Former welterweight
Luis Resto has acknowledged that the beating he gave the late
Billy Collins Jr. in
1983 -- in which, over 10 rounds, he pounded
Collins with tampered gloves that each had two inches of padding removed -- was even worse than previously believed.
Resto, at a news conference on Thursday in
New York, acknowledged that the tape used to wrap his hands in that fight had been soaked in plaster of
Paris, giving him a pair of hardened casts underneath his unpadded gloves.
Collins suffered from blurred vision and depression after the June 16, 1983 fight. He died in a car accident about nine months later.
The admission, which Resto made to Collins' widow,
Andrea Collins-Nile, last year during the filming of a documentary about the scandal, has led to a motion to re-open a civil suit against the
State of New York over its failure to prevent the beating. The legal filing was also announced Thursday.
Eric Drath, who directed "
Cornered," the documentary about the fight and its tragic aftermath, said it was a "heinous and tragic crime" that needed to be retold, according to
The (Nashville) Tennessean.
"It happened in a much more brutal way" than had previously believed, Drath said. "Worse than bare knuckles, it was plaster."Resto and his trainer,
Panama Lewis, were convicted of assault and conspiracy and served jail time after a jury found they had tampered with the gloves. Both men were banned from boxing.
But a civil trial over the state boxing commission's failure to prevent the beating resulted in a hung jury and was dismissed by a federal claims court judge. Collins-Nile's motion at
U.S. District Court in
Albany seeks to re-open the case.
"Ultimately I'm not Resto's judge," Collins-Nile said, according to the
New York Daily News. "The boxing commission was negligent. They were there to protect my ex-husband and they did not."
Mark Thompson, the lawyer representing Collins-Nile in the case, said he is hopeful Resto's confession will convince a judge to re-open the case, according to the
Daily News. The wraps were never confiscated after the fight, but Drath believes that Resto might still have them.
Last summer, during a visit to
Nashville in conjunction with the filming of "Cornered," Resto confessed to Collins' widow that the wraps had been doctored. He said he could no longer live with the secret.
"I should have said something. I lived with it for 24 years. I had to let it go. I'm sorry I kept my mouth shut," Resto said, according to
The Tennessean. "I went to see
Collins' ex-wife. She accepted my apology. I went to the cemetery, too, to show my respect to
Billy Collins. I told
Billy, 'I'm sorry for what I did to you.' "
Collins-Nile said Resto's appearance and confession came as a surprise.
"Resto was kinda sprung on me when [Drath] came down to do his interviews. I didn't even know he was here," she said, according to The Tennessean. "Resto was pretty much crying and said he didn't murder Billy.
"During the fight, Billy told [his father and trainer Billy Collins Sr.] it felt like he was getting hit with rocks," she added. "Now we know he really was getting hit with rocks. It was that much worse."
- published: 26 Jan 2015
- views: 702151