When Jelly Roll stood at the podium to accept Best Contemporary Country Album at the 2026 Grammy Awards in February, he said something that most acceptance speeches don’t: that he would have died or gone to prison without his wife. His appeal as a man from Antioch, Tennessee, who transformed a very challenging history into music that resonates with those who feel ignored by the mainstream, has been defined by his unvarnished, unedited honesty.
The space reacted. He filed for divorce in Williamson County four months later. Before the court documents were made public, the moving truck was seen outside their Nashville residence. Therefore, it takes some clarity to respond to the question of whether Jelly Roll is involved in a lawsuit.

Technically, the answer is yes, but it’s crucial to comprehend the nature of that lawful conduct. A divorce filing, not a lawsuit in the traditional sense, is the most recent procedure. Jelly Roll’s legal name, Jason Bradley DeFord, filed for divorce from Alisa Andrea DeFord, also known as Bunnie XO, in Williamson County, Tennessee, on May 18, 2026. On May 9, nine days prior, they had parted ways.
Sources described the divorce as mutual, although that phrase tends to carry a lot of weight in a narrative like this without always signifying what it suggests. The filing cited irreconcilable differences. Rose Palermo of Nashville is their attorney of record. The couple had been married for almost ten years, having tied the knot in a brief courtroom ceremony in Las Vegas in August 2016, the same evening he proposed during a Yelawolf and Deftones performance. That particular feature has always shown something about their personalities.
Jelly Roll’s name has been involved in additional legal issues in recent years outside the divorce, however the other one was settled amicably. The singer was sued for trademark infringement in U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania in April 2024 by Jellyroll, a wedding band from the Philadelphia region. Their argument was simple: the band had registered the Jellyroll trademark in 2010 and had been performing under that name since 1980, four years before Jason DeFord was born.
Google searches for “Jellyroll” completely buried the band as the singer’s success skyrocketed due to stadium tours and radio songs; according to some accounts, 18 to 20 results for the country star showed before the Philadelphia group was mentioned. In February 2024, Kurt Titchenell, the leader of Jellyroll Band, sent a cease-and-desist letter. The legal staff for Jelly Roll did not comply. It was followed by the lawsuit.
Depending on your point of view, what transpired next was either a silent surrender or a reasonable resolution. Three months after the complaint was filed, in July 2024, the band withdrew it, characterizing the resolution as a “amicable settlement.” The conditions were not made public. They both agreed to live together under their own names.
The band may have reached a financial agreement as part of the settlement, or they may have just decided that going to court against a Grammy-nominated musician with a matching legal budget was not worth the effort. The matter cannot be reopened because it was dismissed with prejudice. For its part, the wedding band Jellyroll continues to perform in the Northeast corridor. One of their most memorable press releases is still their 2007 White House appearance.
Watching the arc of Jelly Roll’s public life over the past few years, there’s a feeling that success arrived with unusual speed and unusual weight. In what seemed like a single turn of the clock, he went from being a local cult figure to country radio, bringing with him a fan base that especially responded to his willingness to be vulnerable about addiction, incarceration, faith, and marriage.
That story included Bunnie XO. She penned a memoir that was released earlier this year, co-hosted a podcast, and talked candidly about their attempts to have a child through IVF and surrogacy. She said in her book that they had found a surrogate and hoped for twins in February, the same month Jelly Roll thanked her at the Grammy Awards for saving his life. They were no longer together by May. What changed is still unknown, and it might never be made public.

