Boxing Promoter Pleads Guilty to Fixing Fights in Las Vegas.

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LAS VEGAS (AP) A well-known boxing manager has pleaded guilty to fixing fights and trying to pay a federal prosecutor and judge $15,000 to have a case against one of his indicted boxers dismissed, authorities said Monday.

Robert Mittleman, 61, of Oak Park, Ill., pleaded guilty to two counts of sports bribery and one count of bribery of a public official, according to a plea memo unsealed by court order last week and made public on Monday.

Mittleman admitted that he arranged for boxer Thomas Williams, also known as Top Dog, to lose a match with Brian Nielsen in Denmark on March 31, 2000, the guilty plea memo states.

Mittleman said Mogens Palle, a Danish boxing promoter, contacted him to set up the fight.

Williams lost the match in the third round and was paid up to $40,000 by Palle for throwing the fight. Mittleman was paid $1,000 to arrange the fight, according to the plea memo.

Mittleman also admitted that in July 2000, at the request of boxing promoter Robert Mitchell, he arranged for Williams to lose an Aug. 12, 2000, boxing match against Richie Melito Jr. in Las Vegas.

Williams lost to Melito in the first round. Mittleman was paid $1,000 to fix the fight, and Williams got $15,000 for taking a dive, the plea agreement said.

The two fought on the undercard of the Evander Holyfield-John Ruiz WBA heavyweight title fight.

After learning that Williams had been indicted on federal sports bribery charges, Mittleman contacted an undercover officer in Las Vegas on Oct. 30, 2003. He told the officer he would pay an assistant U.S. attorney and a U.S. District Court judge $15,000 to drop the case.

Mittleman gave the undercover officer $3,000 as a down payment, authorities said.

Mittleman, who briefly managed Oscar de la Hoya when he turned pro after the 1992 Olympics, will be sentenced July 26 before U.S. District Judge Robert C. Jones.

He faces up to five years in prison and a $250,000 fine on the sports bribery charge, and up to 15 years imprisonment and a $250,000 fine on the bribery of a public official charge.

Mittleman was released on his own recognizance pending sentencing.

The plea memo indicates that Mittleman will testify in the trial of Williams and fight manager Robert Mitchell, who are both charged in federal court with sports bribery and conspiracy to commit sports bribery. Their trial is scheduled for August.

Adam Goldman, Associated Press, 5/3/2004 20:44
 

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This is nothing new. Boxing fixes have gone on for decades. Even judges get paid off I'm sure to call the fight the other way if it goes by decision. Just look at that Oscar de la hoya-Sugar Shane Mosley fight. No fvcken way Sugar shane won that fight it was a fixed the judges got paid off.

Anyone remember the 1988 olympics when that Korean defeated Roy Jones Jr., Man that was laughable No way Roy Jones lost that fight. Boxing is like the WWF in a way lot of fixes and inside jobs go on.
 

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<BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><font size="-1">quote:</font><HR>This is nothing new. <HR></BLOCKQUOTE>

Ceylaya - no it is nothing new for fights to look suspicous, but it is news for a well known manager to cop to a fix in a courtroom.


wil.
 

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UPDATE:

Danish boxing manager denies Mittelman's bribery allegations
By Associated Press, 5/5/2004 15:36

COPENHAGEN, Denmark (AP) Danish boxing promoter Mogens Palle vehemently denied Wednesday claims he bribed a fighter in a bid to fix a bout.

Robert Mittleman of Oak Park, Ill., pleaded guilty in a Las Vegas court to two counts of sports bribery and one count of bribing a public official, according to a plea memo unsealed by court order last week and made public on Monday in Nevada.

Mittleman claimed that Palle had contacted him to set up a fight on March 31, 2000, in Denmark.

Thomas Williams, also known as Top Dog, lost the match in the third round and was paid up to $40,000 by Palle for throwing the fight. Mittleman was paid $1,000 to arrange the fight, according to the plea memo.

''Whatever Mittleman has been entertaining a judge with in the United States, I can only firmly say that I have never, during my 47 years in the business, bribed any boxer to come to Denmark and lose on purpose,'' Palle said.

Palle, who organized a string of bouts in Denmark with boxing greats Sonny Liston, Carlos Monzon, Sugar Ray Leonard, Larry Holmes, Mike Tyson, among others, said the rumors about the fixed fight emerged in 2000 and that ''Mittleman has managed to comment (on) it in three, four different ways.''

Nielsen, one of Denmark's most popular boxers, retired because of a knee injury in October 2003 with a record of 64-2, including 43 knockouts. He won a silver medal at the 1992 Olympics and lost to Tyson in 2001.

Mittleman, who briefly managed Oscar de la Hoya when he turned pro after the 1992 Olympics, will be sentenced July 26 before U.S. District Judge Robert C. Jones. He faces up to five years in prison and a $250,000 fine on the sports bribery charge, and up to 15 years imprisonment and a $250,000 fine on the bribery of a public official charge.
 

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what was to be gained by fixing it...would there have been a way for someone to gain financially? for instance would someone have been able to wager on this?
I agree... as it was ridiculously obvious Jones won, I am just trying to understand who or what was gained by this?

Anyone have an opinion on this?
 

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