Ashley St. Clair has claimed that Elon Musk's artificial intelligence company xAI is suing her in Texas for at least $75,000 after she complained that its Grok AI system 'undressed' her in hyper-realistic, explicit images generated without her consent.

St. Clair, a conservative influencer and the mother of one of Elon Musk's children, has been posting a series of 'Get Ready With Me' videos on TikTok and Instagram Stories, detailing her escalating dispute with xAI.

In those videos, she says she first discovered at the beginning of 2026 that Grok, xAI's chatbot, was producing naked images of her based on ordinary photos, including pictures taken when she was a child. She alleges she repeatedly begged the company and the AI itself to stop, and when that failed, she instructed a lawyer to send a legal notice.

The news came after St. Clair outlined what she says is the 'crux' of her legal complaint against Musk's AI business. She frames it as a product safety case, arguing that xAI 'released an unsafe product onto the public' and that 'millions of women and children have been undressed and violated.'

According to her, Grok generated images of her that were 'so horrific and traumatic to look at' that she struggled to describe them.

'I was stripped down. They look hyper-realistic,' she said, adding that in the process of looking into Grok's outputs she saw AI-generated depictions of girls who appeared to be 'about four years old' who were 'stripped down, undressed and then covered in white, sticky doughnut glaze.'

Those are serious allegations, and at this point they remain one-sided. xAI has not publicly addressed her specific claims, and there is no independent confirmation that the platform has generated images of real minors in the way she describes.

I not aware of any naked underage images generated by Grok. Literally zero.Obviously, Grok does not spontaneously generate images, it does so only according to user requests.When asked to generate images, it will refuse to produce anything illegal, as the operating principle…https://t.co/YBoqo7ZmEj

St. Clair, however, insists that her case is about more than personal humiliation. She says she has 'inside information' that Grok has been trained not only to undress women but 'to undress them better,' despite what she describes as an ongoing legal and reputational crisis around the chatbot.

In her telling, this is not a bug but a feature. She suggests that sexualised, non-consensual images of women and children were used to drive engagement with Musk's AI products at a time when xAI was struggling to keep up with more established rivals such as ChatGPT and Google Gemini. These claims are unverified and not supported by any documentation in the material she has made public so far.

Source: International Business Times UK