Floyd Mayweather jailed in battery case

LOS ANGELES, (Reuters) – U.S. boxing champion Floyd  Mayweather Jr. was arrested yesterday in Las Vegas on suspicion  of grand larceny and domestic battery after an ex-girlfriend  accused him of beating her in front of their children,  according to police and court documents.  

Mayweather, 33, who is undefeated in 41 bouts and widely  regarded as the best defensive fighter of his generation, was  jailed in the Clark County Detention Center in lieu of $3,000  bail, Las Vegas police spokesman Bill Cassell said.  

He was initially booked on a charge of grand larceny for  the alleged theft of a cell phone, but police said they are  urging prosecutors to bring an additional charge of domestic  battery based on the complaint of his ex-girlfriend.  

Police did not name the woman, but an application she filed  in court seeking a protective order against Mayweather  identifies her as Josie Harris, with whom the boxer has three  young children.  
Mayweather’s lawyer, Richard Wright, was not immediately  available for comment.  

Cassell said police were called to the woman’s home on  Thursday but made no arrests as the couple had merely quarreled   and there was no evidence of a crime. 
 
Officers returned about two hours later when the woman  called to report that she had been battered by Mayweather and  that he had stolen her phone, Cassell said. 
Mayweather was arrested and taken into custody yesterday.  
Police declined to give further details. But according to  an protective order request filed by Harris and posted online  by the celebrity news website TMZ.com, Harris accused  Mayweather of assaulting her in front of their children.  

“He awoke me by pulling me by my hair and throwing me on  the ground in my living room and began punching me in my head  … dragging me on the floor and twisting my arm back in an  attempt to try and break it,” she wrote.  

The flamboyant Mayweather, who lives in Las Vegas and is  known by the nickname “Money,” fought his latest welterweight  bout in May against fellow American Shane Mosley, registering a  unanimous points victory that improved his career record to  41-0, including 25 knockouts. 
 
According to a 2010 list of the highest-paid U.S. athletes  compiled by Sports Illustrated magazine, Mayweather ranks third  with total earnings of $60.3 million, behind golfers Tiger  Woods and Phil Mickelson.