For instance, in 2002, the year Floyd Jr. won his WBC lightweight fights against Jose Luis Castillo, Mayweather was slapped two charges of misdemeanor for domestic violence. He pleaded guilty in both counts.
In 2004, the time he won a unanimous decision in a WBC light welterweight title eliminator against DeMarcos Corley, Mayweather figured in a misdemeanor battery against two women in a Las Vegas nightclub. For that ugly abuse, he received three whammies—a one-year suspended sentence, a $1,000 fine, and an order for him to seek counseling for ‘impulse control.’
Worse, that same year, a bouncer he hit on the head inside a bar filed a misdemeanor assault and battery charges. A warrant of arrest was issued against Floyd Jr. in Grand Rapids, Michigan, after he failed to show up at the trial. To avert complications, he pleaded no contest, was fined and ordered to do community service.
http://www.digitaljournal.com/article/286287