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Floyd Mayweather Jr. To Jail: Boxer Set To Begin Serving Jail Time In June [UPDATED]

Mayweather Jail Term Begin

KEN RITTER   01/ 6/12 10:09 PM ET   AP

LAS VEGAS — A judge agreed Friday to postpone a jail sentence against Floyd Mayweather Jr. in a Las Vegas domestic violence case, allowing the undefeated boxer to make a Cinco de Mayo fight against an as-yet unnamed opponent.

The ruling by Justice of the Peace Melissa Saragosa to allow Mayweather to begin his 90-day stint on June 1 came with the fighter's manager and supporters, including rap star Lil' Kim and R&B artist Ray J, in the courtroom as a defense lawyer cited the economic boost that Las Vegas could get from the bout.

Mayweather, meanwhile, waited in the lobby of a nearby building to hear whether Saragosa would make him immediately begin serving the three-month sentence she imposed when the boxing champion pleaded guilty last month to a charge that he attacked his ex-girlfriend while two of their children watched in September 2010.

Saragosa said she was swayed by the last-minute plea from Mayweather's lawyer, Richard Wright, to let Mayweather postpone jail time so he can train to fight on the May 5 date his promoters promised months ago to pay-per-view television and the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas.

Wright said Mayweather wasn't trying to avoid the sentence, and emphasized the potential economic benefit of attracting fight fans and hotel guests to Las Vegas for a Mayweather fight. The lawyer estimated that Mayweather's last seven fights in Las Vegas generated a combined $1 billion in business to the community. He projected the economic boost from a May 5 fight at more than $100 million.

"This is simply a delay because of prior commitments and contracts," Wright said.

"Mr. Mayweather has an obligation to this court," the judge responded. But "given the fact that Mr. Mayweather has these obligations, I am going to grant your request."

Prosecutor Lisa Luzaich protested that Mayweather should have to serve his sentence "just like anyone else."

Saragosa ordered Mayweather to immediately enroll in a yearlong domestic violence counseling program, and noted that under her original sentence, Mayweather faces an additional three months in jail if he doesn't comply. Mayweather also must complete 100 hours of community service and pay a $2,500 fine.

The judge didn't mention a promise that Mayweather's lawyers made in court last month that the boxer would donate $100,000 by the end of the year to the Susan G. Komen for the Cure breast cancer research and support foundation in Las Vegas.

The nonprofit operates with about a $1 million annual budget, foundation executive Stephanie Kirby said Friday. Kirby said Mayweather's lawyers have contacted the organization, but the donation has not been made.

Mayweather, 34, was seen leaving the courthouse area driving a new white Bentley Mulsanne, which has a base price of about $290,000. Mayweather posted photos of a new Bentley luxury sedan this week on his Twitter account, along with separate photos of himself with his children and himself serving people at a food line.

Mayweather's manager, Leonard Ellerbe, issued a statement later saying the Mayweather camp was pleased the judge granted the postponement to allow for what he termed a "mega-fight." He wouldn't say whom Mayweather expects to fight.

Mayweather pleaded guilty Dec. 21 to a reduced battery domestic violence charge and no contest to two harassment charges as part of a plea deal that saw prosecutors drop felony and misdemeanor charges that could have gotten him 34 years in prison.

Authorities say the case stems from a hair-pulling, punching and arm-twisting argument with Josie Harris, the mother of three of Mayweather's children, and threats to beat their sons in an argument about Harris dating another man. Harris, now 31, lives in the Los Angeles area with the couple's sons, now 12 and 10, and a daughter age 8.

Mayweather, who goes by the nickname "Money," has earned upward of $20 million for each of his two most recent fights, one against Victor Ortiz, which won him the WBC welterweight belt, and the other against Shane Mosley.

Mayweather is generally recognized as one of the two best boxers in the world, sharing that spotlight with Manny Pacquiao, a champion fighter from the Philippines. The two men have never fought in the ring, but have a defamation lawsuit pending in Las Vegas federal court stemming from statements by Mayweather that he suspected Pacquiao was taking performance-enhancing drugs.

As part of his plea deal, Mayweather also pleaded no contest Dec. 30 to misdemeanor harassment in a separate case stemming from a scuffle with a 21-year-old homeowner association security guard who claimed he was poked in the face during an argument about parking tickets on cars outside Mayweather's house.

The extended jail stint will be a first for Mayweather, who has been arrested several times since 2002 in battery and violence cases in Las Vegas and in his hometown of Grand Rapids, Mich.

He was convicted in 2002 of misdemeanor battery stemming from a fight with two women at a Las Vegas nightclub, received a suspended one-year jail sentence and was ordered to undergo impulse-control counseling. Wright said that case was overturned on appeal.

He was fined in Grand Rapids in February 2005 and ordered to perform community service after pleading no contest to misdemeanor assault and battery for a bar fight.

He was acquitted by a Nevada jury in July 2005 of accusations that he hit and kicked Harris during an argument outside a Las Vegas nightclub.

He was acquitted last October of misdemeanor allegations that he threatened two homeowner association security guards during a parking ticket argument separate from the one in November.

Mayweather also faces a civil lawsuit in state court in Las Vegas from two men who allege he orchestrated a shooting attack on them outside a skating rink in 2009. Police have never accused Mayweather of firing shots, and he has never been criminally charged in that case.

He is also on the hook for 40 hours of community service with the Las Vegas Habitat for Humanity Project under a South Carolina federal judge's order for dodging a deposition in a music rights lawsuit.

Habitat for Humanity has not heard from Mayweather, agency official Catherine Barnes said Friday.

Earlier on HuffPost:

FOLLOW HUFFPOST SPORTS

LAS VEGAS — A judge agreed Friday to postpone a jail sentence against Floyd Mayweather Jr. in a Las Vegas domestic violence case, allowing the undefeated boxer to make a Cinco de Mayo fight agai...
LAS VEGAS — A judge agreed Friday to postpone a jail sentence against Floyd Mayweather Jr. in a Las Vegas domestic violence case, allowing the undefeated boxer to make a Cinco de Mayo fight agai...
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
sugarmoes
what doth life?
09:33 AM on 01/10/2012
apparently beating women (and children and security guards and club goers and casual passersby) is no big deal anymore. i remember when it was a big deal even to floyd. back when he promised to put a beating on diego corrales for all the battered women in the world. floyd was probably beating his own women at the very same time.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
montanasian
Still trying to make it up the learning curve.
10:06 PM on 01/08/2012
One of the conditions the judge should have set was that he fight Paqueo.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
GaryNOVA
Fear My Micro-bio!!!!!!!!
12:29 AM on 01/08/2012
answer = $$$$$$$$$$$$$$

and he'd have more of it too if he wasnt avoiding fighting Manny
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MrTown3
Boredom brings me here
06:15 PM on 01/07/2012
And of course Pac-Man is ducking him....
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dominick Roffo
Cut the b.s..I'm tired of it
09:48 PM on 01/07/2012
Are you serious?!?!? Arum is the one holding up the fight...Manny wants it.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MrTown3
Boredom brings me here
10:31 AM on 01/08/2012
Manny is off the drugs...Manny doesn't want it....trust me
12:58 PM on 01/07/2012
how did mayweather avoid jail? ... by being a rich n i g g @
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Backtalkisahorse
11:06 AM on 01/07/2012
he must be a Penn State coach.....
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10:30 AM on 01/07/2012
That's a question that doesn't need to be asked, Vegas + Boxing = Corruption. the Judge was bought, plain and simple, another example of "when you have money, you play by different rules"
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
napoleon68
02:33 PM on 01/07/2012
completely agree! remember when paris hilton was caught in vegas with a gram of coke and got probation? if it were you or me, we would be in prison so fast heads would be spinning. so tired of one rule for them, and one for us.

guess this means the dream fight will be put off until both are too old and beaten up for it to be any fun.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CraigVale
08:20 AM on 01/07/2012
" How did Merriwhether avoid jail? " Let me guess..... Because of who he is ? Naw, that can't be true... could it ?
04:36 AM on 01/07/2012
HA and you guys bought the grade school rhetoric, justice is blind.

IT does see money though.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
stape45
No brag, just fact.
10:52 PM on 01/06/2012
Maybe Floyd's problem is that HE is unbeaten.
09:32 PM on 01/06/2012
Judge bet on floyd?
09:08 PM on 01/06/2012
Its all about the benjamins !!!
08:54 PM on 01/06/2012
I hope he gets his butt kicked either in the ring or in prison. You mouth off to some of those inmates and you'll find yourself trying to pull a bloody piece of glass out of your belly. Some of those boys have nothing to lose by killing an additional person.
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12:01 PM on 01/08/2012
Money buys protection. Someone who wants to make a name for himself will be beaten by organizations that want to make a name for themselves and maybe favours. And, Money makes money for everybody. Worth alive.
08:22 PM on 01/06/2012
Mayweather is psychologically unbalance. Now that the US courts has accorded him a very an unusual special treatment for criminals. He should balance his personality and character to be back a normal life as a human being and not on the animalistic category. So he can now finally announce that May 5 is Mayweather VS Pacman, so Mayweather can now generate early revenues to pay his obligations to people in and out of courts specially those civilians he has offended. Finally he cannot carry all his money and fortunes to heaven or hell once he dies.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mirrorwrlds
A world with infinite possibilities.
07:51 PM on 01/06/2012
This is a joke for boxing and Las Vegas to allow a postponement of jail time. Do you think this would happen to an individual without his celebrity status? What will happen when another fight comes up?
08:54 PM on 01/06/2012
Another travesty of justice.
10:31 PM on 01/06/2012
You would be locked up so fast it would make your head spin......