WBC strongly advise to Riabinsky not to go to trial!
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bigman1968
- Super Welterweight
- Posts: 672
- Joined: 24 Jul 2014, 03:45
WBC strongly advise to Riabinsky not to go to trial!
"Sulaiman also clarified the WBC's position as to what would happen once the Povetkin and Wilder lawsuit goes to trial, possibly as early as February barring a settlement.
"If Mr. Wilder prevails at that trial, the WBC shall afford Mr. Povetkin the opportunity to show that the trial's result was not based on a finding that Mr. Povetkin ingested meldonium after January 1, 2016," Sulaiman said. "If Mr. Povetkin fails to make that showing the WBC shall: (a) withdraw recognition of Povetkin as interim world champion (if he wins that title); (b) withdraw any mandatory challenger status he might have; and (c) impose any penalties upon Mr. Povetkin as per the WBC Clean Boxing Program protocol, which includes suspensions and fines.""
"If Mr. Wilder prevails at that trial, the WBC shall afford Mr. Povetkin the opportunity to show that the trial's result was not based on a finding that Mr. Povetkin ingested meldonium after January 1, 2016," Sulaiman said. "If Mr. Povetkin fails to make that showing the WBC shall: (a) withdraw recognition of Povetkin as interim world champion (if he wins that title); (b) withdraw any mandatory challenger status he might have; and (c) impose any penalties upon Mr. Povetkin as per the WBC Clean Boxing Program protocol, which includes suspensions and fines.""
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asdfjkl
- Heavyweight

Re: WBC strongly advise to Riabinsky not to go to trial!
What has the WBC to do with this? It's even more evidence that Wilder and the WBC work together against Povetkin and his team.
Re: WBC strongly advise to Riabinsky not to go to trial!
Who is Riabinsky? Boxrec does not have this promoter. Is he vice-president of commission?
Re: WBC strongly advise to Riabinsky not to go to trial!
View http://www.espn.com.au/boxing/story/_/i ... tkin-fightsandis wrote:Who is Riabinsky? Boxrec does not have this promoter. Is he vice-president of commission?
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bigman1968
- Super Welterweight
- Posts: 672
- Joined: 24 Jul 2014, 03:45
Re: WBC strongly advise to Riabinsky not to go to trial!
http://www.vsenabox.ru/sandis wrote:Who is Riabinsky? Boxrec does not have this promoter. Is he vice-president of commission?
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apollo creed
- Super Welterweight
- Posts: 7254
- Joined: 18 Aug 2014, 12:28
Re: WBC strongly advise to Riabinsky not to go to trial!
asdfjkl wrote:What has the WBC to do with this? It's even more evidence that Wilder and the WBC work together against Povetkin and his team.
Can't wait to see Povetkin getting revenge in court!
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Enlightened-One
- Super Lightweight
- Posts: 14618
- Joined: 19 Jul 2016, 05:12
Re: WBC strongly advise to Riabinsky not to go to trial!
What right does the WBC have to use the outcome of a defamation and breach of contract lawsuit to determine the perceived guilt of an alleged PED user who has already been cleared of any accusations of wrongdoing by WADA and VADA, when the defendants' (Wilder) main defence is "rhetorical hyperbole"?
Surely there's no correlation between proving rhetorical hyperbole and irrefutable proof of PED use?
From a layman's perspective, it appears that the WBC have taken sides with Wilder by issuing threats to Povetkin, because (from what I can tell), they won't punish Deontay if he loses this lawsuit, but they are willing to punish Alexander.
Do we have any legally-trained forum users that can explain this?
Surely there's no correlation between proving rhetorical hyperbole and irrefutable proof of PED use?
From a layman's perspective, it appears that the WBC have taken sides with Wilder by issuing threats to Povetkin, because (from what I can tell), they won't punish Deontay if he loses this lawsuit, but they are willing to punish Alexander.
Do we have any legally-trained forum users that can explain this?
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SaadOffTheDeck
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 19602
- Joined: 04 Jun 2009, 07:38
Re: WBC strongly advise to Riabinsky not to go to trial!
He won't get anything but a bill.apollo creed wrote:asdfjkl wrote:What has the WBC to do with this? It's even more evidence that Wilder and the WBC work together against Povetkin and his team.![]()
Can't wait to see Povetkin getting revenge in court!
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SaadOffTheDeck
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 19602
- Joined: 04 Jun 2009, 07:38
Re: WBC strongly advise to Riabinsky not to go to trial!
The op didn't post the whole statement. Not a threat, just clarification on the interim title. Penalties should be stiffer for frivolous law suits. I'm sure wilder will just settle when they offer him a couple million before either hits court.
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asdfjkl
- Heavyweight

Re: WBC strongly advise to Riabinsky not to go to trial!
It's not just about the 80 ish million for Povetkin, it's also because Wilder tries to destroy his name and a lot of dumb African American Wilder fans think that Povetkin actually did something wrong, while he didn't. Povetkin is a 100% innocent men, from the start.SaadOffTheDeck wrote:The op didn't post the whole statement. Not a threat, just clarification on the interim title. Penalties should be stiffer for frivolous law suits. I'm sure wilder will just settle when they offer him a couple million before either hits court.
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Enlightened-One
- Super Lightweight
- Posts: 14618
- Joined: 19 Jul 2016, 05:12
Re: WBC strongly advise to Riabinsky not to go to trial!
SaadOffTheDeck wrote:The op didn't post the whole statement.
I read the whole statement from another source.
The WBC issued a threat, because they detailed the punishments inflicted on Povetkin should Wilder’s legal team prevail in this litigation. In my mind, that’s a threat.SaadOffTheDeck wrote:Not a threat, just clarification on the interim title.
It was Ryabinsky, not Povetkin, that filed a lawsuit against Deontay Wilder. What has this got to do with the WBC? For this particular situation, the legal system should decide what is “frivolous” not the WBC.SaadOffTheDeck wrote:Penalties should be stiffer for frivolous law suits.
If the lawsuit was indeed deemed to be “frivolous”, then Deontay Wilder’s legal representatives would not have failed in their motion to dismiss, which means that Ryabinsky’s lawsuit contains legitimate complaints that must be addressed in court.
And in legal terms, that has already been proven to be an irrefutable fact that no one can possibly deny!
In terms of my personal opinion though, there’s nothing frivolous about millions of dollars. Didn’t the WBC go bankrupt when they lost their lawsuit to Graciano Rocchigiani for sums similar to the amount that Ryabinsky is suing Wilder for?
Have you read the lawsuit notes that I posted in this forum a few months ago? Ryabinsky’s case is extremely compelling, but as I’m no legal expert, I can’t say for certain that he’ll win this lawsuit.SaadOffTheDeck wrote:I'm sure wilder will just settle when they offer him a couple million before either hits court.
I think this lawsuit will be settled, but my gut instinct tells me that Wilder will be the one paying Ryabinsky a few million dollars to make it go away.
Last edited by Enlightened-One on 09 Oct 2016, 09:52, edited 1 time in total.
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bigman1968
- Super Welterweight
- Posts: 672
- Joined: 24 Jul 2014, 03:45
Re: WBC strongly advise to Riabinsky not to go to trial!
Agree. WBC want all the law suits BS out of the table.SaadOffTheDeck wrote:The op didn't post the whole statement. Not a threat, just clarification on the interim title. Penalties should be stiffer for frivolous law suits. I'm sure wilder will just settle when they offer him a couple million before either hits court.
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bigman1968
- Super Welterweight
- Posts: 672
- Joined: 24 Jul 2014, 03:45
Re: WBC strongly advise to Riabinsky not to go to trial!
Actually it's Wilder\DiBella suit for contract breach for 5M and Povetkin\Riabinsky countersuit for defamation for crazy $$$.Enlightened-One wrote:SaadOffTheDeck wrote:The op didn't post the whole statement.
I read the whole statement from another source.The WBC issued a threat, because they detailed the punishments inflicted on Povetkin should Wilder’s legal team prevail in this litigation. In my mind, that’s a threat.SaadOffTheDeck wrote:Not a threat, just clarification on the interim title.It was Ryabinsky, not Povetkin, that filed a lawsuit against Deontay Wilder. What has this got to do with the WBC? For this particular situation, the legal system should decide what is “frivolous” not the WBC.SaadOffTheDeck wrote:Penalties should be stiffer for frivolous law suits.
If the lawsuit was indeed deemed to be “frivolous”, then Deontay Wilder’s legal representatives would not have failed in their motion to dismiss, which means that Ryabinsky’s lawsuit contains legitimate complaints that must be addressed in court.
And in legal terms, that has already been proven to be an irrefutable fact that no one can possibly deny!
In terms of my personal opinion though, there’s nothing frivolous about millions of dollars. Didn’t the WBC go bankrupt when they lost their lawsuit to Graciano Rocchigiani for sums similar to the amount that Ryabinsky is suing Wilder for?Have you read the lawsuit notes that I posted in this forum a few months ago? Ryabinsky’s case is extremely compelling, but as I’m no legal expert, I can’t say for certain that he’ll win this lawsuit.SaadOffTheDeck wrote:I'm sure wilder will just settle when they offer him a couple million before either hits court.
I think this lawsuit will be settled, but my gut instinct tells me that Wilder will be the one paying Ryabinsky a few million dollars to make it go away.
Defamation is very hard to prove in court, contract breach is much easier....I don't know who represents Riabinsky, but Wilder guy is Judd Burstein...best litigator in Sport business.
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Enlightened-One
- Super Lightweight
- Posts: 14618
- Joined: 19 Jul 2016, 05:12
Re: WBC strongly advise to Riabinsky not to go to trial!
Andrey Ryabinskiy's attorney has already identified mistakes made by Wilder's legal representatives, when they failed to include a Pre-Motion Conference letter prior to filing their Motion to Dismiss, a misstep that they themselves conceded to (as per a letter written by Judd Burnstein, PC).bigman1968 wrote:Actually it's Wilder\DiBella suit for contract breach for 5M and Povetkin\Riabinsky countersuit for defamation for crazy $$$.Enlightened-One wrote:SaadOffTheDeck wrote:The op didn't post the whole statement.
I read the whole statement from another source.The WBC issued a threat, because they detailed the punishments inflicted on Povetkin should Wilder’s legal team prevail in this litigation. In my mind, that’s a threat.SaadOffTheDeck wrote:Not a threat, just clarification on the interim title.It was Ryabinsky, not Povetkin, that filed a lawsuit against Deontay Wilder. What has this got to do with the WBC? For this particular situation, the legal system should decide what is “frivolous” not the WBC.SaadOffTheDeck wrote:Penalties should be stiffer for frivolous law suits.
If the lawsuit was indeed deemed to be “frivolous”, then Deontay Wilder’s legal representatives would not have failed in their motion to dismiss, which means that Ryabinsky’s lawsuit contains legitimate complaints that must be addressed in court.
And in legal terms, that has already been proven to be an irrefutable fact that no one can possibly deny!
In terms of my personal opinion though, there’s nothing frivolous about millions of dollars. Didn’t the WBC go bankrupt when they lost their lawsuit to Graciano Rocchigiani for sums similar to the amount that Ryabinsky is suing Wilder for?Have you read the lawsuit notes that I posted in this forum a few months ago? Ryabinsky’s case is extremely compelling, but as I’m no legal expert, I can’t say for certain that he’ll win this lawsuit.SaadOffTheDeck wrote:I'm sure wilder will just settle when they offer him a couple million before either hits court.
I think this lawsuit will be settled, but my gut instinct tells me that Wilder will be the one paying Ryabinsky a few million dollars to make it go away.
Defamation is very hard to prove in court, contract breach is much easier....I don't know who represents Riabinsky, but Wilder guy is Judd Burstein...best litigator in Sport business.
From what I’ve been reading, this was a fundamental mistake that may have been one of the factors that caused Wilder’s motion to dismiss to fail.
I think Arnold and Porter (Kent Yalowitz) represent Ryabinskiy, but I could be wrong.
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bigman1968
- Super Welterweight
- Posts: 672
- Joined: 24 Jul 2014, 03:45
Re: WBC strongly advise to Riabinsky not to go to trial!
Some guys in suits will earn a lot of Wilder's and Povetkin's money without a single punchEnlightened-One wrote:Andrey Ryabinskiy's attorney has already identified mistakes made by Wilder's legal representatives, when they failed to include a Pre-Motion Conference letter prior to filing their Motion to Dismiss, a misstep that they themselves conceded to (as per a letter written by Judd Burnstein, PC).bigman1968 wrote:Actually it's Wilder\DiBella suit for contract breach for 5M and Povetkin\Riabinsky countersuit for defamation for crazy $$$.Enlightened-One wrote:
I read the whole statement from another source.
The WBC issued a threat, because they detailed the punishments inflicted on Povetkin should Wilder’s legal team prevail in this litigation. In my mind, that’s a threat.
It was Ryabinsky, not Povetkin, that filed a lawsuit against Deontay Wilder. What has this got to do with the WBC? For this particular situation, the legal system should decide what is “frivolous” not the WBC.
If the lawsuit was indeed deemed to be “frivolous”, then Deontay Wilder’s legal representatives would not have failed in their motion to dismiss, which means that Ryabinsky’s lawsuit contains legitimate complaints that must be addressed in court.
And in legal terms, that has already been proven to be an irrefutable fact that no one can possibly deny!
In terms of my personal opinion though, there’s nothing frivolous about millions of dollars. Didn’t the WBC go bankrupt when they lost their lawsuit to Graciano Rocchigiani for sums similar to the amount that Ryabinsky is suing Wilder for?
Have you read the lawsuit notes that I posted in this forum a few months ago? Ryabinsky’s case is extremely compelling, but as I’m no legal expert, I can’t say for certain that he’ll win this lawsuit.
I think this lawsuit will be settled, but my gut instinct tells me that Wilder will be the one paying Ryabinsky a few million dollars to make it go away.
Defamation is very hard to prove in court, contract breach is much easier....I don't know who represents Riabinsky, but Wilder guy is Judd Burstein...best litigator in Sport business.
From what I’ve been reading, this was a fundamental mistake that may have been one of the factors that caused Wilder’s motion to dismiss to fail.
I think Arnold and Porter (Kent Yalowitz) represent Ryabinskiy, but I could be wrong.
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bigman1968
- Super Welterweight
- Posts: 672
- Joined: 24 Jul 2014, 03:45
Re: WBC strongly advise to Riabinsky not to go to trial!
That's Riabinski's attorney:Enlightened-One wrote:Andrey Ryabinskiy's attorney has already identified mistakes made by Wilder's legal representatives, when they failed to include a Pre-Motion Conference letter prior to filing their Motion to Dismiss, a misstep that they themselves conceded to (as per a letter written by Judd Burnstein, PC).bigman1968 wrote:Actually it's Wilder\DiBella suit for contract breach for 5M and Povetkin\Riabinsky countersuit for defamation for crazy $$$.Enlightened-One wrote:
I read the whole statement from another source.
The WBC issued a threat, because they detailed the punishments inflicted on Povetkin should Wilder’s legal team prevail in this litigation. In my mind, that’s a threat.
It was Ryabinsky, not Povetkin, that filed a lawsuit against Deontay Wilder. What has this got to do with the WBC? For this particular situation, the legal system should decide what is “frivolous” not the WBC.
If the lawsuit was indeed deemed to be “frivolous”, then Deontay Wilder’s legal representatives would not have failed in their motion to dismiss, which means that Ryabinsky’s lawsuit contains legitimate complaints that must be addressed in court.
And in legal terms, that has already been proven to be an irrefutable fact that no one can possibly deny!
In terms of my personal opinion though, there’s nothing frivolous about millions of dollars. Didn’t the WBC go bankrupt when they lost their lawsuit to Graciano Rocchigiani for sums similar to the amount that Ryabinsky is suing Wilder for?
Have you read the lawsuit notes that I posted in this forum a few months ago? Ryabinsky’s case is extremely compelling, but as I’m no legal expert, I can’t say for certain that he’ll win this lawsuit.
I think this lawsuit will be settled, but my gut instinct tells me that Wilder will be the one paying Ryabinsky a few million dollars to make it go away.
Defamation is very hard to prove in court, contract breach is much easier....I don't know who represents Riabinsky, but Wilder guy is Judd Burstein...best litigator in Sport business.
From what I’ve been reading, this was a fundamental mistake that may have been one of the factors that caused Wilder’s motion to dismiss to fail.
I think Arnold and Porter (Kent Yalowitz) represent Ryabinskiy, but I could be wrong.
http://forwardlegal.ru/en/team/person/# ... kondrateva
According to this: http://www.boxingnews24.com/2016/06/wor ... -34-5-mln/
Re: WBC strongly advise to Riabinsky not to go to trial!
Do you wake up with race related thoughts in your head or is there like an e-mail list to join that has a racist verse of the day type thing?asdfjkl wrote:It's not just about the 80 ish million for Povetkin, it's also because Wilder tries to destroy his name and a lot of dumb African American Wilder fans think that Povetkin actually did something wrong, while he didn't. Povetkin is a 100% innocent men, from the start.SaadOffTheDeck wrote:The op didn't post the whole statement. Not a threat, just clarification on the interim title. Penalties should be stiffer for frivolous law suits. I'm sure wilder will just settle when they offer him a couple million before either hits court.
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Enlightened-One
- Super Lightweight
- Posts: 14618
- Joined: 19 Jul 2016, 05:12
Re: WBC strongly advise to Riabinsky not to go to trial!
Please have a look at my words you quoted and then read the following:bigman1968 wrote:That's Riabinski's attorney:Enlightened-One wrote:Andrey Ryabinskiy's attorney has already identified mistakes made by Wilder's legal representatives, when they failed to include a Pre-Motion Conference letter prior to filing their Motion to Dismiss, a misstep that they themselves conceded to (as per a letter written by Judd Burnstein, PC).bigman1968 wrote:
Actually it's Wilder\DiBella suit for contract breach for 5M and Povetkin\Riabinsky countersuit for defamation for crazy $$$.
Defamation is very hard to prove in court, contract breach is much easier....I don't know who represents Riabinsky, but Wilder guy is Judd Burstein...best litigator in Sport business.
From what I’ve been reading, this was a fundamental mistake that may have been one of the factors that caused Wilder’s motion to dismiss to fail.
I think Arnold and Porter (Kent Yalowitz) represent Ryabinskiy, but I could be wrong.
http://forwardlegal.ru/en/team/person/# ... kondrateva
According to this: http://www.boxingnews24.com/2016/06/wor ... -34-5-mln/
Povetkin et al is represented by Kent A. Yalowitz and Tanya E. Kalivas of Arnold & Porter LLP.
Wilder is represented by Judd Burstein and Peter B. Schalk of Judd Burstein PC.
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bigman1968
- Super Welterweight
- Posts: 672
- Joined: 24 Jul 2014, 03:45
Re: WBC strongly advise to Riabinsky not to go to trial!
But admit that the Russian attorney looks better than othersEnlightened-One wrote:Please have a look at my words you quoted and then read the following:bigman1968 wrote:That's Riabinski's attorney:Enlightened-One wrote: Andrey Ryabinskiy's attorney has already identified mistakes made by Wilder's legal representatives, when they failed to include a Pre-Motion Conference letter prior to filing their Motion to Dismiss, a misstep that they themselves conceded to (as per a letter written by Judd Burnstein, PC).
From what I’ve been reading, this was a fundamental mistake that may have been one of the factors that caused Wilder’s motion to dismiss to fail.
I think Arnold and Porter (Kent Yalowitz) represent Ryabinskiy, but I could be wrong.
http://forwardlegal.ru/en/team/person/# ... kondrateva
According to this: http://www.boxingnews24.com/2016/06/wor ... -34-5-mln/
Povetkin et al is represented by Kent A. Yalowitz and Tanya E. Kalivas of Arnold & Porter LLP.
Wilder is represented by Judd Burstein and Peter B. Schalk of Judd Burstein PC.
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Enlightened-One
- Super Lightweight
- Posts: 14618
- Joined: 19 Jul 2016, 05:12
Re: WBC strongly advise to Riabinsky not to go to trial!
You could be right for all I know. I'm utterly clueless of legal matters such as this.bigman1968 wrote:But admit that the Russian attorney looks better than othersEnlightened-One wrote:Please have a look at my words you quoted and then read the following:bigman1968 wrote:
That's Riabinski's attorney:
http://forwardlegal.ru/en/team/person/# ... kondrateva
According to this: http://www.boxingnews24.com/2016/06/wor ... -34-5-mln/
Povetkin et al is represented by Kent A. Yalowitz and Tanya E. Kalivas of Arnold & Porter LLP.
Wilder is represented by Judd Burstein and Peter B. Schalk of Judd Burstein PC.
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SaadOffTheDeck
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 19602
- Joined: 04 Jun 2009, 07:38
Re: WBC strongly advise to Riabinsky not to go to trial!
Wilder has a great case considering the legal precedent was set by ryabinsky. Povetkin has nothing but a threat and a hope that the legitimate suit gets dropped.
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asdfjkl
- Heavyweight

Re: WBC strongly advise to Riabinsky not to go to trial!
Well, actually it's Ryabinski who allready said he was planning to suit Wilder and then Wilder countersuited him while Ryabinski prepared his case and like allways, kept his word.bigman1968 wrote:Actually it's Wilder\DiBella suit for contract breach for 5M and Povetkin\Riabinsky countersuit for defamation for crazy $$$.Enlightened-One wrote:SaadOffTheDeck wrote:The op didn't post the whole statement.
I read the whole statement from another source.The WBC issued a threat, because they detailed the punishments inflicted on Povetkin should Wilder’s legal team prevail in this litigation. In my mind, that’s a threat.SaadOffTheDeck wrote:Not a threat, just clarification on the interim title.It was Ryabinsky, not Povetkin, that filed a lawsuit against Deontay Wilder. What has this got to do with the WBC? For this particular situation, the legal system should decide what is “frivolous” not the WBC.SaadOffTheDeck wrote:Penalties should be stiffer for frivolous law suits.
If the lawsuit was indeed deemed to be “frivolous”, then Deontay Wilder’s legal representatives would not have failed in their motion to dismiss, which means that Ryabinsky’s lawsuit contains legitimate complaints that must be addressed in court.
And in legal terms, that has already been proven to be an irrefutable fact that no one can possibly deny!
In terms of my personal opinion though, there’s nothing frivolous about millions of dollars. Didn’t the WBC go bankrupt when they lost their lawsuit to Graciano Rocchigiani for sums similar to the amount that Ryabinsky is suing Wilder for?Have you read the lawsuit notes that I posted in this forum a few months ago? Ryabinsky’s case is extremely compelling, but as I’m no legal expert, I can’t say for certain that he’ll win this lawsuit.SaadOffTheDeck wrote:I'm sure wilder will just settle when they offer him a couple million before either hits court.
I think this lawsuit will be settled, but my gut instinct tells me that Wilder will be the one paying Ryabinsky a few million dollars to make it go away.
Defamation is very hard to prove in court, contract breach is much easier....I don't know who represents Riabinsky, but Wilder guy is Judd Burstein...best litigator in Sport business.
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Enlightened-One
- Super Lightweight
- Posts: 14618
- Joined: 19 Jul 2016, 05:12
Re: WBC strongly advise to Riabinsky not to go to trial!
Team Wilder had previously filed his suit for $5 million two weeks before Andrey Ryabinsky filed the $34.5 million dollar lawsuit against Deontay.asdfjkl wrote:Well, actually it's Ryabinski who allready said he was planning to suit Wilder and then Wilder countersuited him while Ryabinski prepared his case and like allways, kept his word.bigman1968 wrote:Actually it's Wilder\DiBella suit for contract breach for 5M and Povetkin\Riabinsky countersuit for defamation for crazy $$$.Enlightened-One wrote:
I read the whole statement from another source.
The WBC issued a threat, because they detailed the punishments inflicted on Povetkin should Wilder’s legal team prevail in this litigation. In my mind, that’s a threat.
It was Ryabinsky, not Povetkin, that filed a lawsuit against Deontay Wilder. What has this got to do with the WBC? For this particular situation, the legal system should decide what is “frivolous” not the WBC.
If the lawsuit was indeed deemed to be “frivolous”, then Deontay Wilder’s legal representatives would not have failed in their motion to dismiss, which means that Ryabinsky’s lawsuit contains legitimate complaints that must be addressed in court.
And in legal terms, that has already been proven to be an irrefutable fact that no one can possibly deny!
In terms of my personal opinion though, there’s nothing frivolous about millions of dollars. Didn’t the WBC go bankrupt when they lost their lawsuit to Graciano Rocchigiani for sums similar to the amount that Ryabinsky is suing Wilder for?
Have you read the lawsuit notes that I posted in this forum a few months ago? Ryabinsky’s case is extremely compelling, but as I’m no legal expert, I can’t say for certain that he’ll win this lawsuit.
I think this lawsuit will be settled, but my gut instinct tells me that Wilder will be the one paying Ryabinsky a few million dollars to make it go away.
Defamation is very hard to prove in court, contract breach is much easier....I don't know who represents Riabinsky, but Wilder guy is Judd Burstein...best litigator in Sport business.
Review the facts again and let me know if this leads you to revise your theory.
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tiny_acres
- Middleweight
- Posts: 9457
- Joined: 17 Feb 2014, 14:43
Re: WBC strongly advise to Riabinsky not to go to trial!
His racist comments are enough for a lifetime ban from this forum.SFW wrote:Do you wake up with race related thoughts in your head or is there like an e-mail list to join that has a racist verse of the day type thing?asdfjkl wrote:It's not just about the 80 ish million for Povetkin, it's also because Wilder tries to destroy his name and a lot of dumb African American Wilder fans think that Povetkin actually did something wrong, while he didn't. Povetkin is a 100% innocent men, from the start.SaadOffTheDeck wrote:The op didn't post the whole statement. Not a threat, just clarification on the interim title. Penalties should be stiffer for frivolous law suits. I'm sure wilder will just settle when they offer him a couple million before either hits court.
He's by far the most useless poster on this site
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bigman1968
- Super Welterweight
- Posts: 672
- Joined: 24 Jul 2014, 03:45
Re: WBC strongly advise to Riabinsky not to go to trial!
Don't confuse ajfuck with facts...his tongue so deep in Riabinsky's ass that are really hope for him he is getting paid, at least-))))Enlightened-One wrote:Team Wilder had previously filed his suit for $5 million two weeks before Andrey Ryabinsky filed the $34.5 million dollar lawsuit against Deontay.asdfjkl wrote:Well, actually it's Ryabinski who allready said he was planning to suit Wilder and then Wilder countersuited him while Ryabinski prepared his case and like allways, kept his word.bigman1968 wrote:
Actually it's Wilder\DiBella suit for contract breach for 5M and Povetkin\Riabinsky countersuit for defamation for crazy $$$.
Defamation is very hard to prove in court, contract breach is much easier....I don't know who represents Riabinsky, but Wilder guy is Judd Burstein...best litigator in Sport business.
Review the facts again and let me know if this leads you to revise your theory.
