Floyd Mayweather Faces Uphill Legal Battle After Signing Confession of Judgment Over $1.2M Maybach

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Evidence, Records, and What Can Be Proven

Confession of Judgment Document (July 4, 2025): The dealership filed court papers showing Mayweather’s signed admission of the debt, which attorney Michael Cristalli states includes language where “Mr. Mayweather acknowledged the enforceability of the settlement Agreement and the Confession of Judgment and agreed not to challenge either in the event he breached the agreement, which he did.”

Dealership’s Counter-Narrative: Vegas Auto Gallery attorney Ted Anastasiou told reporters: “In June 2025, Floyd signed a confession of judgment admitting to a court of law he personally owes $1.2 million. Last week, he blew a settlement to finally pay. When he begged for an extension, we granted it. He still didn’t pay.”

Anastasiou continued: “His lawsuit is laughable and dead on arrival, and any allegations about the condition of cars he willingly purchased, personally signed for, and then showed off on social media are just a pathetic attempt to spin.”

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The attorney emphasized the legal significance: “You don’t get to sign papers admitting you owe debt, blow the deadlines to pay, and then pretend the money is ‘disputed.’ It isn’t. The receipts exist — his signature is on them.”