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TIME - Man of the Year
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CompactPublishing-TimeMagazine-TimeManOfTheYear-Win31MSDOS.iso
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1992-09-10
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THE WEEK, Page 23SOCIETYTyson Scrapes Bottom
Now he faces money troubles, new charges and prison discipline
Inside the high brick walls of the suburban Indianapolis
prison he will call home for the next six years, Mike Tyson's
sixth week of incarceration brought him some of the bleakest news
yet: his once enormous fortune may be depleted, leaving the ex-
champ nearly broke.
According to an affidavit released last week by a former
accountant to boxing promoter Don King, the King of Unkempt may
have fleeced client Tyson of millions of dollars in winnings
over a five-year period through overcharges and improper
spending. The affidavit, filed in connection with a lawsuit
between Tyson and his former manager, Bill Cayton, alleges that
King charged Tyson $750,000 for "overhead" at the promoter's New
York office, $100,000 in "consulting fees" for his wife, $2
million for him to acquire promotional rights to other fighters,
as well as extravagant sums to cover travel expenses and
personal security. The affidavit also says that Tyson attorney
Vincent Fuller, who in 1985 successfully defended King against
federal tax-evasion charges, recently accused the promoter of
exploiting Tyson financially and hiring puppets to represent
Tyson in financial matters. King, a wily and meddlesome
motormouth who is as beloved in boxing as George Steinbrenner
is in baseball, responded that the affidavit is filled with
"lies, fabrications and half-truths," and that every expense was
taken with Tyson's approval.
Tyson earned $60 million in his six years as a
professional boxer -- including $20 million in 1988 for his
91-sec. title fight against Michael Spinks -- but had only as
little as $5 million by last year. Last week he was forced to
borrow against his own $2 million retirement account to help pay
off the $2 million in legal expenses incurred during his rape
trial last February, including a six-figure sum for celebrity
attorney Alan Dershowitz to conduct his appeal. Former Tyson
accountant Mohammed Khan reportedly claims that the boxer has
"no liquid assets," only real estate in New Jersey and Ohio, an
exotic car collection and the retirement annuity.
That may have been the worst, but it was not the only
embarrassing news Iron Mike faced last week. In a syndicated
television interview, Erinn Cosby, 25, daughter of entertainer
Bill Cosby, alleged that three years ago she fought off Tyson
after he made sexual advances toward her. King called her claim
"absolutely not true."
Behind bars, Tyson had his first serious run-in with
prison authorities when he threatened to "whup" a guard after
they argued in the commissary. Tyson was given four days'
solitary in the disciplinary unit, where he was forbidden to
work at his job in the cellblock recreation area, for which the
ex-champ earns 65 cents an hour. He also had his earliest
possible release date pushed back 15 days, to April 9, 1995.