This, from a man who lived in a house large enough to be a high school. Evander Holyfield, who at one point reportedly donated $5 million dollars at one time to his church, now, faces jail time for not giving the mother of his child payments.
The former boxer was held in contempt of court for failing to pay more than half a mil in back child support. As TMZ first reported, the GA. Dept. of Human Services went after Holyfield because he owed $372,097.40 in support for his 18-year-old daughter, Emani Holyfield.
But according to court docs filed recently in Georgia, that amount swelled to $563,900.91. Evander was held in contempt and ordered to immediately fork over $2,950 a month to clear the debt. Holyfield got a big head start by cutting a check for $17,700 ... knocking his debt down to a cool $546,200.91.
But the payment plan is just the beginning ... the judge ordered that a percentage of Holyfield's income be earmarked to pay down the debt.
Calls to Holyfield's rep have not been

how do u have enough money to donate millions but don't have sense enough to manage the money
ReplyDeletebet he thought the money was going to be flowing forever..NOT
I'll bet my first born that whoever was managing his money is not broke
THATS A SHAME.WELL HE SHOULD B ASHAMED.
ReplyDeleteIts reported that he gave 20 mill to Creflo Dollar'$ ministries by his own admission!
ReplyDeleteQuote; ESPN examines tithing, the practice of donating 10% of one's income to the church, and the relationship between high-profile athletes and some Christian televangelists. Many of these televangelists preach variations of the "prosperity gospel," which teaches its followers that through tithing, they'll be rewarded not just spiritually but financially. Former heavyweight champion Evander Holyfield has given millions of dollars to Creflo Dollar’s World Changers Church in Atlanta, and Arizona Cardinals quarterback Kurt Warner is on the board of directors of a Missouri-based ministry. John Barr reports.
From Sunday’s piece:
John Barr: “You would pay your tithe before you would pay your own house payment?”
Evander Holyfield: “(nodding head) Because I know that tithe, me paying that tithe, it’s going to better me off in the long run.”
“I can’t sit here and tell you I know all the goings on of that whole ministry, and all the money that they make and where it all goes. I have no idea. But I feel good about being involved with them as individuals and what they’re trying to do. And as of right now I’m very comfortable with that.” – Kurt Warner, on being on the board of a ministry essentially under Senate investigation.
It's always cheaper to wrap the package.
ReplyDelete