LAS VEGAS -- Boxer Floyd Mayweather Jr. agreed to pay $5.6 million in back taxes before the Internal Revenue Service was poised to take the money from his purse after his Saturday comeback fight against Juan Manuel Marquez.
The IRS sent the Nevada Athletic Commission a levy notice on Sept. 4 ordering Mayweather's unpaid taxes from 2007 to be deducted from his $10 million fight purse, commission executive director Keith Kizer told The Associated Press.
Kizer said the IRS backed off one week later, after Mayweather agreed to pay the money. Mayweather won the fight in a unanimous decision.
Mayweather's tax attorney, Jeffrey Morse, told the AP on Tuesday that federal officials never intended to take Mayweather's purse, and the five-division champion has satisfied all his IRS debts.
"Floyd has -- and I will absolutely attest to it -- more than satisfied every tax obligation that he has," Morse said. "As of today, as of some time ago, which I can't tell you when, he owes zero to the IRS."
Morse said he expected the IRS to release a $6.17 million lien filed with the county recorder's office in Las Vegas in October last year.
Records on Tuesday showed the lien was still open.
IRS spokesman Raphael Tulino said he could not comment on individual tax matters.
A copy of the levy notice obtained by the AP shows the IRS was seeking less than what it filed for in its lien. The notice dated Aug. 25 said Mayweather owed $4.71 million in unpaid taxes and $930,000 in statutory additions calculated through Sept. 25.
"Although we have given the notice and demand required by the Code, the amount owed hasn't been paid," the notice to boxing regulators said. "This levy requires you to turn over to us this person's property and rights to property that you have or which you are already obligated to pay this person."
Kizer said the IRS did not notify the commission until fight week that the levy would not be necessary. Mayweather and all other fighters on the card were fully paid, he said.
Morse said Mayweather owed substantially less than the $5.6 million levy, but would not say why it was valued at less than the original lien.
Morse said the levy itself was part of Mayweather's agreement with the IRS, not an impetus for the boxer nicknamed "Money" to settle the debt. Morse said the levy was used by the IRS as collateral.
"Unfortunately, if we knew that this information would be out there and disclosed to reporters, we probably wouldn't have entered into that agreement," Morse said. "Floyd likes to keep his private business private."
The IRS in August released Mayweather from another lien for nearly $15,900 for unpaid taxes in 2001. A New Jersey Superior Court judgment from 2007 for a state tax debt of $193,000 was still unpaid, according to the court.
Morse declined to comment on the judgment.
Copyright 2009 by The Associated Press
I happen to know a little bit about law and finance. I'm very interested to hear his reply.
Try fighting that arguement in the Supreme Court. See if it works
I gotta ask 1099?
That's what they got me on. One year I was making some extra dough doing some side work of course the company filed that shit right on time.
So I learned.
I had a friend they took everything he had in the bank but a penny.
They can seriously fukk u up..
Yup, I did alot of contracting work in the housing industry with various work crews. I was young and naive.
IRS are ruthless and relentless. They have my Mom's bank account frozen until she pays some taxes she got in a big personal injury settlement. All her money has been frozen for almost a year and she has appealed the taxes she should find out in November or close to there what happes.
His purse on the fight was USD 10 Mn guaranteed plus a %age of the PPV revenues. Figure he will make USD 15 Mn.
He pays IRS 6, his accountant withholds another $4 nil for 2009 so that he rebuilds IRS relationship.
He nets USD $5 Mn for beating Marquez.
And then you have to add in his promoter's cut and his income from the sponsorships ('reebok is seven figures').
He did Ok.
Nah bad math there. Lets say his pay day for Marquez is 15 million. 10% goes to trainer 13.5mill left.
Now IRS also would take ~40% of the purse for regular current taxes. That makes 8.1million. Now you take away the 5.6 million on back taxes and the number drops to 2.5million.
You can add another 1million for Reebok and bring it to 3.5 but then you also have to subtract .6 million for not making weight. Brings it to about 2.9million. Its still a lot of money.
I paid 5600 in back taxes a couple of years back.
I wonder if they'd just take it from his bank accounts like they wanted to do with me (and could've done had i let it slip any more)
Ultimately BFD.
Irs caught him. They catch a lot of us, so you don't wanna get to cute with them.
I paid 10K in back taxes in 2003. I had a levy on me which took 1/2 of my paycheck until I called and worked out a payment plan. It is almost impossible to get ahold of them during business hours, btw.
Which article of the Constitution are they violating?
What article of the constitution gives an IRS agent the right to break down my door and hold me a gun point?
If he payed it off before they took it out of his purse, then why didn't he pay it off from the very begginning? Plus why are people saying Hoya payed it off for him, someone have a source for that.
Why is there no mention of Oscar De La Hoya being the one who paid the IRS off? If Floyd was not broke, why did Oscar De La Hoya pay? Floyd was broke then and Floyd is broke now. Maybe he can find another midget to fight with who has a semi large following so he can break even. Wait, he already has his eye on tiny Manny Pacquiao. Floyd proved to the world that he cares more about money than he does about his own legacy which up till now, is still very questionable and highly scrutinized. The boy has gone around fighting nothing but midgets and old soft hitting grandfathers. The fraud continues folks.
:chairshot
Shiit, he didnt agree, he HAD to pay. IRS doesn't fukk around. Their existance and power is unconstitutional. We should all boycott the IRS.
25, I think they meant that he agreed to pay BEFORE they took it out of his fight purse.....