logo
Lawsuit claims Ryan Garcia 'feigned' injury to get out of exhibition fight

Lawsuit claims Ryan Garcia 'feigned' injury to get out of exhibition fight

USA Today13-03-2025

Lawsuit claims Ryan Garcia 'feigned' injury to get out of exhibition fight
Show Caption
Hide Caption
JuJu Watkins humbly handles being the 'face' of women's basketball
USC's JuJu Watkins modestly talks about how she brings in eyes to collegiate women's basketball.
Sports Seriously
An entertainment company says boxer Ryan Garcia feigned an injury last year to back out of an exhibition fight, according to a lawsuit filed Thursday in U.S. District Court in California.
Fanmio, the company based in Florida, is suing Garcia for breach of contract. The lawsuit centers on a exhibition that was to pit Garcia against Rukiya Anpo – a bout that would have given Garcia a chance to fight while he is serving a one-year suspension for testing positive for a banned substance.
Garcia announced Dec. 15 he had suffered a wrist injury during training camp and would have to postpone the exhibition fight against on Dec. 30 in Tokyo. He had agreed to the exhibition and was contractually obligated to participate, according to the complaint.
But Fanmio, the promoter for the exhibition, said Garcia "feigned" the injury and backed out on Dec. 14, a day before the event.
On Jan. 20, it was announced that Garcia would fight in Rolly Romero in New York on May 2, about two weeks after his suspension is set to end. He tested positive for Ostarine the weekend of his April 2024 fight against Devin Haney in Brooklyn that Garcia won by majority decision.
'Instead, with no sign of any surgery or recovery from the 'injury' that prevented him from participating in the Exhibition, Garcia is set to fight against Rolly Romero in New York on May 2 — the Times Square Fight," the complaint states.
Lupe Valencia, an attorney who represents Garcia, told USA TODAY Sports the boxer "didn't do anything wrong and we're going to respond to the lawsuit. There's nothing more to add than that."
A news release issued Dec. 15 said the boxer had been evaluated three days earlier by orthopedic surgeon Steven Shin of Cedars-Sinai Orthopaedics in Los Angeles for an aggravated bilateral wrist injury.
'I recommend that he hold off on sparring and boxing matches for several weeks," Shin said, according to the news release. 'Treatment options will be discussed with Mr. Garcia after further evaluation.'
Fanmio also is suing Golden Boy Promotions, with which Garcia is under contract. Fanmio says Golden Boy Promotions "improperly used its influence over and contract with Garcia to prevent the match from happening."
Eric Gomez, president of Golden Boy Promotions, did not immediately respond to USA TODAY Sports' requests for comment left by voicemail and text message.
Golden Boy Promotions, founded by retired boxer Oscar De La Hoya, demanded a 'king's ransom" from Fanmio to allow the fight to go forward, according to the complaint.
That, according to the complaint, 'ultimately led to the boxer relying on a pre-existing injury and backing out of the fight – when Fanmio refused to agree to Golden Boy's terms."
Announcing the postponement of the fight on Dec. 15, Fanmio CEO Solomon Engel wished Garcia a speedy recovery and said they looked forward to "announcing a new date."
By that point, according to the complaint, Fanmio had incurred more than $1 million in expenses working to promote the fight. The company is suing for damages in excess of $75,000, according to the complaint.
Of the lawsuit, the complaint states: "This action is the story of a suspended boxer, Garcia—in dire need of earning opportunities—who found a promoter and a worldwide entertainment broadcast company (Fanmio)willing to take a chance on him; only for Garcia to abandon them when another promoter (GoldenBoy) improperly claimed that an exhibition boxing match – in which Garcia was contractuallyobligated to participate – could not happen because of Golden Boy's contract with Garcia."
Garcia and Golden Boy both stand to profit handsomely from the May 2 fight in New York, according to the complaint.
'Upon information and belief, Garcia is being paid $40 million for the Times Square Fight and his next fight through Golden Boy," the complaint states. 'Golden Boy is expected to see profits well in excess of that given Garcia's popularity."
In addition to breach of contract, the complaint cites unjust enrichment, tortious interference, fraudulent inducement, fraudulent misrepresentation, negligent misrepresentation, declaratory judgment and promissory estoppel.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

USC baseball ace Caden Aoki granted extra year of eligibility, enters transfer portal
USC baseball ace Caden Aoki granted extra year of eligibility, enters transfer portal

USA Today

time39 minutes ago

  • USA Today

USC baseball ace Caden Aoki granted extra year of eligibility, enters transfer portal

USC baseball ace Caden Aoki granted extra year of eligibility, enters transfer portal On Monday, USC baseball's season came to an end in the NCAA Tournament. After making their first postseason appearance in 10 years, the Trojans fell to Oregon State in the final of the Corvallis Regional. On Wednesday, the Trojans got more tough news when it was reported that their top pitcher, Caden Aoki, will be entering the transfer portal. Aoki was a senior this past season, but was granted an additional season of eligibility by the NCAA. However, it now appears as though he will spend that season elsewhere. After spending his freshman year at Notre Dame in 2022, Aoki transferred to USC prior to the 2023 season. He emerged as the Trojans' top starting pitcher over the better part of the past three seasons. In 2025, he went 6-4 with a 3.99 ERA. However, it was the NCAA Tournament where Aoki forever etched himself into Trojans lore. In USC's tournament opener against TCU, Aoki allowed just one run over eight innings, throwing 114 pitches. For his performance, he was named to the all-Corvallis Regional team. While the Trojans were likely expecting to lose Aoki anyway, seeing him hit the transfer portal would be a tough loss. Given that USC lacked pitching depth behind Aoki in 2025, it will be critical that head coach Andy Stankiewicz address the position this offseason.

NFL 'tush push' ruling draws USC reaction
NFL 'tush push' ruling draws USC reaction

USA Today

time2 hours ago

  • USA Today

NFL 'tush push' ruling draws USC reaction

NFL 'tush push' ruling draws USC reaction Recently, the NFL made headlines surrounding a vote on the legal status of one of its more popular and controversial plays. Known as the "tush push," the play essentially consists of offensive linemen getting behind the ball carrier—typically the quarterback—and pushing him forward past the line to gain. The play has been popularized by the Philadelphia Eagles in recent seasons. However, as USC fans know, its history goes back nearly two decades to October 15, 2005. That evening, USC running back Reggie Bush pushed quarterback Matt Leinart into the end zone to take down archrival Notre Dame. In late May, the NFL held a vote regarding the legalization status of the play, which has come under much scrutiny in recent seasons. After being put to vote, it was determined that the play will still be legal moving forward. Following the news, Leinart took to social media to share his thoughts on the matter. "Yo @ReggieBush we trendsetters," Leinart wrote. "The BUSH PUSH lives on!" This fall will mark 20 years since the original Bush Push took place on that fateful evening in South Bend, Indiana. Very few of the players who participated in that game are still playing football. But as long as the play continues to be used in the NFL, the legacy of the Bush Push will continue to live on. "

GirlsDoPorn boss, once 1 of FBI's 10 most wanted, pleads guilty to sex trafficking
GirlsDoPorn boss, once 1 of FBI's 10 most wanted, pleads guilty to sex trafficking

Miami Herald

time4 hours ago

  • Miami Herald

GirlsDoPorn boss, once 1 of FBI's 10 most wanted, pleads guilty to sex trafficking

LOS ANGELES - After three years on the run and a stint on the FBI's Ten Most Wanted Fugitives list, the leader of GirlsDoPorn, Michael Pratt, pleaded guilty to sex trafficking charges in San Diego on Thursday, authorities said. Pratt used force, fraud and coercion to recruit hundreds of women, many of whom were in their late teens, to perform sex acts on camera, according to the U.S. Department of Justice. The women were often lured under the pretense of modeling gigs and were later told they would be filming adult videos, which Pratt and his business partners falsely promised would not appear online, prosecutors said. If the women refused to finish filming, Pratt would threaten to sue them, cancel flights home and post the videos publicly. The videos would then be uploaded to where Pratt made more than $17 million in profits from 2012 to 2019, prosecutors said. The consequences for the young victims were devastating. In court hearings, victims detailed how they had lost jobs, been evicted, dropped out of school or been disowned by friends and family. Some attempted suicide. In court, Pratt admitted to coming up with the idea for GirlsDoPorn, recruiting women to appear in the videos, sometimes transporting them to and from the site of a video shoot and sometimes manning the camera, prosecutors said. He faces a potential life sentence and is scheduled to be sentenced on Sept. 25. He was initially indicted in October 2019 alongside his business partners. But before Pratt could answer for his crimes, he disappeared. For years, while his business partners entered guilty pleas and victims testified in court, Pratt was nowhere to be found. The FBI placed him on its top 10 list and offered a $100,000 reward in return for information leading to his arrest. Authorities finally nabbed the elusive sex trafficking ringleader in Spain in December 2022, where he was held in custody until his extradition to San Diego in 2024, according to the Department of Justice. Pratt's former business partners Ruben Andre Garcia, Matthew Wolfe and Theodore Gyi have already been convicted and are serving sentences of 20, 14 and four years, respectively. Valorie Moser, the former GirlsDoPorn bookkeeper, pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit sex trafficking and is scheduled to be sentenced in September, prosecutors said. The charges against the sixth person in the indictment - a woman who was accused of helping recruit women to film the adult movies - were dropped in 2021, according to reporting from the San Diego Union-Tribune. Pratt directed Garcia, a male adult-film performer, to recruit "reference girls" to falsely convince young women that the videos they were filming would not appear online and that their friends and family would never see them, prosecutors said. The reference girls were paid per model they tried to recruit. At least one of the models was underage. "I can remember being so worried to tell him [Garcia] that I was just 17," a woman told the court during a hearing for Garcia. "But he was not mad or concerned. Instead he was excited and was eager to start." The women were often flown to San Diego from out of state to participate in the adult films. Pratt and his business partners would attempt to hide their connection to GirlsDoPorn from the models, having them sign contracts with innocuous-sounding business names such as "Begin Modeling," "Bubblegum Casting" or "BLL Media," prosecutors said. Pratt pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to sex-traffic from 2012 to 2019 and one count of sex trafficking a victim in May 2012, prosecutors said. ---------- -Times staff writer Sonja Sharp contributed to this report. Copyright (C) 2025, Tribune Content Agency, LLC. Portions copyrighted by the respective providers.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store