PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Former heavyweight champion Joe Frazier told his lawyer on Thursday to drop a lawsuit against his daughter after she pledged to help him locate his missing business records.
The files at the center of the legal dispute never left "Smokin' Joe's" North Philadelphia gym, a lawyer for Jacquelyn Frazier-Lyde said Thursday.
"I talked to my father today and he asked me how I was doing and I told him that I loved him," Frazier-Lyde said at a press conference that focused on her campaign for city judge.
Frazier's lawyer said he reluctantly agreed to drop the suit at his client's request, although he vowed to refile it if Frazier-Lyde does not comply.
"This is about a father's love for his daughter," lawyer Michael P. Kelly said.
"We're giving her a chance to live up to her word," he said. "If we're not fully satisfied, I'll be right back, quicker than a Joe Frazier left hook."
The 63-year-old Frazier filed the suit in Philadelphia Common Pleas Court this month charging that Frazier-Lyde refused to return contracts and other financial records she kept when she managed her father's legal affairs.
Frazier's lawyers believe he may be missing out on film royalties, product endorsement fees or other income perhaps promised in his old contracts, they said.
"All I'm asking is for the papers, that's all," Frazier said during a telephone interview in which he discussed both the lawsuit and his love for his daughter.
Frazier, who runs the gym with his minister-son Marvis, another of his 11 children, derives most of his income these days from appearance fees, his managers say.
Agent Les Wolff said Frazier has been "swindled and mismanaged," and needs the money due him.
The suit charged that Frazier-Lyde had control of the documents because she served as her father's lawyer from 1989 to 2004.
She took up boxing at age 38 and won titles in three different weight classes, fighting under the Muhammad Ali-bestowed nickname "Sister Smoke."
"She loves her father very much. She wants to see him prosper," said her lawyer, William Dixon.
The 45-year-old Frazier-Lyde, a married mother of three, is running for a seat on the city's Municipal Court in the May 15 Democratic primary.
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PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Former heavyweight champion Joe Frazier told his lawyer on Thursday to drop a lawsuit against his daughter after she pledged to help him locate his missing business records.
The files at the center of the legal dispute never left "Smokin' Joe's" North Philadelphia gym, a lawyer for Jacquelyn Frazier-Lyde said Thursday.
"I talked to my father today and he asked me how I was doing and I told him that I loved him," Frazier-Lyde said at a press conference that focused on her campaign for city judge.
Frazier's lawyer said he reluctantly agreed to drop the suit at his client's request, although he vowed to refile it if Frazier-Lyde does not comply.
"This is about a father's love for his daughter," lawyer Michael P. Kelly said.
"We're giving her a chance to live up to her word," he said. "If we're not fully satisfied, I'll be right back, quicker than a Joe Frazier left hook."
The 63-year-old Frazier filed the suit in Philadelphia Common Pleas Court this month charging that Frazier-Lyde refused to return contracts and other financial records she kept when she managed her father's legal affairs.
Frazier's lawyers believe he may be missing out on film royalties, product endorsement fees or other income perhaps promised in his old contracts, they said.
"All I'm asking is for the papers, that's all," Frazier said during a telephone interview in which he discussed both the lawsuit and his love for his daughter.
Frazier, who runs the gym with his minister-son Marvis, another of his 11 children, derives most of his income these days from appearance fees, his managers say.
Agent Les Wolff said Frazier has been "swindled and mismanaged," and needs the money due him.
The suit charged that Frazier-Lyde had control of the documents because she served as her father's lawyer from 1989 to 2004.
She took up boxing at age 38 and won titles in three different weight classes, fighting under the Muhammad Ali-bestowed nickname "Sister Smoke."
"She loves her father very much. She wants to see him prosper," said her lawyer, William Dixon.
The 45-year-old Frazier-Lyde, a married mother of three, is running for a seat on the city's Municipal Court in the May 15 Democratic primary.
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