ReggieDiggs wrote:
Okay so under FL laws, & I'd presume under other regions, Al is a manager. How is Al being a promoter?
the commissions would not let events be staged without a licensed, bonded promoter, who files all the paperwork
and pays all the expenses yada yada. therefore, the cards haymon's fighters appear on all are promoted by licensed
promoters. if people are dragged into court and there is a licensed promoter and all the papers were filed and
i's dotted and t's crossed, then the allegation that haymon is a promter will be summarily thrown out.
i'm with you, diggs. they just keep coming back over and over like haymon is a promoter like they don't
know the difference. it's like banging your head against a wall thread after thread.
that link i posted before has a whole novel in the statute about promoters obligations and from
the commission site you can look at all the required forms and requirements for the license
and fees and requirements to stage fights. the law really leaves no wiggle room for this stuff.
if haymon was a promoter, it would be pretty easy to show.
"(20) “Promoter” means any person, and includes any officer, director, employee, or stockholder of a corporate promoter, who produces, arranges, or stages any match involving a professional."
if guilty haymon could get 60 days in jail + civil fines and forfeiture, but so far we are just talking
about civil suits, and the finding of haymon breaking the law would not be a civil issue. it would
be a criminal matter in a different court, which could end haymon's boxing career if he was found guilty.
i just want to add that the topic of the thread is whether haymon is good for boxing or not,
and for example quillin vacating his title to avoid korobov, and garcia-salka, and i could go on
and on, the jury is out with me whether haymon is a net + or - for the sport from an enthusiasts
perspective. we want to see good matchups. haymon has signed an army of boxers and by law
he has obligations to all of them and it remains to be seen if he will keep his promises to them
and of course his investors will be paying close attention. if he gets a promoter's license or takes
a job with a promoter, his managerial contracts vaporize, so he is depending on promoters to
cooperate, and he doesn't have a good track record getting along with promoters.