Davis has been on probation since 2023, after pleading guilty to multiple traffic offences tied to a 2020 incident in Baltimore in which four people were injured when his vehicle struck another car. Davis left the scene before police arrived. The sentence included probation terms that remained active even after a later violation led to jail time.
Those conditions are now the pressure point. The Florida case has reopened Maryland’s authority over Davis, allowing a judge there to act independently of what happens next in Miami. The Florida allegations include battery, false imprisonment, and attempted kidnapping. The alleged victim has also filed a civil lawsuit. Even before those matters are resolved, the mere existence of the arrest is enough to put Davis back under scrutiny from the Maryland court.
Davis’ attorney has asked the judge to recall the arrest warrant and instead issue a summons to appear in court, along with GPS monitoring. That request underscores the risk. Once probation is in play, discretion shifts away from promoters, networks, and sanctioning bodies, and back to a courtroom that has already shown limited patience with Davis’ compliance.
The ripple effects are already visible. His planned exhibition bout with Jake Paul was cancelled in November, costing Davis both money and a high profile Netflix platform. The WBA has since designated him a champion in recess at 135 pounds, a status that often precedes a title being reassigned if timelines continue to slide.
For years, Davis’ legal problems existed alongside his boxing career, rarely dictating it. This time is different. The Florida case matters mainly because it reactivates Maryland’s leverage, turning an old probation sentence into the central obstacle Davis now has to clear before anything else can move forward.
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