High-profile individuals are not exempt from legal accountability, as demonstrated by Floyd Mayweather's court-ordered $33,000 monthly child support plus $933,000 in back payments to his daughter Price Morehead, despite his wealth and public image as 'Money Mayweather.' The case reveals how legal systems enforce financial obligations through default judgments and property liens, even against wealthy individuals who may ignore court orders. Mayweather's situation also illustrates how personal relationships can involve complex power dynamics, including workplace exploitation and potential retaliation, as evidenced by the class action lawsuit against his strip club alleging wage violations and intimidation of dancers.
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Floyd Mayweather's Baby Mama EXPOSES Everything He Did To HerAdded:
Floyd Mayweather's baby mama is suddenly exposing private details about their relationship after court documents reportedly confirmed Floyd fathered her child. And now, the more she speaks out, the worse the situation seems to be getting for Floyd as old rumors and accusations start resurfacing online.
Floyd Mayweather had a baby with a dancer at his Las Vegas strip club, and now he has been ordered to pay a million dollars in back child support on top of $33,000 a month for the baby girl. The woman at the center of it is Paige Morehead. She is not some stranger Floyd met one night at the club. Morehead says she was in a long-term intimate relationship with Mayweather that lasted eight years until she claims he broke up with her when he found out she was pregnant in April 2021. The child, a girl, was born in December of that same year. Mayweather, 49, was legally declared the father of the 4-year-old girl in March 2026, according to court documents obtained by TMZ Sports. The child was born in December 2021. The paternity case did not result in a court declaration until March 2026. That is more than four years of a child growing up with a father who refused to acknowledge her. Four years of Paige raising this little girl alone, navigating diapers, first steps, first [music] words, while Floyd Mayweather was out here posting stacks of cash on Instagram and flying private. Floyd was ordered to pay $32,850 a month in child support in addition to 933,000 in back support. Round those numbers up because that is effectively the $33,000 a month and $1 million figure that has set the internet on fire since the story broke on May 21st, 2026. How does the richest boxer in the history of the sport, a man who once earned $300 million from a single fight, end up in a situation where a judge has to forcibly declare him a father and order him to pay nearly a million dollars in debt he already owes his own child despite being served twice and ultimately ordered to take a DNA test simply chose to ghost a paternity case about his own daughter and because he never engaged the judge had no choice but to rule against him by default. Per the court, Floyd has only paid about $151,000 of what he owes. So the judge ruled Paige can place a lien worth up to $2 million on property owned by Mayweather in California helping ensure she gets the money for the child. So as of right now, Paige Morehead has the legal right to go after Floyd Mayweather's California real estate. [music] She has a mechanism to collect what the courts say her daughter is owed. The courts got involved in June 2023 when the mother, Paige Morehead, asked a Nevada judge to legally declare Mayweather the father of the 18-month-old child who was born in December 2021. The child was already a year and a half old before Paige even went to court which tells you something about this woman. She did not run to a judge the second Floyd disappeared. She waited. She tried other avenues first.
The latest baby marks Mayweather's fifth child, his fifth.
And reportedly the one he tried hardest to avoid. The piece of this story that keeps getting buried under the headline numbers. The million dollars, the 33,000 a month [music] is the relationship itself because this was not a one-night stand. This was not a casual encounter.
This was by Paige Morehead's account an 8-year relationship with one of the most recognizable men on the planet. 8 years.
That is longer than some marriages. Long enough to know someone's routines, their secrets, their fears. Long enough to build real attachment, real dependency, emotional and financial. And for all eight of those years, Paige was also working at Floyd's club. Paige claims Floyd pressured her to get an abortion and ultimately fired her even though she had worked at his Girl Collection club for 4 years. So, take the full picture here.
Paige Mayweather is a woman who gave Floyd Mayweather 8 years of her personal life and at least four of those years working inside his own business. She was, by every definition, embedded in his world. She was not on the outside looking in.
She was on the inside. Literally, is an upscale topless gentleman's club located minutes from the Las Vegas strip. It is owned by retired championship boxer Floyd Mayweather who came up with the idea of owning his own club while serving time for domestic violence. He used his fortune to open Girl Collection and since [music] opening in May of 2017, it has been one of the most popular Las Vegas strip [music] clubs in the city. Think about that origin story.
Floyd Mayweather sat behind [music] bars doing time for a domestic violence conviction and used that period to plan a strip club. Mayweather developed the idea for Girl Collection while he was serving time. When he got out, the pro boxer used his fortunes to design and build a Vegas strip [music] club that put others in the city to shame. The club opened in 2017. Paige was one of the dancers Floyd himself selected. It features a roster of stunning Las Vegas strippers handpicked by Mayweather. That detail matters because it tells you that Floyd was not passively connected to the women who work there. He was actively [music] involved in choosing them.
He was present. Floyd spends almost every night he has available at his club monitoring the girls and how they are treating his high-end clientele [music] and also making sure the club is running the way he envisions. So, Paige was working at a club where the owner, her long-term partner, was present almost every night. That is the environment in which their relationship lived and breathed. That is also the environment in which she eventually became pregnant.
And then, according to Paige, everything changed the moment Floyd found out. She claims he broke up with her when he found out she was pregnant in [music] April 2021. The breakup came first, and then came the pressure. Paige claims Floyd pressured her to get an abortion.
And then, to complete [music] the rupture, Floyd fired her from the club.
Let that settle. In the span of a few weeks in April [music] 2021, Paige Morehead went from being in an 8-year relationship and employed at her partner's business [music] to being broken up with, pressured to terminate her pregnancy, and fired from her job. All of it at the hands of the same man. She had no relationship. She had no income [music] from the club she had spent 4 years building her livelihood at, and she was pregnant, [music] carrying a child that the father wanted erased. She had the baby anyway. Paige named her Price Morehead, but strip away the commentary, and what you have is a single mother abandoned by an 8-year partner raising a child alone in Las Vegas. While that partner continued flying private jets and posting stacks of hundred-dollar bills on social media. To understand the full weight of what Paige Morehead is alleging, you have to understand the world inside Girl Collection. Because it was not just a setting, it was a power structure, and Floyd Mayweather sat at the very top of it. Two women filed a class action lawsuit against boxer Floyd Mayweather and his Las Vegas strip club for allegedly failing to pay the exotic [music] dancers minimum wage and illegally withholding tips. The two women alleged they were misclassified as independent contractors when they worked as dancers at Girl Collection. This lawsuit, filed separately from Paige's paternity [music] case, paints a detailed picture of how Floyd ran his business and treated the women who worked there. Girl Collection had rules over how the dancers performed, including dress codes, stage rotations, and rules for how much they could receive for private dances and VIP sessions. The dancers claimed that Mayweather and Howard classified them as independent contractors instead of employees, >> [music] >> which meant they didn't get paid minimum wage for their hours. According to the plaintiffs, they were forced [music] to hand over a percentage of their tips, which their legal team claims violates the Fair Labor Standards Act. The dancers could only make money through patron tips.
That Girl Collection and Mayweather collected and dispersed. Dancers would also have to pay house fees to perform, usually between $100 [music] and $200 for each shift. She was paying for the privilege of working. And if the tips were slow, she left her shift in the red. In the lawsuit, it is alleged that Mayweather had control over when dancers could leave, and he also determined how much of their tips the club would keep.
Moreover, the dancers claimed that Mayweather and his sister often threatened and intimidated them. And then came the most serious allegation in that suit. A dancer named Jasmine Woodward [music] approached Mayweather about unpaid wages. She says that she approached Mayweather about failure to pay her for the shifts that she worked earlier in the weekend and was met with a slap in the face in front of other dancers and customers on the floor of the club, according to the suit. And Mayweather followed after her shouting she could not take a joke. One of the women alleged she was fired for her involvement in the lawsuit and for asking for wages from previous shifts.
Now, line that up with what Paige Morehead says happened to her. She was in a relationship with this same man.
When she became pregnant, she says he pressured her to get an abortion. When she refused, she was fired. The same termination as retaliation pattern described in the class action lawsuit.
The portrait that emerges is of a man who built an environment where he had total control over the women working for him and where any woman who challenged that control faced immediate consequences. Mayweather attorney felt and Nuelle told The Athletic that the boxer vehemently denies the allegations and looks forward to the opportunity to prove in court his innocence. But the lawsuits keep stacking up. And so does the paper trail. Here is where the story of Paige Moorer head does not exist in isolation because if you pull back the lens, you see that Paige's account fits into a much older pattern in Floyd Mayweather's life with the women closest to him. The most significant chapter in that pattern >> [music] >> involves Josie Harris, the mother of three of Floyd's children and the woman at the center of his 2010 domestic violence conviction. Harris's relationship with Mayweather spanned from 1995 to 2010 >> [music] >> during which they had three children, sons Koraun born 1999 and Zion born 2001 and daughter Jirah born 2003. 15 years.
That is the relationship that defined Floyd Mayweather, the man behind the boxing record. The partnership was marked by turbulence, most notably a September 2010 incident in which Mayweather assaulted Harris in front of their children leading to his 2011 guilty plea to domestic violence and harassment charges and a subsequent prison sentence served in 2012. As per Harris's side of the story, Mayweather had attacked her on six occasions during their relationship. In September 2010, Mayweather attacked her extremely brutally. The most severe incident occurred in September 2010 when Mayweather entered her Las Vegas home without permission, pulled her by the hair, punched her, kicked her and assaulted her in front of their children. Harris reported the attack to police leading to a domestic battery charge against Mayweather. Their eldest son allegedly snuck out of the home and told a security guard to call the police.
Harris' home video security footage was later released and revealed [music] the aftermath of the incident. Video footage also shows their children running to security before police were called.
Harris had to receive medical attention and was left with brain contusions, a possible concussion, and a sprained left arm. Floyd pleaded guilty.
He was sentenced to 90 days in jail and served approximately 2 months in prison in 2012. But what happened after the conviction is almost as revealing as the conviction itself. Mayweather denied the allegations against him. During an interview with Katie Couric, he accused Harris of being on drugs and claimed [music] that he was not the aggressor in their relationship. His exact words, which he said on a nationally televised interview, were, [music] "Did I restrain a woman that was on drugs?
Yes, I did. So if they say that's domestic violence, then you know what?
I'm guilty.
I'm guilty of restraining someone. Josie Harris fired back. On May 5, 2015, Harris filed a defamation lawsuit against Mayweather in the Superior Court of California, Los Angeles County, seeking $20 million in damages. The complaint alleged that Mayweather's statements falsely portrayed her as a drug addict and were defamatory. Harris denied the accusations of drug abuse and sought compensation for the harm caused by the remarks. Before she could see that lawsuit through, Josie Harris died. TMZ reported that Harris, 40, was found unresponsive while sitting in her car parked outside of her Valencia, California home. Law enforcement sources told the outlet that they were called to Harris' home around 9:30 p.m. and she was pronounced dead on the scene. A biography chronicles Harris and Mayweather's heartbreaking romance filled with mental and physical abuse and giving an account of the numerous beatings she received by him. In one of her final interviews in 2017, Harris told USA Today, "I was a battered woman.
I felt embarrassed about saying I was a battered woman. I felt shame. I felt like it was my fault." She never got to publish her story in her own words. The pressure to abort, the firing, the disappearing act. The thread between these two stories is impossible to ignore. The final piece of this story is the one Floyd Mayweather has spent years building his entire identity around, the money. Money Mayweather. The man with the custom jets, the man [music] who posts bricks of cash on Instagram, the man whose net worth was once estimated at $500 million.
The man who branded himself as the greatest earner in the history of sports. And yet, financially speaking, it has been an awkward few months for Floyd Mayweather. Since the beginning of 2026, the boxing legend's post-retirement finances >> [music] >> have been placed under a massive public microscope. The saga began in January when a lengthy Business Insider investigation alleged that Mayweather was heavily leveraged, taking out high-interest loans against his real estate, facing foreclosures, and dealing with a growing list of unpaid bills.
Mayweather forcefully denied the claims and is actively suing the publication and one of its reporters for defamation.
Weeks later, Floyd went on the offensive, filing an explosive $340 million lawsuit against Showtime Networks.
In that [music] complaint, Mayweather alleged he wasn't experiencing financial strain due to his own spending, but rather because hundreds of millions of dollars from his career earnings had been secretly diverted into third-party accounts by his former manager Al Haymon. Then came the IRS. The IRS has formally filed a $7.3 million dollar lien against Mayweather. The lien, which was filed in Las Vegas, where Mayweather owns multiple properties, specifically targets unpaid taxes from the years 2018 and 2023. Public records indicate that the 7.3 million dollar balance was still unpaid as of March 26. The undefeated fighter has a long documented history of tangling with the IRS. Mayweather famously owed the IRS 22.2 million dollars for his 2015 taxes. The year he fought Manny Pacquiao and made roughly 250 million dollars. And now add Page Mou heads case on top of all of it. Per the court, Floyd has only paid about 151,000 dollars of what [music] he owes. So the judge ruled Page can place a lien worth up to 2 million dollars on property owned by Mayweather in California. Here is a man who reportedly made over a billion dollars across his career. And a Nevada court found that he had paid only 151,000 toward a debt he owes his own four-year-old daughter. Not because the money wasn't there, but because by all indications he chose not to engage. It is incredibly difficult to pin down the exact state of Floyd Mayweather's net worth today. At his peak, Celebrity Net Worth estimated Floyd Mayweather's net worth at 500 million dollars. Obviously, that number was based on the assumption that he actually received [music] the money he earned. Today, they estimate his net worth at 100 million dollars.
But it's very hard to feel confident about that number. With all these lawsuits, liens, and allegations, Floyd also continues to project a billionaire's lifestyle, regularly posting photos of himself on private jets surrounded by bricks of cash. But at the same time, the sheer volume of financial smoke over the last few months suggests something concerning is at play. So what do you do when the money brand starts to crack? You fight, literally. Despite retiring from professional boxing with a 50 to zero record in 2017, the 49-year-old fighter has recently embarked on a highly lucrative comeback tour. He is scheduled to face Mike Tyson in an exhibition [music] bout followed by a fully sanctioned professional rematch against his long-time rival Manny Pacquiao at the Sphere in Las Vegas. The comeback is not about legacy.
The pattern makes that clear. [music] It is about cash flow, the one thing that Floyd Mayweather, for all his branding, may genuinely be running short on. And in the middle of all of it, there is a 4-year-old girl named Price Morehead, a little girl who had no say in any of this, spent 8 years in a relationship with him, was pressured to end the pregnancy, [music] was fired, just to get a judge to write the words, "The court finds that Floyd Mayweather Jr. is the father of Price Morehead." The title of this video asks what Paige Morehead says Floyd Mayweather did [music] to her, and the answer is right there in the court documents. An 8-year relationship ended the moment she got pregnant. A job she had held for 4 years terminated. A DNA test ignored twice. A default judgment. $933,000 in back support unpaid and a $2 million lien now sitting on his California property. Floyd Mayweather has built a career on one word, undefeated. But in the courts of Nevada, in the court of public opinion, and in the life of a little girl who carries the last name Morehead, he did not show up to fight this one. And the question now is whether the man nicknamed money will pay what the court says he owes, or whether Paige will have to fight to collect every single cent.
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