A waiter and part-time actor who says
he played a pivotal role in putting together the Floyd Mayweather Jr.-Manny Pacquiao fight has gone to court to get a
piece of the record-breaking revenue generated by the event.
Gabriel Salvador filed suit against
Pacquiao’s camp, CBS Corp. and its premium cable network Showtime, stating he
was promised a finder’s fee for his help in setting up an early meeting that
led to the May 2, 2015, clash between the two middleweights that became the
highest-grossing pay-per-view TV event in history.
The fight generated more than $430
million in revenue for CBS and Showtime, which shared the event with Time Warner’s HBO. Salvador is asking for “no
less” than $8.6 million based on an oral agreement he claims to have had with
CBS and Pacquiao’s trainer and confidant, Freddie Roach, who is named in the
suit
The complaint says Salvador provided
an “in” to setting up the fight by introducing CBS Chairman Leslie Moonves to
Roach.
Salvador had gotten to know Roach
through visits to the Wildcard Gym in Hollywood. As a waiter at Craig’s, the
West Hollywood restaurant frequented by entertainment industry types, Salvador
had also struck up a friendship with Moonves over their mutual passion for
boxing.
While the match was long a highly
desirable event for fight fans, discussions were stalled for years due to the
undefeated champion Mayweather’s unwillingness to deal with Pacquiao’s
promoter, Bob Arum. Such disputes are common in the fight game.
Salvador’s suit said a May 28, 2014,
meeting that he coordinated between Roach and Moonves at the Scarpetta
restaurant in Beverly Hills helped facilitate the fight and that both sides
promised him a finder’s fee if the event went forward. Salvador claims they
agreed on 2% of the gross proceeds for the fight.
The suit cites quotes to the press
by Arum made after the fight was announced in which the promoter said Salvador
played a role in making the long-anticipated event happen.
Salvador said he received no
compensation beyond $10,000 to cover his hotel and travel expenses for
attending the fight in Las Vegas.
In the suit, Salvador said he later
approached Moonves about further payment. Moonves then called Creative Artists
Agency's Nick Khan, who represents Roach, on Salvador’s behalf.
According to the suit, Salvador was
later contacted by Keith Davidson, said to be a contracted associate of
Pacquiao, who told him to accept a $50,000 payment. Davidson, also named as a
defendant in the suit, is charged with having told Salvador he would be fired
from his job at Craig’s and would “never work as an actor in this town again”
if he failed to take the offer and release CBS and Pacquiao from any future
claims.
Davidson falsely claimed that he
worked for Moonves, the suit noted.
Salvador filed a police report that
detailed what he said were threatening statements made by Davidson. The
suit said Khan apologized to Salvador for Davidson’s behavior and that the
plaintiff has been able to hold onto his job at Craig’s. A spokesperson for CBS said the company has no comment on the suit.
SOURCE: los Angeles Times
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