Source: Tyson Didn't Start Fight
Police say former heavyweight champion Mike Tyson was arrested on assault charges early Saturday following a street brawl with two men outside a Brooklyn hotel where all three men were guests.
Police say the boxer was treated for minor cuts to his hands after the other men apparently swung at him with a metal pole taken from the lobby of the hotel where Tyson also was staying.
Tyson, 36, was charged with third-degree assault, a misdemeanor, in the 5:30 a.m. fight. The two men, Samuel Velez, 31, of Reading, Pa., and Nestor Alvarez, 24, of Philadelphia, both were charged with misdemeanor counts of menacing and harassment, according to the Brooklyn district attorney's office. Velez and Alvarez pleaded not guilty at an early Sunday arraignment and are due back in court on Thursday.
One of the men and their female companion were treated for minor injuries at a hospital, police said. Tyson was not hospitalized.
A source close to the investigation said the two men started the fight with Tyson, adding that the boxer feared the men would hit him with the pole.
"They did instigate it," the source told The Associated Press. "They were harassing him, saying things to him. But Tyson was the one who threw the first punch."
Boxing historian Bert Sugar told CBS News, "I guess inactivity is gnawing at him."
Shelly Finkel, adviser to the Brooklyn-born boxer, did not know any of the details of the confrontation, saying, "I'm in the process of trying to find out."
Tyson, who faces a misdemeanor assault charge, was released on Saturday after being given a desk appearance ticket requiring him to show up for a hearing Tuesday Brooklyn Criminal Court.
Saturday, Tyson walked silently past a small group fans who shouted "Mike! Mike!" as he was led out the precinct in a driving rain.
In 1986, Tyson became the youngest heavyweight champion in history at age 20, but legal troubles soon followed.
He was convicted of rape in 1992 and sentenced to six years in prison. He served three years before being released on parole. In a Fox television interview last month, Tyson said he was so angry about the conviction he wanted to rape his accuser and her mother.
In 1997, after Tyson bit off a piece of Evander Holyfield's ear during a bout, his Nevada boxing license was suspended for a year and he was fined $3 million. In 1999, he was released from a Maryland jail after serving 3½ months for assaulting two motorists.
Last year, he threw a punch at Lennox Lewis' bodyguard at a news conference announcing a fight between the two, setting off a brawl between the two boxers in which Tyson bit Lewis' leg.
Tyson eventually lost to Lewis, but won his last fight in the ring, knocking out Clifford Etienne in the first round in February.