Lightweight boxing champion Davis arrested: reports
The 30-year-old American allegedly assaulted his former girlfriend on June 15, Father's Day, outside her home in Doral, according to WPLG-TV, the Miami Herald and TMZ.
Advertisement
Davis, who lives in Coral Springs, was taken into custody in Miami Beach, according to an arrest report cited by media.
Police said Davis and the woman were in a relationship for about four years and had two children and that the incident took place when Davis went to the woman's home to pick up the children.
A verbal dispute began and led to a physical altercation, police said, when Davis demanded she retrieve the children from his car then struck the woman in the back of the head and slapped her in the face, cutting her lip.
The police report said the woman called her mother, who came out of the house to the scene and filmed part of the incident, in which Davis tossed a small box at the victim.
Advertisement
Davis, a southpaw fighter, has a ring record of 30-0 with one draw and 28 knockouts. His most recent bout was a controversial majority draw against compatriot Lamont Roach in New York last March in which Davis kept the World Boxing Association lightweight crown.
js/nr

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Epoch Times
42 minutes ago
- Epoch Times
FBI Expands Global Operations to Counter CCP With Australia, New Zealand Partnerships
FBI Director Kash Patel praised Australia as a critical ally as the bureau expands its fight against the influence of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) there and in New Zealand. 'We're expanding global operations to confront some of the most serious threats to the American homeland: foreign influence, cyber attacks, CCP espionage, and counter narcotics,' he said in an Aug. 3 post on X. 'Australia is a critical ally in that fight.'


Miami Herald
4 hours ago
- Miami Herald
Miami judge becomes first confirmed U.S. attorney during Trump's second term
President Donald Trump's first confirmed nominee for U.S. Attorney is a Miami-Dade judge whose professional background includes poor job evaluations in the office he will now lead. On Saturday, Judge Jason A. Reding Quiñones secured a 49-44 cloture vote in the U.S. Senate. He will now head the U.S. Attorney's Office in South Florida, replacing interim U.S. Attorney Hayden O'Byrne. READ MORE: Trump picks U.S. attorney in Miami. As criminal prosecutor, he received poor evaluations Trump posted on his social media platform, Truth Social, 'Very proud of our great Republican Senators for fighting, over the Weekend and far beyond, if necessary, in order to get my great Appointments approved, and on their way to helping us MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!' The Miami Herald could not reach Reding Quiñones for comment. Reding Quiñones, formerly a federal prosecutor in the Miami office, was appointed as a Miami-Dade County judge a year ago by Gov. Ron DeSantis and is a lieutenant colonel in the Air Force Reserve. After graduating from Florida International University's law school in 2008, he began his career practicing corporate law before transitioning to a military lawyer for the U.S. Air Force and then joining the Justice Department. Soon after, he joined the U.S. Attorney's Office in Miami as a prosecutor in the major crimes section, where he would receive poor evaluations from supervisors relating to incompetence; however, Reding Quiñones filed a discrimination complaint claiming he was being targeted because of his race. He would later drop that complaint and continue on in the Miami office's civil division, where he recieved satisfactory job evaluations. Despite this history, University of Richmond Law Professor Carl Tobias said it likely wouldn't have a big impact on his confirmation by the Senate. The Senate Judiciary Committe process for evaluating U.S Attorney nominees is 'not very rigorous,' Tobias said. That's because, he said, the panel doesn't have the resources to conduct hearings and instead relies on staff analysis and recommendations. 'Practically all nominees receive no discussion and voice votes, unless staff detects red flags,' he said. Tobias believes confirmations have grown increasingly politicized, but in a rare occurrence, Reding Quiñones received a 12-9 committee party line vote before the process continued to the Senate where he would be confirmed. The confirmation is not only a victory for the president, but also a much-needed move for the Miami office, which has remained one of the busiest in the country despite growing struggles. Since the resignation of former U.S. Attorney Markenzy Lapointe, the first Black lawyer to hold the position in South Florida, earlier this year, the office has lost a half a dozen senior career prosecutors. READ MORE: Miami U.S. Attorney, first Haitian-American in post, to resign before Trump takes office 'The [South Florida office] does critical law enforcement work and its several hundred attorneys function more smoothly when the office has a permanent, Senate-confirmed leader, who cooperates effectively with the Justice Department and other US Attorneys,' Tobias said. While the U.S. Attorney position may now be filled, other seats in South Florida and the rest of the state have not made it through Senate confirmation hearings yet. The Senate failed to confirm one Trump federal judge nominee who would preside in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida and three nominees for the Middle District. Tobias noted that these are emergency vacancies, as both districts have substantial caseloads that are reaching or already surpassing protracted lengths without resolution. The Senate is now in recess, which means any appointments will have to wait until September when it resumes session. 'The diligent, overloaded Southern and Middle District judges and the people of Florida must wait for relief,' Tobias said.


New York Post
7 hours ago
- New York Post
Manhunt launched for fugitive migrant who tried to ram ICE officers with car
A pair of illegal migrants tried to ram federal immigration agents during a bust in Denver before fleeing the feds – with one, a child sex abuse convict, still on the loose. Mexican national Jose Mendez-Chavez, a pedophile who entered the US illegally at least a half-dozen times, was behind the wheel Thursday when he tried to slam into Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents near Colorado Springs, KMGH-TV News reported. 'Mendez was not an 'innocent victim,'' an ICE spokesperson told the outlet. 'He is an abuser who plays the system and is now wanted for assault on a federal officer.' Advertisement 3 ICE says they now have Francisco Zapata-Pacheco in custody. ICE Denver 3 Teams of federal agents were staging an operation to capture two fugitives who tried to ram ICE agents and then fled by vehicle. AP The feds were conducting a raid at a construction site in Black Forest when they were attacked. The agents fired three shots as the migrants sped away, but authorities nabbed the passenger in the vehicle, identified as Francisco Zapata-Pacheco, a few hours later. Advertisement He is being held for deportation proceedings, KMGH said. 3 Jose Mendez-Chavez is still on the run. ICE Denver Meanwhile, ICE slammed the Colorado Rapid Response Network, a group that has been tipping off migrants about pending federal raids in the area, as 'despicable.' 'Two criminal aliens attempted to ram their vehicle into ICE officers during a targeted enforcement operation in Colorado Springs,' a department spokesperson said. Advertisement 'ICE officers are facing an 830% increase in assaults,' they said. 'Lies and violent rhetoric incite hostility against the brave men and women of ICE who put their lives on the line every day to protect American communities, as we witnessed in Colorado [on Thursday].'