LAS
VEGAS – In January, June 1 seemed like such a long time away. There were
$250,000 cars to buy, luxury vacations to take, a fight to win and basketball
games on which to bet.
But June 1 is
here and barring a last-minute reprieve the best boxer in the world will find
himself in a tiny prison center in his adopted hometown.
6x10 jail cell |
For at least
the next two months, he'll trade his posh 22,000-square foot home complete with
a two-story movie theater and 24-foot high ceilings for a 6-foot by 10-foot
jail cell inside the Clark County Detention Center in downtown Las Vegas.
There was
plenty of outrage Jan. 6 when Saragosa delayed Mayweather's report date by five
months so he could fight Miguel Cotto. For delaying the sentence, something
that is commonplace, Saragosa took more criticism than Mayweather, who pled
guilty to domestic battery after a 2010 incident in which he allegedly
assaulted Josie Harris, the mother of three of his children.
The question
is, what good will come of however many of the 87 days remaining on
Mayweather's sentence he actually serves? Domestic violence is a serious crime
and violence against women must be taken seriously – more seriously than it has
been.
Mayweather
attorney Richard Wright said he expected the sentence to be reduced to
"something around two months" when good behavior is factored in.
The truth of
what happened that night inside Harris' home in the 3800 block of Tropical Vine
in Las Vegas is known only by Mayweather, Harris and two of their sons.
A police
report at the time of the incident indicated that the then-10 year-old Koraun
Mayweather told police he saw his father hitting and kicking his mother. He
also said that his father threatened to beat him if he left the house. However,
Koraun Mayweather did reportedly leave and alerted authorities.
Harris has
not spoken publicly about the incident. Mayweather has consistently denied
hitting Harris and has repeatedly asked, "Where are the pictures?" of
an injured Harris.
Mayweather
was not available to speak to the media Thursday, even though his manager,
Leonard Ellerbe, told Yahoo! Sports he "absolutely would" arrange an
interview with the fighter before Mayweather had to report to jail.
Ellerbe failed
to return calls Thursday.
Wright said
he spoke to the boxer Wednesday. He said Mayweather was handling matters
"about as you'd expect," and said Mayweather told him, "It is
what it is," regarding his impending jail sentence.
Wright said
Mayweather accepted the plea deal so his son wouldn't be forced to testify.
Mayweather said the same thing to the Nevada Athletic Commission during a Jan.
31 licensing hearing.
"I did
with Floyd what I do with all of my clients – I laid out to him the
scenarios," Wright said. "In the worst-case scenario, he was facing a
felony prosecution [that carried a maximum 34-year sentence]. I'm not saying
anything of the probabilities, just what he was facing. I have had people
insist innocence, but when facing a felony prosecution and a lengthy
imprisonment, when an offer of a plea bargain comes that will give you a
non-felony and no jail time, well, principle, truth, justice, all of that often
goes out the window.
"If it's
a thing where you don't go to jail, you don't get a felony and you accept this
plea, that's a lot more attractive than rolling the dice and taking a chance on
what a jury might do. Without a doubt, Floyd's intent was [to save his son from
testifying], and he did what he thought was best for him and his family."
But
Mayweather will go to jail, even if for a relatively short time. Wright said he
felt the Clark County District Attorney initially overcharged the boxer. The
grand larceny charge was for taking iPhones belonging to Harris and their sons,
items that are worth more than $250.
"In
truth, whenever you have a domestic situation, they wind up taking something, a
phone, the car keys, anything, and you wind up like this," Wright said.
"If I went through all the files and started pulling up all the cops and
all the firemen in this town who had [domestic violence incidents] and took the
keys or a phone or something like that, that's all the DA would be doing would
be prosecuting those kinds of cases."
He said
Mayweather complied with the community service requirements of the sentence Saragosa
imposed.
The sentence
shouldn't affect Mayweather's ability to fight again in 2012 should he so
choose. If he's released from jail in late July or early August, he'll have
plenty of time to prepare for a November or December fight.
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