Originally posted by Tunney
Gerald McClellan was a bad man
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Without defending Ike, the accurate account of that was that he drove a car that the child was in into a wall. He didn't manhandle the kid and disable him.Comment
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I actually agree with much of your post. Except for 2 points.I actually USED to feel bad for Gerald McClellan.... But hey karma is a mother f'er. What a low life sadistic piece of **** he is to take an innocent dog that wasn't bothering anyone and tape his mouth shut so he couldnt even defend himself and basically feed him to a vicious pitbull to rip him to shreds. God musta really punished him for his sins since he actually is having him live through what happened to him. The poor defenseless dog never had a chance. At least McClellan is still living. **** Gerald McClellan and if you feel sorry for him and think it's not bad what he did because it was "only a dog" then **** you too.
Point #1. God has nothing to do with anything.
Point #2. Karma has nothing to do with anything.Comment
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After an heated argument with his girlfriend, he grabbed the little boy and put him in the car. He drove off angrily at a high speed, and slammed the car into a wall, permanently crippling the little boy.Comment
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Don King took almost all of McClellan's purse and abandoned him, not to mention all the other disgraceful things he has done (like killing two men).
I wonder when 'karma' will get him. King is truly living like a king with the money he has 'earned' over the years, while many of the fighters he has screwed are penniless and forgotten.Last edited by TheGreatA; 09-24-2008, 06:32 PM.Comment
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A new, updated edition of Jack Newfield's hard-hitting unauthorized biography of boxing kingpin Don King, source of the Emmy-winning film starring Ving Rhames. With a new epilogue. Working his way out of a life of street crime and numbers running - and jail time for manslaughter - King rose to become a powerhouse in the fight game, outnegotiated corporate giants, fleeced the treasuries of entire countries, and amassed a vast personal fortune while ruining the lives and careers of some of boxing's greatest champions. The dying words of the man King stomped to death on the streets of Cleveland in 1966 - Don, I'll pay you the money! - became the motif for Don King's ascendancy.
From the book Life and Crimes of Don King.
A new, updated edition of Jack Newfield's hard-hitting unauthorized biography of boxing kingpin Don King, source of the Emmy-winning film starring Ving Rhames. With a new epilogue. Working his way out of a life of street crime and numbers running - and jail time for manslaughter - King rose to become a powerhouse in the fight game, outnegotiated corporate giants, fleeced the treasuries of entire countries, and amassed a vast personal fortune while ruining the lives and careers of some of boxing's greatest champions. The dying words of the man King stomped to death on the streets of Cleveland in 1966 - Don, I'll pay you the money! - became the motif for Don King's ascendancy.
A new, updated edition of Jack Newfield's hard-hitting unauthorized biography of boxing kingpin Don King, source of the Emmy-winning film starring Ving Rhames. With a new epilogue. Working his way out of a life of street crime and numbers running - and jail time for manslaughter - King rose to become a powerhouse in the fight game, outnegotiated corporate giants, fleeced the treasuries of entire countries, and amassed a vast personal fortune while ruining the lives and careers of some of boxing's greatest champions. The dying words of the man King stomped to death on the streets of Cleveland in 1966 - Don, I'll pay you the money! - became the motif for Don King's ascendancy.
A new, updated edition of Jack Newfield's hard-hitting unauthorized biography of boxing kingpin Don King, source of the Emmy-winning film starring Ving Rhames. With a new epilogue. Working his way out of a life of street crime and numbers running - and jail time for manslaughter - King rose to become a powerhouse in the fight game, outnegotiated corporate giants, fleeced the treasuries of entire countries, and amassed a vast personal fortune while ruining the lives and careers of some of boxing's greatest champions. The dying words of the man King stomped to death on the streets of Cleveland in 1966 - Don, I'll pay you the money! - became the motif for Don King's ascendancy.
A new, updated edition of Jack Newfield's hard-hitting unauthorized biography of boxing kingpin Don King, source of the Emmy-winning film starring Ving Rhames. With a new epilogue. Working his way out of a life of street crime and numbers running - and jail time for manslaughter - King rose to become a powerhouse in the fight game, outnegotiated corporate giants, fleeced the treasuries of entire countries, and amassed a vast personal fortune while ruining the lives and careers of some of boxing's greatest champions. The dying words of the man King stomped to death on the streets of Cleveland in 1966 - Don, I'll pay you the money! - became the motif for Don King's ascendancy.Comment
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