rolling Stone reported. The trio included Tiny’s daughter Zonnique Pullins.

T.I. and Tiny filed a lawsuit against the company after it launched its “L.O.L. Surprise O.M.G.” dolls in 2019. The case first went to trial in January, ending in a mistrial after barred testimony was presented to jurors.

The testimony was from a customer who said she stopped purchasing the dolls after learning they weren’t affiliated with the OMG Girlz. She accused MGA of “racist cultural appropriation,” adding she “did not want to support a company that steals from African Americans and their ideas,” according to the news outlet.

At the time, the judge granted MGA an immediate mistrial.

“Hearing the testimony was even worse than reading it in the cold print,” MGA’s lawyers had written. “The prejudicial nature of this testimony accusing MGA of racist cultural appropriation cannot be understated.”

MGA Entertainment said the OMG Girlz are reminiscent of the company’s Bratz dolls during opening statements on Wednesday.

T.I. and Tiny reiterated the company allegedly stole the girl group’s aesthetic ⁠— specifically, a 2017 performance during which the trio reunited.

“Now, someone was watching that reunion appearance,” their lawyer said. “And that someone, we don’t know who, worked at MGA Entertainment. You will see that outfits worn by the OMG Girlz at that New Year’s event in Atlanta later translated into dolls that (MGA founder) Isaac Larian and MGA are making millions of dollars off of.”