Floyd Mayweather is one of the most well-known boxing champions in the world, making over a billion dollars during his career.
However, he is speaking out and suing Showtime, claiming he never got all the money he earned, and the company played a big role in siphoning away hundreds of millions of dollars.
The Lawsuit
The lawsuit was filed by Floyd in California, and he is looking to “recover hundreds of millions of dollars in the misappropriated funds and damages resulting from a long-running and elaborate scheme of financial fraud.”
Longtime advisor Al Haymon allegedly perpetrated the scheme, and he got “substantial participation and aid” from Showtime and former Showtime Sports president Stephen Espinoza.
The misappropriated earnings come to about $340 million, which, according to Mayweather, is still “missing and unaccounted for.”
Showtime and Espinoza are listed as defendants in the legal documents, while Haymon is not being sued.
Along with the money, Mayweather is suing Showtime and Espinoza for punitive damages, “aiding and abetting breach of fiduciary duty, civil conspiracy to commit fraud, conversion, and unjust enrichment.”
Within the suit, Mayweather names some of his biggest fights, basically alleging that Showtime and Espinoza delivered money that was meant for Mayweather directly into Haymon’s hands by sending accounts that Haymon controlled.
Floyd Mayweather is one of the most well-known boxing champions in the world, making over a billion dollars during his career.
However, he is speaking out and suing Showtime, claiming he never got all the money he earned, and the company played a big role in siphoning away hundreds of millions of dollars.
The lawsuit was filed by Floyd in California, and he is looking to “recover hundreds of millions of dollars in the misappropriated funds and damages resulting from a long-running and elaborate scheme of financial fraud.”
Longtime advisor Al Haymon allegedly perpetrated the scheme, and he got “substantial participation and aid” from Showtime and former Showtime Sports president Stephen Espinoza.
The misappropriated earnings come to about $340 million, which, according to Mayweather, is still “missing and unaccounted for.”
Showtime and Espinoza are listed as defendants in the legal documents, while Haymon is not being sued.
Along with the money, Mayweather is suing Showtime and Espinoza for punitive damages, “aiding and abetting breach of fiduciary duty, civil conspiracy to commit fraud, conversion, and unjust enrichment.”
Within the suit, Mayweather names some of his biggest fights, basically alleging that Showtime and Espinoza delivered money that was meant for Mayweather directly into Haymon’s hands by sending accounts that Haymon controlled.
Non-accessible Funds
Years after his fights and contract with Showtime, Mayweather switched managers.
When his new team asked to see Showtime’s books, Mayweather claims the network told him they were “lost in a flood,” or weren’t accessible.
This further muddies the waters on what the truth about Mayweather’s money is.
Attorney Statement
Mayweather’s attorney Bobby Samini spoke to TMZ about the legal case.
He said, “Floyd is one of boxing’s biggest pay-per-view draws. He generated hundreds of millions of dollars in revenue for Showtime. Mr. Mayweather now takes this fight to the courtroom to recover what he rightfully earned. Retiring undefeated at 50-0, Mr. Mayweather will go the distance in the courtroom just as he has in the ring.”