|
From ring to court
IBF boss takes leave to fight bribery charges
Posted: Tuesday December 14, 1999 10:20 AM
NEWARK, N.J. (AP) - Now that its indicted president is on the
sidelines, the International Boxing Federation wants federal
prosecutors to stop their effort to install a court-appointed
monitor for the governing body.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Joseph Braunreuther, lead prosecutor in
that bid, would not disclose his reaction to Monday's announcement
by Robert W. Lee Sr. and the IBF. "We'll respond in court," he
said.
Lee said he requested a leave of absence from the group he
founded so he can defend himself against charges he took bribes to
rig boxing rankings.
Lee offered to stay on leave until the charges are resolved. A
trial is scheduled for Jan. 11, but most likely will start later in
the year.
The 65-year-old Lee noted he has a heart condition and
complications from diabetes. He said he could not wage a defense
and "continue to give the IBF the time and attention it deserves
from its president and commissioner."
The IBF said its executive committee unanimously accepted Lee's
offer and appointed one of its vice presidents, Hiawatha Knight of
Detroit, to serve as president during Lee's absence.
The retired gym teacher and high school athletic coach was a
member of the Michigan State Athletic Boxing Commission from 1978
to 1988, the last eight years as chairwoman.
A message left for Knight at the IBF's headquarters in East
Orange, N.J., was not returned Monday.
An indictment and a government lawsuit brought last month accuse
Lee and others of taking $338,000 in bribes to change the
organization's rankings. The rankings play a big role in
determining fights and purses for boxers.
U.S. District Judge John Bissell last month imposed spending
restrictions on the IBF while prosecutors prepared their case for a
monitor.
Bissell set a Dec. 22 hearing on their request for an injunction
removing Lee and installing a monitor. If approved, it would be the
first time a monitor was imposed on a sports organization.
The IBF said Monday it "should not be singled out for this
unprecedented action."
"No other sports group which has gone through similarly
difficult times has come under this kind of attack by the federal
government - not the U.S. or International Olympic Committees, not
the NCAA, not any other professional or amateur sports organization
where one or more individual members have had similar allegations
made against them," the IBF said.
Monitors have been installed a dozen times in the 20-year
history of the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organization Act,
generally to cleanse mob-riddled labor unions. Zachary Carter, the
former U.S. attorney for Brooklyn, Queens and Long Island, is the
choice of prosecutors here to become the IBF monitor.
Prosecutors also want Lee banned from boxing for life, but that
issue probably would not be resolved until after a trial.
Lee founded the IBF in 1983, pledging to bring fairness to the
rankings. The IBF gets a share of purses for sanctioning fights,
and prosecutors say the group began taking improper payments almost
from its inception.
The indictment said seven promoters and managers were involved,
as well as 23 boxers. They have not been charged, and the
indictment refers to them only by number. The investigation is
continuing.
| Related information |
| Multimedia |
Visit Multimedia Central for the latest audio and video
|
| Search our site |
Watch CNN/SI 24 hours a day |
|
|
Sports Illustrated and CNN have combined to form a 24 hour sports news and information channel. To receive CNN/SI at your home call your cable operator or DirecTV. |
Copyright 2003 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
|
Copyright © 2000
CNN/Sports Illustrated
An AOL Time Warner Company.
All Rights Reserved.
|
Terms under which this service is provided to you.
Read our privacy guidelines.
|
|