A guy has filed lawsuits against Floyd Mayweather and Lil Uzi Vert, claiming that the two of them, together with others of the boxer’s crew, assaulted him in the previous year.

A man named Abdullah Ali, who claims to have seen a glimpse of Mayweather’s trailer in New York on June 27, last year, has allegedly filed a lawsuit against the rapper and boxing legend. TMZ reports that Ali made these allegations in his lawsuit.

Lil Uzi and other members of Mayweather’s entourage noticed Ali when he was filming the former world champion’s trailer unloading a Rolls-Royce, according to Ali’s counsel.

He says he was attacked by at least ten individuals who punched and kicked him while he lay on the ground for almost a minute.

Lil Uzi Vert has refuted the accusations and stated he wasn’t even present, along with his legal team.

The statement claims that Little Uzi Vert was not there at the scene of the alleged incident and that he is not acquainted with Floyd Mayweather or associated in any way with Mayweather’s Money Team.

Even though he is suing Mayweather, Ali has stated that he has no idea whether the boxer saw the purported incident or not.

Ali claims to have had multiple injuries, including knocked out teeth, and that he reported the event to the police but that nothing was done. As a result, he is now suing for undisclosed damages.

He also sent images that displayed multiple missing front teeth.

After being sued by a production business that claimed the rapper owed them hundreds of thousands of dollars, Lil Uzi Vert was the target of another lawsuit within a week.

Over a debt of more than $500,000. The Philadelphia native, their business Uzivert LLC, and manager Amina Diop are the targets of a lawsuit brought by creative agency M99 Studios.

The rapper was accused of breaching their agreement with the group in the case, which was submitted to an Atlanta US District Court.

“Tour packages, creative direction and production for concerts, tours and live events” are the company’s areas of expertise. It is situated in Los Angeles.

The company claimed that Uzi “regularly failed to maintain function credit cards or sufficient funds in [their] travel account,” requiring M99 to front the money, in a complaint that HipHopDX was able to witness.