Itskowitch denied these charges, saying that no such deception was involved.
"Both fighters got disclosures," he said. "I don't think what those fighters got paid has anything to do with this."
According to Itskowitch, for the May 15 card featuring Paulie Malignaggi and Amir Khan, the state commission requested that Golden Boy submit promotional contracts for all fighters on the card. Instead, Golden Boy sent the contracts to the Association of Boxing Commissions (ABA), concerned that because New York is a public information state, Golden Boy's contracts might become public record.
The ABA is a highly respected record-keeping organization that binds all of the various boxing commissions in the U.S. Itskowitch said that based on his company's reading of the Muhammad Ali Boxing Reform Act, it was allowed to send the documents to the ABA.
"We didn't want our contracts on the public record," Itskowitch said. "We have confidentiality clauses in our contract. We want to comply with what we needed to comply with but at the same time, we wanted to protect our agreements."
Instead, Itskowitch received a letter from the New York commission on Friday saying that Golden Boy would be suspended effective immediately because the promotional contracts were never sent.
He said the commission never held a hearing to discuss a possible suspension and doesn't understand why the panel asked for the promotional agreements in the first place, even if it is its right to do so. He also said he had sent an e-mail to the commission last week requesting clarification, but had not gotten a response.
Melvina Lathan, chairwoman of the New York commission, did not return a phone call seeking comment.
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