Saturday, May 23, 2026 - Floyd Mayweather Jr. has filed a lawsuit alleging that a former close associate orchestrated a massive fraud scheme that cost him at least $175 million through unauthorised financial dealings, missing investments and disputed property transactions.
According to court documents obtained by TMZ Sports,
Mayweather claims businessman Jona Rechnitz spent years building trust with him
before allegedly taking control of key financial matters, including banking
arrangements, investment deals and real estate transactions.
The former world champion alleges Rechnitz, alongside Ayal
Frist, Frist Apex Ventures and attorney Alexander Seligson, operated a
fraudulent network that redirected millions of dollars through fake
investments, unauthorised wire transfers and questionable corporate entities.
Among the most serious allegations, Mayweather claims
approximately $100 million worth of jewellery was handed over to Miami-based
jewellers in exchange for only around $13 million. The lawsuit further alleges
that a large portion of the jewellery collection remains in the possession of
the dealers.
Court filings reportedly include text messages in which one
jeweller allegedly threatened to begin liquidating Mayweather’s jewellery if
payments were not made. According to the complaint, Rechnitz allegedly
responded: “Agreed thx.”
Mayweather also claims he transferred $7.5 million into what
he believed was a legitimate investment opportunity, only for the deal never to
materialise and the money to disappear. The boxer additionally alleges that
another $15 million connected to a real estate settlement was moved without his
authorization.
The lawsuit further claims Mayweather unknowingly signed
documents transferring ownership of his Gulfstream private jet with the buyer
information left blank. According to the filing, the former boxer says he still
does not know where the proceeds from the aircraft sale went
Mayweather also accuses Frist of falsely portraying himself
as a senior executive at Vada Properties despite allegedly never holding such
positions. The former boxing champion is seeking at least $175 million in
damages, punitive compensation and a full financial accounting of the allegedly
missing funds.

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