Episodios

  • Baby Samaria Sauls: NICU Death in Fort Worth — Missing Organs Allegation & A Family Demanding Answers
    Feb 15 2026

    A premature infant dies after weeks in a Fort Worth NICU, and her family says her body was returned without organs and without clear consent—now they’re demanding answers, accountability, and justice for Baby Samaria Sauls.

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    27 m
  • The DM That Changed Everything: Dubai Nights Chapter 1
    Jan 16 2026

    She was twenty-three, drowning in student debt, and desperate for a way out. Then the DM arrived—a luxury modeling contract in Dubai. All expenses paid. Designer clothes. Infinity pools. Everything she'd ever dreamed of.

    Destiny Clarke boarded that plane believing she was flying toward opportunity. But what happens when the dream becomes a nightmare you can't wake up from?

    In honor of National Human Trafficking Awareness and Prevention Month, we're releasing Chapter 1 of *Dubai Nights: A No Tears For Black Girls Story* by J.C. Reedburg—a powerful novel that shines a light on the countless young Black women lured overseas with promises of a better life, only to find themselves trapped in a system designed to consume them.

    This episode asks the questions mainstream media won't: What really happened to Destiny Clarke? And how many girls just like her have vanished without a trace?

    **Dubai Nights is FREE on Amazon Kindle from January 16-19, 2026, and free afterward with Kindle Unlimited.**

    Listen to Chapter 1. Then download the book and discover what happened next.

    *Content Warning: This episode discusses human trafficking and may be difficult for some listeners.*

    LINK TO BOOK: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0GFSHZW9R

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    24 m
  • What More Evidence Do You Need Than a Woman’s Fear? The Murders of Stephanie Moseley, Wendy Black, and Tara Labang
    Jan 11 2026

    Imagine watching a murder unfold through a phone screen—and doing nothing. In this episode of No Tears For Black Girls, host Samantha Paul unpacks the connected stories of three women whose lives were stolen by men who believed their rage mattered more than women’s right to live: dancer and actress Stephanie Moseley, shot in her Los Angeles apartment while her husband FaceTimed Floyd Mayweather; Wendy Black, a Maryland nurse anesthetist who begged the courts for protection and was told her fear wasn’t enough; and Tara Labang, a healer whose killing became a footnote to a Facebook Live confession. Three women. Two killers. One broken system that turned every warning sign into paperwork and excuses.

    This isn’t a whodunit—it’s an examination of how. How protective orders get denied even when women say “he threatened to kill me with a gun.” How red flag laws are supposed to remove weapons from dangerous people, and why they so often aren’t used in time. How media headlines humanize some victims while reducing others to “domestic incidents.” Through survivor-centered storytelling, data on intimate partner violence, and a hard look at police, courts, and tech platforms, Samantha argues these deaths were not inevitable tragedies—they were preventable failures.

    To go even deeper into this world, you can read our ongoing No Tears For Black Girls book series on Amazon. The series is available in both paperback and e‑book formats, and digital copies are included at no extra cost with an eligible Amazon Kindle subscription (such as Kindle Unlimited).

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    28 m
  • The Stone Kids: 728 Days Missing in Arizona — Governor & AG Under Fire for Inaction
    Jan 9 2026

    Arizona Governor Katie Hobbs and Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes are the state’s top leaders for public safety and accountability, and on January 9, 2026, the Stone family marks a milestone no family should ever have to count: 728 days since three boys went missing in Arizona—Winston Stone, Timothy Paul Stone Jr., and Marcel Orion Stone.

    You’re listening to No Tears For Black Girls. I’m Samantha Paul. This episode is based on public reporting and on court filings and documents shared with me by the Stone family. Where claims are allegations, I will say so. Our focus is simple: accountability, and bringing attention back to the missing.

    Three Arizona boys. Missing for 728 days. Two years of unanswered questions, stalled urgency, and a system families say treats missing Black children like paperwork instead of emergencies. This episode examines what happens when the word “runaway” becomes an excuse to delay action, when families are forced into motions to compel for basic records, and when potential evidence and timelines become a fight instead of a priority. We also place this case in broader context, including the June 2024 U.S. Department of Justice civil rights findings related to Phoenix policing that the family points to as relevant when asking the court and the public to take systemic failures seriously.

    Host Samantha Paul asks why Arizona’s top leadership has not addressed this case with clear, public urgency—and why “silence from the top” is something the public has every right to question when three children are still missing.

    If you have information that could help locate Winston Stone, Timothy Paul Stone Jr., or Marcel Orion Stone, contact the FBI at 1-800-225-5324 or submit a tip at tips.fbi.gov, and contact the

    National Center for Missing & Exploited Children at 1-800-843-5678 or visit missingkids.org.

    At the bottom line, this is not entertainment. This is accountability. Where are Winston, Timothy Jr., and Marcel?

    New release: Dubai Nights: A No Tears For Black Girls Story (Book 8) drops January 13, 2026, and will be FREE on Amazon January 16–19 in honor of Human Trafficking Awareness Month. New album: No Tears For Black Girls, Vol. 1 soundtrack featuring Jayda Truth releases January 16, 2026 on Datzhott Records.

    Support the mission of No Tears For Black Girls by subscribing on Spotify. You’ll unlock exclusives and get early access to new episodes before they go live.

    Subscribe here: https://creators.spotify.com/pod/profile/no-tears-for-black-girls/subscribe

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    20 m
  • Did Suge Knight Use Tupac As A Human Shield? - Verdict: TRUE!
    Jan 3 2026

    This is not a typical No Tears For Black Girls episode.

    You're hearing the first episode of Datzhott—a new celebrity gossip investigation show hosted by Samantha Paul. This is your exclusive preview before the official launch in February 2026.

    Today's investigation: Did Suge Knight use Tupac Shakur as a human shield? We examine 29 years of evidence, witness testimony, and the math that doesn't lie. Our verdict: TRUE.

    Want more Datzhott? Let us know in the comments. This show officially launches February 2026 with the relaunch of Datzhott.com. Follow Datzhott News on YouTube for exclusive content until then.

    We never use the word "alleged." If we said it, we meant it.

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    20 m
  • They Let Him Die — New Federal Lawsuit Names Arizona Governor in the Timothy Stone Case
    Dec 15 2025

    When Timothy Paul Stone collapsed alone in a Phoenix motel bathroom, his three sons — Winston, Timothy Jr. and Marcel — had already been taken by police and handed to a woman their grandparents say was a stranger. Today, Timothy is dead and the boys are still missing.

    In this update to our original Timothy Stone episode, we break down the Stones’ newly filed federal wrongful‑death and civil‑rights lawsuit. The complaint names the State of Arizona, Governor Katie Hobbs, Attorney General Kris Mayes, and multiple agencies and officers, and argues that officials “let him die to cover up a kidnapping” and could face liability under Arizona’s felony‑murder rule.

    In this episode, we walk through:

    • The key allegations in the 1st Amended Complaint

    • How the felony‑murder rule works, and why the family believes it applies

    • The timeline from the motel welfare check to Timothy’s death

    • What we still don’t know about Winston, Timothy Jr., and Marcel’s whereabouts

    If you have any information about the whereabouts of Winston Stone, Timothy Paul Stone Jr., or Marcel Orion Stone, please contact the FBI at 1‑800‑CALL‑FBI (1‑800‑225‑5324) or the/National Center for Missing & Exploited Children at 1‑800‑THE‑LOST (1‑800‑843‑5678).

    Court documents and source links are available at NoTearsForBlackGirls.com (see the Resources section for the Timothy Stone case).

    All individuals and agencies named in this episode are entitled to the presumption of innocence. The lawsuit described here contains allegations only.

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    28 m
  • They Let Him Die to Cover Up a Kidnapping: The Timothy Stone Case
    Dec 1 2025

    On January 9, 2024, someone kidnapped Timothy Stone's three children—two autistic. He called 911. Police refused to help. 54 days later, Timothy was dead. 692 days later, his sons are still missing. This is the story Arizona doesn't want you to hear.

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    1 h y 53 m
  • 50 Cent, Revenge Porn & The Price of Fame
    Nov 10 2025

    When intimate images of R&B singer Teairra Marí were leaked online, 30 million people watched her trauma become entertainment. She fought back in court—but the system had other plans. This is the story of revenge porn, power, and what happens when Black women seek justice.


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    19 m