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View Full Version : Shocking! Another nig boxer arrested!


Steve B
August 11th, 2005, 11:42 PM
Heavyweight boxer Etienne arrested
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Associated Press
Posted: 4 hours ago



BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) - Police said heavyweight boxer Clifford Etienne held up a check cashing business, fired a shot when a clerk failed to move fast enough and pulled a gun on officers as he tried carjack two different vehicles with children inside.

Etienne, who took up boxing while serving a prison sentence for armed robbery, was arrested Wednesday night as he tried to escape when the car he was driving ran up on a curb. He was being held Thursday in lieu of a $70,000 bond, according to the East Baton Rouge Parish Sheriff's Office.
The 33-year-old was charged with one count each of attempted first-degree murder, attempted first-degree murder of a police officer, and two counts each of armed robbery and second-degree kidnapping.


Clifford Etienne, right, takes a shot from Nicolai Valuev in their bout in Germany on May 14, 2005. (Christian Fischer/Bongarts / Getty Images)


Police spokesman Sgt. Don Kelly said Etienne allegedly fired one shot when a clerk failed to move fast enough during the robbery of the check cashing business Wednesday night. After running away with an undisclosed amount of cash, he tried to carjack a young woman with two children in her car, then a man who also had two children in his car, all while police chased him.

"At various times he pointed his gun at the police officers and the man in the second carjacking," Kelly said.

Kelly said Etienne tried to fire twice, but the gun malfunctioned.

While serving a 40-year sentence at two Louisiana prisons, Etienne won the state prison boxing championship. He was paroled in 1998 after serving 10 years and became a professional boxer.

He is best known for being knocked out by Mike Tyson in 49 seconds in 2003.

During the final days of his second term in January 2004, Gov. Mike Foster denied a pardon to Etienne, citing the violence of his crimes. During a robbery spree with three other men in the 1980s, Etienne shot one man in the arm, then took two others to a remote soybean farm, forced them to strip and robbed them of about $1,000 and a gold watch. http://msn.foxsports.com/boxing/story/3882776


Cliffy probably needed the money for doctor bills cuz in his last fight against Russian Nicolai Valuev the boy was nearly decapitated.

http://msn.foxsports.com/id/3882858_36_1.jpg



Here Cliffy looks for some loose change.

http://www.boxnews.com.ua/photos/599/NikolayValuevEtienne1.jpg

Rounder
August 12th, 2005, 09:54 PM
Delightful photos, Steve. Nothing, and I do mean nothing, fires me up more than seeing a White man beating and punishment a GD, bubble-lipped, blue-gummed neeee-gerrrrr. You ought to see me and my boys doing cartwheels around the living room watching White men whipping niggers and muds on UFC TV. Do you remember the FORMER bad-ass Ortiz ??

Steve B
August 12th, 2005, 10:11 PM
Delightful photos, Steve. Nothing, and I do mean nothing, fires me up more than seeing a White man beating and punishment a GD, bubble-lipped, blue-gummed neeee-gerrrrr. You ought to see me and my boys doing cartwheels around the living room watching White men whipping niggers and muds on UFC TV. Do you remember the FORMER bad-ass Ortiz ??

That fuckin spick! Ortiz was destroyed by Chuck Liddell who happens to live about 20 miles from me. I met him once and he is just the nicest fella outside the Octogon you'd ever want to meet. Quite, reserved, smiles and doesn't say much. Not that big or intimidating and if weren't for the mohawk haircut you would think he was just a regular joe. In fact I started to think to myself: "This guy ain't shit, I could kick his ass". Fortunately, I took it no further than thought as a prolonged hospital stay is not something I want to relish at this stage in life. :D

Joe_J.
August 12th, 2005, 10:18 PM
Niggers are why the sports page is more like a police report on any given day.

Good pics, BTW! Only thing better are some of the pics of niggers hanging from trees.

N.B. Forrest
August 17th, 2005, 10:15 AM
I've just got turned on to that UFC stuff since I started watching the "Ultimate Fighter" reality show, and the subsequent fights on "Spike". Unlike straight boxing, it plays into the physical strengths of White men - and that's the way a real street fight almost invariably unfolds: grappling for advantage on the ground.

And damn, is it a joy to watch a White stud strangle a coon into submission! :box:

Steve B
August 17th, 2005, 08:17 PM
I've just got turned on to that UFC stuff since I started watching the "Ultimate Fighter" reality show, and the subsequent fights on "Spike". Unlike straight boxing, it plays into the physical strengths of White men - and that's the way a real street fight almost invariably unfolds: grappling for advantage on the ground.

And damn, is it a joy to watch a White stud strangle a coon into submission! :box:

A great UFC fight is on this Saturday(Aug 20) nite between UFC light heavyweight champ chuck Liddell and Jeremy Horn who beat Chuck 6 years ago. Both of these White guys have spent their careers knocking out and choking just about every nig that was ever put in front of them, not to mention a boatload of spics.

UFC 54 : Liddell vs Horn
By Sean McClure
Monday, July 18, 2005



Jeremy Horn is at the top of too many top 10 lists to name and, in most cases, he is ranked above the champions. He deserves the accolades when you look back at his career. His record is an impressive 75 wins, 13 losses, and 5 draws and those 75 wins are over a who’s who list in mixed martial arts. He beat Forrest Griffin with a knockout via a kick in at the IFC’s Global Domination stopping the new UFC superstar in round 2 of their fight. Horn submitted a very talented David Louiseau at TKO 15 by guillotine choke. One of the most impressive of his bouts was his fight with Vernon Tiger White at King of the Cage 23 : Sin City. Horn won that by decision and beat then champion White after three rounds of fast and furious action. Despite having beaten some of the best there is, Jeremy has always been a smallish 205 lber, even losing some key fights to the likes of Babalu, Elvis Sinosic, as well as Ricardo Arona and Randy Couture both in Rings.There is no doubt that Horn is the real deal... but is he ready to be champion? Chuck Liddell would like to have a say in that I am sure.



“The Iceman” Chuck Liddell is without a doubt one of the most successful and dangerous strikers in the MMA game, and he has a sprawl that is one of the sport’s best. Chuck also has a very solid chin to boot. Just look at his fight with Vernon White and you will see him get rocked and then come right back and stagger White in return. He proves his worth in the cage time-and-time-again as one of the sport’s best. Chuck’s record is not as lengthy as Horn’s but it is certainly more visible. Chuck has fought in Pride and the UFC 16 times out of his 19 professional fights. Horn has fought in just 12 in his 93 fights with a long layoff from the UFC and Pride, not having competed at the highest levels of the sport since 2002 when he decisioned Gilbert Yvel. This doesn’t make Chuck better necessarily but it for certainly makes him more visible and more recognizable... not to mention his recent TV appearance on SpikeTV's "The Ultimate Fighter" and winning the UFC title from Couture in a very memorable performance. We know how good he is at 205 because we see it every time he steps in the ring.



One thing Horn might have going against him is, as we said, the weight issue. Many feel that he has been fighting out of his ideal weight class of 185 lbs for much of his career. Moreover, a good portion of his recent match-ups have been at 185. He is stepping back up in weight to fight Chuck at UFC 54 so the questions nags, with this work against him??? Don’t get me wrong, he has shown his skills and they will be effective in any class. He certainly can go at 205 lbs as he had so many times in the past (namely that KO victory over Griffin, the Vernon White decision, and the almost forgotten choke victory over Liddell himself in 1999). Chuck will have his hands full if this goes to the ground like it did with his last title match with Randy. As for striking? Horn can strike, too. He is not a knockout artist by any means but he wears his opponents out with solid technique, and can ground and pound with extreme prejudice... and did I mention he has NEVER been knocked out?



The main difference between Jeremy and Chuck, that will factor into this fight is the "end game"that each fighter is bringing into the cage. Chuck has KO’d his opponents in 75 percent of his victories. Horn has finished about 75 percent of his fights by submission. Horn will likely have the advantage if he can take it to the mat, after mixing it up with some striking to find the openning he needs for the takedown. As stated, Chuck's sprawl is very effective so this will be a test for the Nebraska native. Bottom-line, Chuck's end game will be at hand (or at fist) virtually every moment of the fight (the big KO)... while Jeremy needs to take utter control and get it to the ground so he can bring his submissions skills to bear. Note: While Horn has never been KO'ed, Liddell has never tapped, though he was choked unconscious by Horn.



Also of importance in this fight is the motivation of the opponents... Chuck is on mission of revenge. He has already gotten revenge with one of his three losses, and Horn will make it number 2. If he beats Horn there is only one left : Quinton Jackson. For Horn, this is the opportunity to cement his name as a UFC mainstay. He has always been one of the best, but has never acheived what so many of his teammates have, winning the UFC title (as did Miletich, Hughes, Menne, Pulver, Sylvia). He has alot to gain after a long absence from the UFC. This is why for the first time in his career, he is training just for himself, and not working with the whole team to get everyone ready for their own respective fights.



If you were to take a really good look at the nuances of this fight, ignoring any likes and dislikes about either fighter, then we can see that we are in for a real barn-burner - lots of back story to build excitment, a good mix of styles, revenge, a renewed opportunity, and an intriging "name brand (big TV push for Liddell) v. generic label (absence of presence to the emerging audience for Horn)" match-up... But what it comes down to is, the winner of this match is the one that gets past all the promotionsl hype and can impose his will and strategy the best.http://www.maxfighting.com/index.cfm?ac=news.detail&nid=388