Brian McKnight has filed a defamation lawsuit against The Rickey Smiley Morning Show, radio host Karen Clark, and media company Urban One. The case marks the latest chapter in the R&B singer’s ongoing public conflict involving his ex-wife and estranged children.
According to WBLS, the lawsuit focuses on interviews and broadcast segments that McKnight says repeated false allegations about his behavior toward his family.
The complaint, filed in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of North Carolina, claims the syndicated program and Clark aired statements portraying him as “emotionally abusive, mentally abusive, and neglectful.” McKnight argues the accusations were presented without proper verification and caused significant harm to his public image.
The singer is seeking $25,000 in compensatory damages for each claim, along with additional punitive damages. As of now, neither The Rickey Smiley Morning Show nor Clark has publicly responded to the lawsuit.
The legal dispute stems from interviews tied to McKnight’s family tensions that aired in late 2025. In January of that year, Clark interviewed McKnight’s ex-wife, Julie McKnight, on Foxy 107.1 in Raleigh, North Carolina. The discussion, which was later posted to the station’s YouTube channel, focused on the singer’s relationship with his older children.
McKnight’s lawsuit claims Clark asked leading questions during the conversation and failed to provide him an opportunity to respond to the accusations.
The complaint also points to a December 15, 2025 segment on The Rickey Smiley Morning Show that featured audio from an interview with his eldest son, Brian McKnight Jr.
During the segment, McKnight Jr. alleged that his father refused to tell his brother, Niko McKnight, that he loved him while Niko was dying of cancer in May 2025. McKnight’s filing states that broadcasting the claim without verification further harmed his reputation.
The lawsuit arrives during a stretch of heightened controversy for the singer.
In 2024, McKnight faced backlash after referring to his estranged children as “products of sin” in a social media post. Public scrutiny also intensified earlier this year when he celebrated an $8.8 million default judgment in a separate defamation case against Julie McKnight related to statements in her memoir.
However, court records later showed Julie McKnight moved to vacate that judgment, arguing she had not been properly served with legal documents.
The ongoing family dispute has also spilled into McKnight’s professional life. Claflin University previously canceled his scheduled appearance at its Presidential Scholarship Gala following criticism from students and alumni.
