Homeowners file case vs Floyd
LAS VEGAS, Nevada (AFP) — Unbeaten boxer Floyd Mayweather has been threatening employees of the homeowners association in the development where he lives, according to officials who have gone to court to stop him.
A complaint by Southern Highlands Estates in Clark District Court seeks $10,000 in damages and an injunction to limit contact between Mayweather and employees of the gated community south of the glitzy Las Vegas Strip.
Mayweather, 33, already faces misdemeanor battery charges from a December 16 incident in which he allegedly poked a security guard in the face outside his home over complaints about parking.
Mayweather, 41-0 with 25 career knockouts, faces a January 24 trial on charges of felony coercion, robbery and grand larceny in connection with a September dispute at the home of the mother of his children.
The boxing star faces up to 34 years in prison if convicted on all counts in that case.
The homeowners group wants Mayweather to stay inside his vehicle at the entrance to the neighborhood, show identification and make no harassing or threatening comments to security guards plus follow rules by obtaining a device to enter the neighborhood on his own and placing identification sticker on his vehicles.
In the suit, the group claims Mayweather “repeatedly engaged in hostile, harassing and threatening behavior toward and against certain employees” including “threatening the life of a patrol officer, physically accosting a security officer, refusing to provide identity to gate officers” over the past three months.





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