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  • CP #022
    2026/05/06

    This one is DIFFERENT.

    Mona aka Don’t Call Me White Girl pulls ZERO punches as she breaks down a life that most people wouldn’t survive.

    From getting expelled in elementary school…

    To losing her father to prison at 5…

    To being in federal prison by 21…

    👉 She lived with NO fear of death.

    👉 She was boosting, hustling, and surviving by ANY means.

    👉 And at one point… she was doing it all while PREGNANT.


    “I didn’t care if I died… it was up with anybody.”

    This episode isn’t just about the streets…

    It’s about mindset, survival, trauma, and transformation.

    Now?

    She’s one of the most viral, unapologetic voices in media.

    💥 This is the REAL story behind the personality.

    🧠 WHAT YOU’LL LEARN:
    • How trauma shapes identity
    • The psychology of “no fear” living
    • Street survival vs real growth
    • How Mona turned pain into POWER
    • Why most people NEVER make it out

    If you’re formerly incarcerated—or trying to level up beyond your past—this is for YOU.

    👉 Tap in. Subscribe. Share.


    ⏱️ CHAPTERS

    00:00 – “I Didn’t Care If I Died…”

    01:17 – Meet Mona (Don’t Call Me White Girl)

    03:10 – Growing Up in Philly vs The Suburbs

    05:20 – Imaginary Classroom → Comedian Mindset

    06:50 – Father Goes to Prison at 5

    09:30 – Getting Expelled & Early Violence

    11:50 – First Charges & Trouble Escalates

    14:30 – Street Life Begins

    18:15 – Federal Prison by 21 😳

    19:40 – No Fear of Death Mentality

    21:00 – Boosting Game Explained 💰

    25:00 – Selling Drugs & Fast Money

    28:40 – “You’ll Be 30 When You Get Out…”

    31:30 – Losing Everything

    35:00 – Trauma, Loss & Street Reality

    37:00 – On The Run

    39:00 – PREGNANT IN JAIL 😳

    41:20 – Back to the Streets While Pregnant

    43:10 – Why She Never Stopped

    45:40 – Going Viral & New Life

    End – Final Gems 💎

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    1 時間 17 分
  • CP #021 From Harlem Killer to Diddy's Head of Security (Real Story) | Crime Pays
    2026/04/15

    Raised in Harlem during the crack era — where survival meant everything — Roger Bonds lived a life most people only hear about in stories.

    At just 19 years old, he caught a body… and made a decision that would change the course of his life forever.

    In this episode of Crime Pays, Roger sits down with Ash Cash and J. White to tell his story — unfiltered.

    From the Polo Grounds (“Vietnam”) to Rikers Island and federal prison, he breaks down the reality of street loyalty, the consequences of fast decisions, and what it takes to survive when your back is against the wall.

    But this isn’t just a prison story…

    After doing his time, Roger transitioned into a completely different world — becoming a trusted figure around Sean “Diddy” Combs, traveling globally, and helping build major business plays like the Cîroc brand.

    Inside this episode:

    • Growing up in Harlem during the crack epidemic
    • Catching a body at 19 and turning himself in
    • The truth about loyalty in the streets
    • Surviving Rikers Island and prison politics
    • Transitioning from street mentality to business mindset
    • Working closely with Diddy and moving in elite circles
    • Why proximity to power doesn’t equal ownership
    • Turning past mistakes into purpose

    This is a story about consequences, discipline, and transformation.

    Because sometimes… Crime Pays in lessons.


    ⏱️ TIMESTAMPS

    0:00 – “I caught a body at 19…” (Hook)

    1:20 – Intro / Welcome to Crime Pays

    2:00 – Growing Up in Harlem (“Vietnam”)

    3:30 – Early Street Life & Reputation

    5:30 – Fast Money & Fast Decisions

    8:00 – The Environment That Shaped Him

    11:00 – Becoming Known in the Streets

    15:00 – Life Between 16–19 (Peak Street Years)

    20:00 – The Night Everything Changed

    25:30 – Loyalty & Taking the Charge

    28:30 – Turning Himself In

    31:00 – Entering Rikers Island

    36:00 – Prison Politics & Survival

    40:30 – Lessons from Incarceration

    42:30 – Transitioning After Prison

    44:00 – Entering the Music Industry

    45:30 – Working with Diddy

    48:00 – Moving in Power Circles

    50:00 – Street Mentality vs Business Mindset

    52:00 – Building the Cîroc Brand

    54:00 – Proximity to Power vs Ownership

    56:00 – Growth, Discipline & Self-Control

    58:00 – Advice for the Next Generation

    1:00:00 – Final Thoughts & Closing Gems

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    1 時間 28 分
  • CP #020 She Got 30 YEARS for 154 Kilos… Now She’s Free | Crime Pays
    2026/04/01

    This week on Crime Pays, we sit down with Angela “Free” Wright — a woman whose journey from a structured upbringing to a 30-year federal sentence will leave you speechless.

    Raised in a two-parent household with a pastor as her father, Free was the least likely person to end up in prison… but she was sentenced to 30 years for conspiracy involving 154 kilos of cocaine.

    Living a double life as a school teacher and a money runner, she found herself pulled into a lifestyle driven by power, fast money, and influence — until everything came crashing down.

    After her arrest, betrayal from people close to her, and facing decades behind bars, Free made a life-changing decision…

    She refused to accept that reality.

    While incarcerated, she:

    • Studied the law and fought relentlessly for her freedom
    • Helped others receive clemency while still denied her own
    • Rebuilt her identity and purpose from the inside out

    Today, she’s home, mentoring others, advocating for change, and proving that your past does not define your future.

    This episode isn’t just about prison…

    It’s about transformation, faith, discipline, and the power of believing in something greater than your circumstances.

    🎙️ Welcome to Crime Pays.


    ⏱️ CHAPTERS (TIMESTAMPS)


    00:00 — Pastor’s Daughter… But Drawn to the Streets

    Early life, church upbringing, and attraction to power

    02:00 — From College to the Game

    Clark Atlanta experience and first exposure to hustling

    05:00 — Living a Double Life

    Teacher by day, money runner by night, earning $5K/week

    08:00 — The Psychology of Power

    Why she was drawn to dope boys and street influence

    12:00 — Scaling the Operation

    Expanding across multiple states and entering cocaine trafficking

    15:00 — The Lifestyle Trap

    Why fast money is hard to walk away from

    18:00 — Warning Signs Before the Fall

    People around her getting arrested and ignored red flags

    19:30 — The Arrest

    Drivers getting caught and the case unfolding

    23:00 — Betrayal & Federal Pressure

    Friends testifying and the reality of federal cases

    29:00 — Sentenced to 30 Years

    First-time offender facing 364 months

    31:00 — Breaking Point in Prison

    Early mindset and survival mentality

    32:00 — Fighting for Freedom

    Writing letters, studying law, and refusing defeat

    34:00 — Speaking Freedom Into Reality

    Renaming herself “Free” and manifestation mindset

    37:00 — Vision While Incarcerated

    Planning her future before release

    39:00 — Clemency & Release

    Helping others get free and eventually coming home

    41:00 — Life After Prison

    Mentorship, impact, and purpose-driven living

    43:00 — The Real Lesson

    Choices, consequences, and redemption

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    58 分
  • CP #019 From 40 Years to CEO: Ed Hennings Built a Business Empire After Prison | Crime Pays
    2026/02/18

    At 24 years old, Ed Hennings was handed a charge that could have kept him behind the wall for decades.

    Most people would have folded.

    Instead, he made a decision:

    If he was going to do the time, the time was going to build him.

    In this episode of Crime Pays, Ed shares how he transformed prison into preparation — developing discipline, mental toughness, and a blueprint for ownership that would carry him when he finally came home.

    After being denied parole eight times, he didn’t waste a second of freedom. Within one year, he owned a barbershop. Then trucking. Now he’s building a legacy through a work boot company rooted in identity, confidence, and pride in honest work.

    This conversation isn’t about crime.

    It’s about mindset, redemption, discipline, and building a future when the odds say you shouldn’t have one.

    If you’re coming home soon, already home, or trying to rebuild your life for real — this episode is a blueprint.

    🔥 What You’ll Hear in This Episode

    • The day everything changed — June 11, 1996

    • What “paralysis” feels like when you read your charges

    • Why being the “go-to guy” can destroy your future

    • Turning prison into training camp for life

    • How to protect your mind in an environment designed to break it

    • Denied parole eight times — and staying focused

    • Why he came home moving with purpose, not celebration

    • Building ownership instead of chasing fast money

    • The deeper meaning behind his work boot brand

    • Why confidence is something you earn, not something you fake


    Chapters & Timestamps

    00:00 — The Day Everything Changed (June 11, 1996)

    03:42 — When the Charges Hit: Shock, Fear, Paralysis

    08:15 — Being the “Go-To Guy” and the Pressure of the Streets

    12:28 — Accepting Responsibility vs. Making Excuses

    16:50 — First Years Behind the Wall: Mental Survival Mode

    21:37 — Turning Prison Into Preparation

    27:05 — Discipline, Routine, and Protecting Your Mind

    32:11 — The Pain of Being Denied Parole (Again and Again)

    38:46 — Why He Never Let Bitterness Take Over

    44:02 — The Moment He Realized He Would Come Home Different

    49:18 — Walking Out With a Plan, Not Just Freedom

    54:36 — Ownership Over Fast Money

    59:41 — Opening His First Business

    1:04:12 — Building Confidence Through Work

    1:08:57 — The Work Boot Company: Identity and Pride

    1:13:40 — What People Get Wrong About Coming Home

    1:18:22 — Advice for Those Still Behind the Wall

    1:22:05 — Redemption, Responsibility, and Legacy

    1:26:30 — Final Message to the Crime Pays Family

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    1 時間 12 分
  • CP #018 From 22 Charges as a Teen to Feeding 2 Million Families | Crime Pays
    2026/02/04

    He caught his first case at 15 years old.

    Gang life. Street wars. Federal time.

    A mindset built for survival — not success.

    Philos Cannada sits down with Ash Cash and Jay White for one of the rawest conversations of the year.

    This isn’t a highlight reel.

    This is the real story — how the streets grabbed him early, how prison hardened him, and how one mental shift changed everything.

    From doing 13 years in federal prison

    to coming home and turning $2,000 into $25,000 in 30 days

    to building real businesses, fixing credit, running ads, and creating freedom —

    Philos breaks down:

    • How environment shapes identity
    • Why most people never escape the mindset
    • What prison really teaches you (if you’re paying attention)
    • How discipline transfers from the streets to business
    • Why your past doesn’t disqualify you — it trains you

    This episode is for:

    • People currently behind the wall
    • Anyone fresh home trying to figure it out
    • Families supporting loved ones inside
    • Hustlers ready to redirect their energy the right way

    No motivation fluff.

    No fairy tales.

    Just strategy, accountability, and execution.

    🎙 Crime Pays is the #1 personal development platform for formerly incarcerated men, women, and their families.

    If Philos can rebuild from this…

    so can you.

    🔗 CONNECT & FOLLOW

    📲 Philos Cannada

    Instagram: @theq.uietbuilder

    📲 Ash Cash

    Instagram: @iamashcash

    📲 Jay White

    Instagram: @iamjasonwhite_

    🚨 JOIN CRIME PAYS ACADEMY

    Learn how to thrive beyond the wall with real tools, coaching, and community:

    👉 https://www.skool.com/crimepaysacademy

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    2 時間 4 分
  • CP #017 13 Years in Federal Prison → $25,000 in 30 Days (TRUE STORY) | Crime Pays
    2026/01/21

    First year of high school… he caught his first case.

    By 15, he was involved in shootings.

    By 18, he was on the run.

    And by 26, he had survived 13 years in the federal system.


    In this powerful Crime Pays episode, Sharif Robinson breaks down the real story — growing up in a Muslim household while the streets pulled harder, getting jumped by 40 people, surviving violent federal prisons, and how one shift in mindset turned everything around.


    When Sharif came home in 2023, he didn’t have clout, followers, or a platform.

    He had discipline, a plan, and the willingness to execute.


    After getting fired from his first job home, he took his last $2,000, ran Instagram ads, and turned it into $25,000 in 30 days — then built a business that hit multiple six figures.


    This episode is not just inspirational — it’s instructional.


    📌 FOLLOW / CONNECT with Sharif:

    IG: @creditworks_


    📲 Follow Ash Cash: https://www.instagram.com/iamashcash @iamashcash

    📲 Follow Jay White: https://www.instagram.com/iamjasonwhite_ @iamjasonwhite_


    📌 JOIN Crime Pays Academy:

    Learn how to thrive beyond the wall (for you or your loved one):

    (put your link here)


    ⏱️ Chapters (YouTube Timestamps)

    0:00 – First case in high school

    2:20 – The intro: prison to business

    4:15 – Growing up in New York with 2 parents split

    9:10 – Muslim household vs street reality

    10:55 – Seeing death + “I’m all in”

    11:40 – Jumped by 40 people

    13:20 – First shooting + where the gun came from

    15:10 – Caught the same day

    16:05 – Probation and feeling “like the man”

    18:55 – What led to the 13-year federal case

    21:45 – On the run mentality

    23:35 – The detective moment: “Get a lawyer”

    29:40 – Entering USP prison life (48 hours, stabbings)

    33:25 – Gang politics inside

    40:05 – The mindset shift begins (Bruce + learning business)

    42:10 – Having a daughter changed everything

    47:20 – Coming home 2023 + real estate plan didn’t work

    51:10 – CDL job, fight, fired

    54:10 – Turning $2,000 into $25,000 with ads

    56:20 – What he teaches now: credit, funding, business structure

    1:08:20 – Joining Crime Pays Academy (pay it forward)

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    1 時間 16 分
  • CP #016 From Ecstasy Pills to Million-Dollar Catalogs
    2025/12/31

    At 13 years old, Rico aged out of foster care and walked straight into survival mode.

    Years later, he tracked down his mother in Chicago looking for help — and instead heard words that changed his life forever:

    “This check already gone… unless you got drugs.”

    That moment didn’t just push him into the streets.

    It erased the idea of safety.

    From flooding Chicago with ecstasy pills…

    to getting set up by someone he trusted…

    to sitting in a cell with no blueprint and no guidance…

    Rico’s story could’ve ended exactly how the system designed it to.

    But it didn’t.

    After prison. After loss. After burying his brother.

    He pivoted — not to motivation, but to ownership.

    Today, Mercer “Rico” Prince is one of the youngest dealmakers brokering multi-million-dollar music catalog deals, helping artists, producers, and creators reclaim control of their work — and their future.

    This episode isn’t about hustling.

    It’s about replacing survival instincts with strategy.

    In this conversation, Rico breaks down:

    • Why foster care taught him independence — not protection
    • How ecstasy became more profitable than crack in Chicago nightlife
    • The setup that led to two Class X felonies
    • Why he took 4 years even though he could’ve beaten the case
    • The loss that forced him to leave the streets for good
    • How he made his first $250,000 legally — and never looked back
    • Why streaming platforms are robbing creators blind
    • And how ownership is the real freedom play after incarceration

    If you’re coming home with felonies, grief, or no direction — this episode is proof that belief plus education still beats the odds.

    Tap in. This one hits different.

    ⏱️ Chapters & Timestamps

    00:00 – “Unless you got drugs…”

    01:06 – From foster care to the streets

    04:35 – Realizing the system wasn’t family

    08:51 – The moment his mother activated survival mode

    11:00 – Why pills beat crack financially

    14:57 – School vs money: the early choice

    18:38 – The setup that changed everything

    22:00 – Facing Class X felonies

    24:48 – Why he took the plea deal

    28:03 – Prison mindset: no plan, no guidance

    29:55 – Losing his brother & forced reinvention

    33:19 – Enter the music business

    36:01 – The catalog game explained

    40:01 – Why artists sell their catalogs

    43:02 – Ownership vs exploitation

    46:21 – IHQ Network vision

    50:07 – Breaking culture cycles

    51:50 – Advice for people coming home

    53:05 – Belief, faith & self-education

    54:25 – Where to find Rico

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    56 分
  • CP #015 They Called Him a Kingpin. He Beat the Feds & Took His Life Back | Eric Geralt
    2025/12/10
    They didn’t just lock her up —they tried to silence her story.Angela Stanton King went from giving birth chained to a hospital bed,mother gone, grandmother gone, partner gone…with a newborn taken from her arms —to sitting in the Oval Office, changing laws, freeing women, and saving babies across America.From prison jumpsuit → presidential advisor.From garbage bags & no support → bestselling author & national movement leader.From trying to survive → helping nearly 100 babies live.This isn’t politics.This is pain → purpose.Trauma → rebirth.A Black woman turned warrior who refuses to fold, flinch, or shut up.In this raw Crime Pays conversation, Angela opens up about:• Giving birth while shackled — and how she got the law changed.• Losing her mother & grandmother while incarcerated — and not breaking.• Being framed, abandoned, counted out — and coming back stronger.• Why abortion is spiritual warfare & generational impact.• Her controversial alliance with power — and the criticism that followed.• 97 births saved through Auntie Angie’s House… and counting.• Why formerly incarcerated talent is the future of business & leadership.• How to return home with nothing — and rebuild anyway.• Do-for-self, no-excuses, faith-driven reinvention.This episode is unfiltered. Uncomfortable. Necessary.Not left. Not right. Real.Watch with your heart open.Share with someone rebuilding their life.And remember — redemption is a lifestyle.🚨 Join Crime Pays NationLearn how to thrive after incarceration.Get mentorship, community, tools, and access →👉 https://www.skool.com/crimepaysacademy📲 ConnectFollow Ash Cash: @iamashcashFollow Jay White: @iamjasonwhite_Support Angela: AuntieAngiesHouse.org (donate, volunteer, get involved)Follow Crime Pays:IG @CrimePaysPodcast | TikTok @CrimePays | YouTube: Crime Pays🕒 Chapters & Timestamps00:00 – Abortion is life or death.00:18 – “I gave birth chained to a bed.”00:41 – Silence warriors on both sides: MLK & Charlie Kirk00:53 – Misconception: “People think I’m a white supremacist.”01:25 – Welcome to Crime Pays02:00 – Introducing Angela Stanton King: trauma → triumph02:55 – From pain to purpose → Auntie Angie’s House04:06 – First impressions & the voice the system wasn’t ready for05:01 – Pregnant in prison & pressured to abort05:51 – Chained, watched, separated: the birth story06:58 – From prison → palace → White House impact07:44 – “God, if you restore me, I’ll spend my life helping others.”08:40 – Meeting Trump & changing policy10:13 – Women chained during birth — the part they don’t talk about11:17 – Life in poverty, survival crimes & how the streets raise you12:52 – Baby 97 born — legacy over stats13:55 – Turning street skills into business skills15:05 – Trauma, motherhood & why she had to stay strong16:30 – Black lives matter starts at birth17:20 – Pain → purpose as restoration18:52 – Why men struggle more when coming home19:48 – Faith-based rebrand & the assignment20:57 – Race as distraction, power as target22:32 – The Group Chat movement — everybody welcome23:39 – Vision: Auntie Angie’s House nationwide25:00 – The trust problem in Black economics26:00 – “A million people. One dollar. A million a week.”27:05 – Broken systems, fatherhood & prison reform29:00 – Clemency, pardons & why we need second chances31:00 – Expungement ≠ forgiven — know the difference32:18 – Entrepreneurship as survival33:30 – Intense or anointed? Both.34:47 – Crime → purpose if you flip it36:10 – Spiritual warfare & the value of life37:47 – If she wasn’t born… generations vanish40:02 – Preparing for freedom inside41:11 – “Write my sister?” — on-air promise42:10 – The biggest misconception44:05 – Business is business — operate in your favor45:16 – Reinvention formula: blend in or boss up46:23 – Advice for women coming home with shame47:45 – Every pain is an assignment48:20 – Closing | Crime Pays family
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    49 分