
Subjects of Interest
Myron Grace
Screenworks Entertainment
Why This Matters
If you've published a book or posted about your writing online, chances are you've been contacted by someone promising exposure, media coverage, or film adaptation for a price. One name that keeps coming up over and over, for more than a decade, is Myron Grace, the self-described CEO of Screenworks Entertainment. This isn’t a rant. It’s a dossier, backed by records, screenshots, and first-person reports. It examines Grace’s business practices, including spam, manipulation, broken promises, and threats. If you’re a creative professional, you deserve to know the facts before engaging with him or anyone like him. I’ve spent months researching this, compiling firsthand reports, conducting interviews, ordering business records, downloading his entire online footprint, and archiving emails, as well as reviewing all episodes from his radio show. The nearly 50 gigabytes of findings are disturbing.
I want to talk about my experience with him. Not because I’m looking for drama, but because someone has to say something. Enough is enough.
Who’s Myron Grace?
Myron Grace is the CEO and founder of Screenworks Entertainment, which he claims is a Cleveland-based company he runs alongside his partner and wife, Rockie Thunder. He describes Screenworks Entertainment as a publishing company, record label, film studio, artist management firm, and promotions agency. There's no direct record of a business entity named “Screenworks Entertainment” registered in Ohio’s online corporate database.
Grace also boasts affiliations with entities like LMC Productions, Gateway Music, and New World Soldiers Entertainment, but these names don't appear to have a meaningful online footprint or any traceable business presence. Out of fairness to those entities, which may be unaware their names are being used this way, I'm not focusing this report on them.
Grace’s personal resume, publicly posted online, reads more like a list of unverified dreams than a legitimate work history. He claims to have been trained in nonviolence by Coretta Scott King, though there's no evidence she taught any such courses outside formal civil rights training environments. He also claims to have executive produced a sitcom on Warner Brothers TV, written a hit off-Broadway play, and launched one of the most successful radio broadcasts in Radio One network history, all without naming the projects or offering a single piece of outside confirmation. The resume includes inconsistent formatting, multiple spelling errors, and sudden shifts to all caps mid-sentence.
He also claims to have won a journalism award equal to the Pulitzer Prize, yet his public writing, especially his promotional emails, is riddled with grammatical errors, broken sentences, and a complete lack of professional polish. For someone who claims to be a communicator, he often struggles to string coherent thoughts together on paper.
On air, it's not much better. Grace frequently mumbles and is nearly incoherent during his radio broadcasts. His delivery is halting, and he often glances off camera to read what appears to be cue cards, even to remember the name of his own show. For someone offering media training and brand development services, the presentation lacks basic clarity.
Grace also lists time at Thomas M. Cooley Law School, stating he was in the J.D. Program for Corporate Law. However, he doesn't list a graduation date or degree earned, and no bar certification can be verified. That omission matters, especially considering he often falls back on his so-called legal training to issue threats, accuse critics of slander, and intimidate authors who challenge him. For someone who repeatedly references law school and lawsuits, his misuse of legal terms, like confusing slander with libel and ignoring the requirements of the CAN-SPAM Act, suggests either a misunderstanding of the law or a calculated bet that no one will call him out.
In short, Grace appears to rely more on borrowed prestige and vague claims than verifiable results. What he markets as a company looks more like a two-person operation held together by puffery, recycled email pitches, and a lot of name-dropping.
The Spam Begins
Over the last few months, I’ve received more than a dozen unsolicited emails from Myron Grace and his "company," Screenworks Entertainment. I never signed up for any of these. I never agreed to be on a list. And I’ve asked politely, firmly, and legally to be removed. He keeps sending them anyway.
Worse, these emails don’t just go to me. They’re blasted out to nearly two hundred people at a time. Many of those people have also asked to be removed. Many others probably didn’t even realize they were being marketed to under shady terms.
This Isn’t Marketing. It’s Spam
This isn’t just annoying. It’s deceptive.
When you pay someone to promote your book, you trust them to send it to people who want to read it, not to dump it into inboxes of strangers who never asked for it. That’s not marketing. That’s spam. And it hurts authors more than it helps.
And here’s why that matters: Authors pour everything into their work: time, money, and emotion. When you finally decide to invest in marketing, you’re not doing it casually. You’re doing it because you believe in your story and you want it to find its audience. But if someone blasts out your book with no targeting, and no care, they’re not helping you. They’re damaging your name. Readers see your title as junk mail. Librarians and bookstores tune it out. Real media contacts start to ignore anything with your name on it.
That kind of damage is hard to undo. It sticks. It follows you. And the worst part? You paid for it.
Who’s Really Sending These Emails?
Grace uses multiple email addresses to send unsolicited advertisements. Some emails come from a sender named "Rockie Thunder," who isn’t a separate representative but Grace’s co-host—and wife—making it clear this isn’t a team of professionals but a two-person operation recycling the same aggressive sales tactics under different names.
There’s no unsubscribe option. Some of these emails include blind CCs to dozens of recipients, with some addresses bouncing back as undeliverable, a common tactic used by scammers to obscure real recipients and avoid detection. Others appear to be self-sent, with only his own email addresses listed, creating an illusion of exclusivity. This tactic may also serve to inflate his perceived legitimacy or authority, giving the impression that he alone is managing high-level outreach rather than flooding inboxes en masse.
Inflated Reach, Deflated Reality
Across multiple posts on his Facebook pages, Grace routinely claims his marketing packages reach up to 50,000 email recipients. But based on professional-level screenshots, captured headers, and the actual email traffic observed, the real number appears to be fewer than 200, many of which are outdated, fake, or bounce on reply.
This isn’t targeted exposure. It’s a recycled spam list passed off as professional promotion. Authors aren’t paying to be discovered. They’re paying to be ignored, flagged, or filtered into junk folders alongside obvious scams.
Legal Violations and Threats
Even after being told to stop, even after multiple "cease and desist" requests, even after quoting the CAN-SPAM Act (which carries serious fines), the emails keep coming. At one point, I was threatened with a lawsuit just for speaking up. The CAN-SPAM Act, enforced by the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), makes it illegal to send commercial email without a valid unsubscribe method.
When I replied and asked to be removed, I was threatened with a lawsuit. He even sent a message stating:
"I am Myron Grace and if you ever say anything bad about me again I will let the court take your money for Libel and Slander. One warning only."
For someone who brags about having attended law school and claims to sue corporations in his spare time, Grace either doesn’t understand or chooses to ignore the basics of the CAN-SPAM Act, which clearly requires a working opt-out system and penalizes violations with fines of up to $51,744 per email. I’ve received more than a dozen of these emails, even after asking him to stop. If the FTC decided to enforce it, he could theoretically face over $620,000 in penalties just from my inbox alone, and that’s a conservative estimate.
His emails don’t just break the law, they weaponize it. He uses deception to get in your inbox, then legal threats to stay there.
Fake Foundations and Free Emails
Despite claiming to run a professional media business with high-profile clients and legal muscle, Myron Grace doesn’t use a single business domain for email. Not one. Every email I’ve received, every threat, every pitch, every exclusive offer, has come from a free personal address. We’re talking yahoo.com, hotmail.com, gmail.com. Nothing that even hints at a real organization or infrastructure. No @screenworksentertainment.net
, no staff emails, not even a forwarding domain. Just the same tired usernames recycled across spam blasts.
But the one that truly stands out? myrongracejusicefoundation@yahoo.com.
That’s not a typo on my part. He actually named his supposed legal foundation the “Jusice Foundation.” Misspelled. In the email handle. For someone who brags about attending law school, threatens slander and libel suits, and claims to sue corporations for fun, you’d think he’d know how to spell “justice.” But then again, as you'll see later in this report, Grace struggles to remember where he is at times and the name of his own show.
Of course, no such foundation exists. There’s no website, no EIN, no nonprofit registration. Just a big, serious-sounding name slapped onto a Yahoo account. It’s not a foundation. It’s flexing. He wants to sound intimidating. Like someone with a legal team. Like someone with authority. But when you’re threatening legal action from a Yahoo account, the act starts to fall apart.
This isn’t professional. It’s amateur branding held together by free email providers and bravado. That alone should make any author think twice before trusting him with money, let alone their reputation.
The Intimidation Pattern
He reacted to criticism with threats, throwing around slander accusations like weapons, including one bizarrely delivered by email, even though slander, by definition, refers to spoken defamation. A legal scholar like Grace should know that’s not how it works, which suggests either he doesn’t understand the law or hopes I don’t.
On his June 4th, 2025 AM radio show, The Midnight Hour Radio Show: A Place Where Stars Call Home, Grace claimed to have “several lawyers,” echoing the same kind of posturing he’s used in emails. These repeated claims of legal muscle appear designed to intimidate rather than inform.
Inflated Listener Claims
Grace claims 250,000 local listeners and up to 8 million through streaming platforms like Urban One and ViacomCBS. But the Midnight Hour Radio Show tells a different story, at least online. As of this writing, the June 18, 2025 show on his official Facebook page shows just 9 views. Many other episodes often have fewer than 50 total views. To be fair, these are Facebook view counts, and the show may indeed be broadcast over AM radio, which doesn't track digital metrics the same way. His The Midnight Hour Radio Show Facebook Group only has 22 members. But the undeniable contrast between claimed numbers and visible engagement raises serious questions. Inflating reach to justify payment is misleading, especially when used to pressure authors into costly promotional packages costing from $200 to $250,000. That $250,000 price tag? More likely a prop than a real offer, a flex to make him look like a major player, not something anyone’s actually buying.
Questionable Distribution Claims
Grace frequently boasts that his radio show, The Midnight Hour Radio Show, reaches up to 8 million people, claiming distribution through Radio One, Urban One, and ViacomCBS. In a June 2025 Facebook post under the profile myron.grace.54, he claimed 250,000 local listeners in Cleveland and “up to 8 million” through those platforms. However, these claims don’t hold up under scrutiny.
According to Nielsen’s Fall 2022 data, only 3.4 million Ohioans listen to AM radio in a given month, and 10.8 million across AM/FM combined. It’s unlikely that a single local AM program without verified syndication accounts for a significant portion of that statewide audience.
Even outside traditional radio, the numbers don’t support Grace’s claims. The promotional Facebook posts tied to each episode often have no likes, no comments, and no shares. Meanwhile, The Midnight Hour Radio Show’s YouTube channel has just 182 subscribers, comments are turned off, and most videos have fewer than 20 views. A show with 182 subscribers isn’t leading public opinion, it’s barely reaching the neighbors.
No official record exists of The Midnight Hour Radio Show being broadcast or distributed by Radio One, Urban One, or ViacomCBS. These are tightly controlled media brands with strict guidelines on partner representation. Despite Grace regularly including them in his marketing materials, no partnership or endorsement can be independently verified.
Equally questionable is the inclusion of “Screenworks Entertainment (ASCAP).” While it may be technically true that Grace registered music or content through ASCAP’s open database, this doesn’t imply any kind of corporate endorsement, licensing deal, or broadcast distribution agreement. For a company that insists on its credibility, this kind of vague name-dropping raises more red flags than it clears.
This pattern, grand claims with little visible proof, is consistent with how Grace markets everything from his radio show to his author services. In another June 2025 Facebook post, he promoted “Hot Atlanta Mix 106,” claiming 684,000 monthly listeners and 36,000 new listeners per month via TuneIn Radio. Yet there was no mention of any authors, book promotion, or interviews. Despite repeated marketing of his services to writers, the absence of real author content raises questions about who is actually benefiting from these promotional packages.
The “Book Tour” That Wasn’t
Between May 14 and May 18, 2025, Myron Grace made several Facebook posts claiming to be on a multi-state book promotion tour. He shared photos and videos from locations including the Seminole Hard Rock Casino in Cincinnati, Ohio; Harrah’s Cherokee Casino in North Carolina; a mall in Atlanta, Georgia, and a rest stop in Kentucky. In each post, Grace stated he was “promoting an author,” but never once mentioned the author’s name or the book title.
May 14, 2025 – Seminole Hard Rock Café, Cincinnati, OH
Grace posts a 30-second video on Facebook saying he’s at the Seminole Hard Rock Café and heading to Atlanta for business. He adds, “Makin' them films go smooth, turning them books into movies…”
Click to watch the video on Facebook.
May 15, 2025 – Kentucky Rest Stop
Grace posts several photos on Facebook showing the same black-and-white flyer positioned in different spots: taped to a wall, tucked into a rack of tourism brochures, and held in front of a rest stop map. One image even shows the flyer placed next to a spotted lanternfly pest notice. While it’s unclear if these were taken at different rest areas or simply staged at a single location, there is no signage, no audience, and no mention of the author or book title, despite Grace writing that he’s in Lexington, Kentucky, “promoting authors.”
(“Author promotion,” according to Myron Grace: no signage, no book, no audience, just a fistful of bargain-bin flyers waved in front of a highway map like it’s a press conference.)
(Grace’s idea of a book tour stop: wedging flyers between free Kentucky tourism brochures at a rest stop. No table, no signage, no author. Just a blurry photo as proof.)
(Grace’s “author promotion” flyer taped beside a spotted lanternfly pest control notice. No signage, no context, and no indication anyone ever saw it, except his phone camera.)
May 16, 2025 – Atlanta, Georgia (Unknown Mall)
Grace posts a video from what he claims is a mall in Atlanta. He says the mall’s name, but it’s mumbled and incoherent. Earlier in the trip, he had said he was heading to Atlanta for business to “promote an author,” but he provides no specifics. Is this what he meant: sitting at a water fountain in the middle of a mall? There’s no book title and no author name. Aside from the same upside-down, mirrored flyer, there’s no signage, no photos of public engagement, and no actual marketing effort on display.
(Live from a water fountain bench in Atlanta: another world-class author promotion brought to you by Myron Grace. No signage, no table, no book, just an upside-down flyer and a camera phone. Marketing excellence at its finest.)
Click to watch the video on Facebook.
May 18, 2025 – Casino Confusion
In a 43-second video, Grace and his wife sit at a slot machine inside a casino he struggles to identify. He first says they’re in “Las Vegas,” then fumbles for the correct name while looking through his phone to get the correct location. He claims the visit is for promotional purposes, but the only marketing material shown is the same black-and-white flyer, briefly held upside down again, mirrored, and unreadable. No signage, no booth, no book, and no visible effort to engage anyone.
(Once again, Grace holds an upside-down flyer like it’s a VIP pass, this time inside a casino. No booth. No banner. No audience. Just the same lazy pitch in a new location.)
Click to watch the video on Facebook.
May 18, 2025 – A Strange Goodbye
Later that same day, Grace posts from the King Center, claiming he’s there to “say goodbye” to a “dear friend and mentor,” Coretta Scott King. He gives no explanation of his connection to her, no indication they ever met, and no reason why this visit has anything to do with the supposed book tour. The video shows no grave marker, no signage, just vague commentary, background scenery, and at one point, a long shot of his crotch as he walks, likely unintentional but emblematic of his lack of focus. If the gesture is genuine, it’s never clarified. If not, it reads like another attempt to inflate his public image by associating himself with prominent figures, even posthumously. Like much of the trip, it feels less like a tribute and more like branding.
(At the tomb of Martin Luther King Jr. and Coretta Scott King, Grace claims he’s saying goodbye to a “dear friend and mentor.” No backstory. No proof they ever met. Just more vague self-glorification, followed immediately by a pitch for his marketing services. Because nothing says respect like shilling email blasts next to a civil rights icon’s grave.)
Despite the lack of public interaction, professional materials, or even clear identification of the author or book, Grace has consistently framed these outings as a multi-state promotional tour. But the evidence tells a different story. What’s visible isn’t a campaign to promote a book, it’s a loosely staged set of photos and vague captions, more likely a personal trip being rebranded for tax or promotional gain.
No Verified Success Stories
Despite claims of helping 3,800 clients and selling 6.4 million books, there are no verifiable success stories of authors landing major deals through Grace’s services. Most positive reviews appear suspicious or vague, and none cite specific results. Meanwhile, dozens of detailed negative experiences exist, including breakdowns of services paid for and not received.
Example One: The Intangible Tangerine
In one of only a few visible mentions of a book, Grace shared a link to The Intangible Tangerine by Matthew Hawkey in a June 4, 2025 Facebook post. It wasn’t even a formal promotion, just an Amazon link with the book description copied into the post. At the bottom, Grace added his usual claim: that he’s helped sell more than 6.4 million books and can “work with any budget.” But the post received no likes, no comments, and no visible traction. The book’s Amazon Best Sellers Rank hovered around #2,822,567, and the only reviews on the page were written in 2023, well before Grace ever shared it. There’s no sign his involvement led to a single sale. If this is an example of his marketing in action, it’s underwhelming at best.
I want to stress, none of this reflects on Matthew Hawkey or his book. The Intangible Tangerine is a sincere and creative work that deserves real support. The issue isn’t the author, it’s that Grace uses books like this as props for self-promotion, without offering any real strategy or results.
Example Two: Alcoholism: Till Death Do We Part
In a follow-up post dated March 20, 2025, Grace again promoted Alcoholism: Till Death Do We Part by Mark J. Holmes. The content was largely identical to the earlier March 8 post, repeating the book’s description and adding claims about the wide range of promotional services Screenworks Entertainment offers. However, this version included several broken or malformed links, including the Amazon purchase link and author website. None of the links in the post were functional, which further undercuts the credibility of the promotion. Despite two separate posts promoting this book, it still had only four Amazon reviews and no sign of increased exposure. The repeated use of copy-pasted content and broken links raises questions about the quality and attention given to client campaigns.
Copy-Paste Promotion Strategy
To date, nearly all of Grace’s “book promotions” follow the same template: a copied-and-pasted Amazon link, a generic “Purchase Your Copy Today” line, and the author’s name repeated once or twice. There’s no personalized pitch, no call-to-action beyond the Amazon link, no video, no graphics, no interviews, no engagement with the author or their readers.
These are flat posts, often with no likes, no shares, and no comments. Despite Grace’s claims of offering press releases, SEO, brand development, and promotional outreach to “up to 8 million people,” the actual posts reflect none of that. They’re basic link shares at best, not campaigns, not marketing, and certainly not proof of professional results.
These sparse, low-effort posts stand in contrast to Grace’s repeated boasts of massive client success, raising further questions about the nature and scope of the services he actually provides.
Credibility and Audience Reach
Finally, one verifiable author interview surfaced in promotional materials: an appearance by Dolen Perkins-Valdez, scheduled for Week Sixteen of The Midnight Hour Radio Show. According to the interview confirmation post, the live call-in was set to air on 1490 AM WERE Cleveland from 5:15 p.m. to 5:22 p.m. EST—a total of just seven minutes. The promotional post provided a link to newstalkcleveland.com, but the link led only to the station’s homepage. A site search turned up no trace of the interview, no archive, and no mention of the author. No video, transcript, or post-show promotion was found on Grace’s Facebook pages or YouTube. While this confirms at least one scheduled author appearance, the minimal exposure and complete lack of accessible evidence again raise questions about the value clients actually receive.
In addition to low view counts on his AM radio show videos, Grace’s public-facing metrics on social media further undercut his promotional claims. His personal “Myron Grace” Facebook page shows fewer than 150 total engagements: likes, comments, or shares, between January 1 and June 27, 2025. For someone claiming to reach 250,000 weekly radio listeners and stream to millions more, this is an extremely low level of engagement. It raises serious questions about how many people are actually interacting with his content, let alone purchasing services from it.
In addition to the nonexistent engagement, Grace’s on-air presence is a masterclass in amateur hour. He coughs into the mic, loud, constant, and unmuted, like he’s never heard of a mute button or basic audio etiquette. If it’s medical, I haven't heard him explain it. If it’s not, it’s just laziness. Worse, nearly every time he says the name of his own show, “The Midnight Hour Radio Show: A Place Where Stars Call Home,” or other common terms or phases, he turns his head and seeminly reads it stiffly just off camera, like it’s taped to a wall he can’t quite see. Same awkward pause. Same robotic tone. Same blank delivery. For someone charging up to $250,000 for media exposure, it’s not just sloppy. It’s laughable. Come on, learn the name of your own show!
(Myron Grace, caught mid-glance at what appears to be a cue card or screen, because even the name of his own show can’t be trusted to memory. For someone charging up to $250,000 for media training and brand building, you’d expect him to remember the basics without reading off the wall.)
Patterns of Deceit: A 15-Year Trail of Complaints
I’m not his only target, just one of many indie authors who received the same pitch. What I found through simple research wasn’t just a few isolated complaints, but a concerning pattern of questionable behavior. Here are just a few examples:
- 2009–2010: Grace ran Starlight Midwest Entertainment and began advertising on Craigslist, recruiting actors and “investors” for films that were never produced. Multiple users reported being ghosted after paying fees. (ComplaintsBoard)
- 2010: A woman named G.L. publicly demanded that Grace stop using her name in his emails without permission. (ComplaintsBoard)
- 2011–2013: Complaints about unpaid actors and promotional packages that never materialized continued. (Ripoff Report)
- 2022: Author T.R. posted a scathing review, showing Grace promised him connections to Ron Howard, James Earl Jones, and The Oprah Winfrey Show, all if he paid more money. When the author stopped paying, Grace retaliated with slanderous emails sent to U.S. industry contacts and even the U.S. ambassador to Ireland. T.R. says the stress nearly killed him. (ComplaintsBoard)
- 2024: Another author (J.A.) shared that Grace contacted her out of the blue on Facebook, offering her a movie deal for $11,000. He never asked about her book’s genre. When she declined, he became hostile and condescending. (ComplaintsBoard)
- 2025: A new spam complaint was filed on March 8, 2025 against tvpilots@yahoo.com for violating spam rules. (Spam.org)
Threats and Harassment
Myron Grace doesn’t just ignore unsubscribe requests, he retaliates. Multiple people have documented threats:
- N.M. (2022): Asked for a refund and was threatened with public defamation by Grace.
- R. (2022): Was targeted by smear campaigns after asking for a refund.
- J.A. (2024): Was emotionally manipulated and mocked when she declined to send $11K.
He has also been accused of impersonating others online to defend himself. A user calling themselves “Truth & Consequences” posted threatening responses to critics, many believe it was Grace using an alias. (ComplaintsBoard)
This Matters – For All Creators
Grace targets hope. Writers who believe in their work. Artists who want to be heard. He knows exactly what to promise, just enough fame, just enough credibility, and then disappears after getting paid. Worse, when victims speak up, he threatens them.
I’m not just another name in his inbox. I’m a publisher, author, researcher, and former intelligence analyst and investigator. And unlike others, I’m documenting everything. This report is just the beginning.
What You Can Do:
- Report to the FTC: https://reportfraud.ftc.gov.
- Report Spam: https://www.spamcop.net.
- Alert the Ohio Attorney General: https://www.ohioattorneygeneral.gov.
- Report to the Better Business Bureau: https://www.bbb.org.
- Report spam to Google Gmail and Yahoo. Google and Yahoo can remove email accounts for sending spam.
- Warn other authors: Link to this report. Share it.
This isn’t just symbolic. With his long, documented history of violations, my formal complaints, filed with these agencies, may finally carry the weight needed to force Grace to face real consequences. If you’ve been targeted, adding your voice only strengthens the case.
A Note on Retaliation
I fully expect Myron Grace to respond to this report, whether on his radio show or one of his many social media accounts. Every claim here is backed by public complaints, verifiable records, and direct correspondence. This isn't personal. It's documentation, gathered using investigative eDiscovery tools used by law firms, investigators, and legal teams to capture online evidence that holds up in court.
I have spent over 30 years in intelligence analysis and collection, investigations, and opposition research. This is what I do. I don't just make claims. I collect proof, and I collect it the right way. And I have never lost in court.
And just like an investigator uses surveillance to track a subject, I’m using digital and cyber surveillance to monitor any retaliation. I’ve already downloaded and archived his social media posts and email communications in a legally defensible manner. If he chooses to insult me or my work publicly, that won’t change the facts, it’ll only confirm them.
I don’t fear retaliation. I document it, and thrive on it.
Myron Grace has left behind a long, ugly trail of manipulation. If you’ve been contacted, be cautious. If you’ve been targeted, know you’re not alone. And if you’re thinking of paying for his services, please—don’t.
Graced messed with the wrong author and investigator. Now we fight back—with truth, facts, and names. Writers know how to communicate. We cut through the noise, document the facts, and make people pay attention. It’s time to use those skills where they matter most.
I’ll give him this—The Midnight Hour Radio Show spins some decent ’80s tracks. But decent music doesn’t excuse deceptive business practices.
Final Word
This isn’t a misunderstanding. This isn’t a difference in marketing style. This is a documented, repeat pattern of deception, manipulation, and intimidation that has gone unchecked for far too long, and too many authors have been afraid to speak out, fearing retaliation or embarrassment. Lawfare is his game, and even that is fake.
Grace doesn’t just sell inflated promises, he sells access to a fantasy he can’t deliver. And when questioned, he lashes out.
He has built a brand on name-dropping celebrities, faking distribution claims, spamming inboxes, and intimidating authors who dare to speak up. He preys on people who are passionate, trusting, and hopeful, people who want nothing more than to share their stories with the world.
But that ends here.
No more silence. No more shrugging it off. No more letting him quietly move from one inbox to the next, one promise to the next victim.
This report is public. It’s documented. It’s archived. And it’s only the beginning.
A more comprehensive report is already in progress, with additional records, screenshots, and video statements from others who have come forward. It'll focus on Grace’s so-called “businesses,” including his fake Justice Foundation, and how he uses faith, race, threats, celebrity name-dropping, and fabricated credentials to sell himself and silence critics.
You want to know what real exposure looks like? It looks like this.
Because now everyone knows your name, Myron.
Disclaimer: This journal entry isn't intended to disgrace Mr. Grace. It's meant to inform potential future clients: authors, musicians, and other creative professionals about Mr. Grace’s long history of unverifiable credentials, frequent legal threats, unsubstantiated marketing claims, and repeated use of public legal filings that raise serious questions about his business practices. Readers are encouraged to review all publicly available records and make their own informed decisions.
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