Share
Sports

'I'm Broke' - Infamous NFL Star Hits Rock Bottom, Files for Bankruptcy as Debt Reaches $3M

Share

Editor’s Note: Our readers responded strongly to this story when it originally ran; we’re reposting it here in case you missed it.

Former NFL wide receiver Antonio Brown, one of football’s most polarizing and eccentric figures during his 12-year career, is broke, according to news reports and social media posts from the 35-year-old.

Brown shared the news that he had filed for bankruptcy on social media on May 20 and, in typical AB fashion, treated the matter as a joke.

The former Pittsburgh Steeler shared a popular meme from the NBC sitcom “The Office” in which star character Michael Scott — played by Steve Carell — shouted, “I declare bankruptcy!”

WARNING: The following social media posts contain language that some readers might find offensive.

Trending:
Investigators Find Cause of Fatal Roller Coaster Derailment: 'We Will Make Sure Something Like This Will Never Happen Again'

CTESPN — an account Brown appears to run that plays on speculation he suffers from chronic traumatic encephalopathy from concussions he sustained in the NFL — posted a video with the meme followed by a clip of the former receiver jubilantly running through a backyard.

Brown promptly reposted it.

A day later, he posted a link to his personal CashApp account to allow people to chip in and said, “I’m Broke,” along with some sexually charged language.

The Times Union of Albany, New York, reported the bankruptcy filing on May 22, saying Brown had filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy two days earlier in Florida, where he is from and currently resides.

The seven-time Pro Bowler listed debts to eight creditors for an amount nearing $3 million.

He also owed at least four people who sued him in civil court but whom he never paid.

Related:
Watch: Travis Kelce Responds to Rumors About His Retirement - 'Opportunities Outside of Football for Me'

Per the report, $1.2 million of Brown’s crushing debt was owed to a single individual, a truck driver who claimed the former NFL star assaulted him and who a court awarded the sum.

Brown lost the case by default as he never showed up to court to dispute the lawsuit from Anton Tumanov, who said he was assaulted at Brown’s home in 2020, Yahoo Sports reported.

Three others to whom he was ordered to pay six figures each in civil court also had not been paid.

Many of Brown’s debts also appeared to be related to credit cards and to his tumultuous time as the partial owner of the Arena Football League team the Albany Empire, based in the New York state capital.

Do you like Antonio Brown?

The team was kicked out of the league with seven games remaining on its schedule last year after Brown said he would not pay the fines he owed and the team was accused of not helping pay some of the league’s operating costs.

Players and coaches later said Brown either never paid them or removed paychecks from their bank accounts after they had been paid, CBS Sports reported.

The former Steeler also owed $28,589 to a company called Avanti Solutions and a sum of $296 to a Florida plumber.

He declared $50,000 in assets, and it was unclear who owned the 18,000-square-foot Fort Lauderdale estate he listed as his address in the filing.

Brown earned more than $88 million playing in the NFL from 2010 to 2021, according to Over the Cap.

The first nine seasons were with the Steelers. He was traded to the Oakland Raiders in 2019 but never appeared in a game after feuding with management. Brown finished that season in New England and concluded his career with two years in Tampa Bay.

In October 2019, the former football star posted and later deleted a screenshot on his Instagram page that purported to show he had a bank account balance of more than $24 million.


An Important Message from Our Staff:

 

We who work here at The Western Journal have fought for years against Big Tech and the elites who want to shut us down and then shut America down. 

 

Make no mistake — nothing will be the same after November 2024. Will you help us fight? Will you help us expose the America-hating elites who will do everything they can to steal this election? 

 

We’re a small group of people fighting to save the country for our readers and for our own family and friends. Can we count on your help?

 

At this point, Big Tech has cut off our access to 90% of advertisers. Imagine if someone took 90% of your paycheck and there was nothing you could do. They’re trying to starve us out.

 

Donations from readers like you have literally helped keep our lights on, and we need you now more than ever. 

 

We operate on a shoestring budget, but with that budget, we terrify the globalists. Please help us continue the fight. Stand with us, and we will never surrender.

 

Thank you for reading The Western Journal and for believing in America. 

 

It is a pleasure to serve you.

 

P.S. Please don’t let the America-hating left win. Stand with us today!

Truth and Accuracy

Submit a Correction →



We are committed to truth and accuracy in all of our journalism. Read our editorial standards.

Tags:
, , , , , , , , , ,
Share
Johnathan Jones has worked as a reporter, an editor, and producer in radio, television and digital media.
Johnathan "Kipp" Jones has worked as an editor and producer in radio and television. He is a proud husband and father.




Conversation