Dewey Bozella To Make Pro
Debut on undercard of Hopkins vs. Dawson Card after serving 26
years on Wrongful Murder Charge!
October 11, 2011
(OCT 11) LOS ANGELES ----Dewey Bozella's dream has always been to have
just one professional boxing match. Following perhaps the most
unconventional path to a first professional fight in the history of the
sport, on Oct. 15, that dream will come true. After spending 26 years in
prison after being wrongfully convicted of murder and having that
conviction overturned two years ago, Bozella is scheduled to fight in a
four-round cruiserweight bout against Larry Hopkins of Houston, Tex. on
the undercard of the championship fight between WBC and Ring Magazine
Light Heavyweight Champion Bernard Hopkins and former World Champion
Chad Dawson. So that all of those who have become captivated by his
story can catch the outcome of his professional debut, highlights of
Bozella's fight against Larry Hopkins will be shown during the HBO
Pay-Per-View® telecast.
"This is the opportunity that I have been waiting for," said Bozella.
"Boxing was the one thing that helped me get through my time in prison
and the fact that I am getting this chance to make my dream come true,
is something that I cannot wait for."
Bozella is 52 years old, six years older than even Hopkins, boxing's
ageless champion who at 46 became the oldest boxer ever to win a world
title last May. Bozella has been training in Philadelphia with Hopkins
in preparation for his pro debut, and Hopkins has been impressed and
inspired by Bozella.
"Dewey Bozella is a prime example of the power of the mind and heart to
do anything," said Hopkins. "This is a man who lost everything for a
crime he didn't commit, but he never gave up hope. He has inspired
everyone who has heard his story, including me. I'd rather face 100 Chad
Dawsons than face two or three days in Dewey's shoes."
It is important to note some of the parallels between Bozella and
Hopkins. Both spent time in prison, though Bozella was innocent,
beginning at a young age. Both decided to change their lives for the
better while incarcerated. Boxing helped both men find their passion and
changed their lives. Although a jury twice found Bozella guilty, the
second time following a retrial, he took his frustrations and bitterness
to the prison boxing ring and channeled his energy into training.
Bozella took his passion for boxing and made it his focus while in
prison. He ended up winning the Sing Sing Light Heavyweight title. He
later earned a bout against New York City Golden Gloves champion Lou Del
Valle, who would go on to be the first fighter ever to knock down Roy
Jones Jr. in a professional fight. Bozella nearly won the fight, but it
was stopped after Del Valle landed a punch that cut Bozella badly above
the eye with Del Valle being declared the winner.
Meanwhile, Bozella continued to make his life what he wanted it to be
despite being in jail. He earned his GED, bachelor's and master's
degrees-all from prison-and he even proposed to and married Trena Boone,
whom Bozella met while she was visiting her brother in Sing Sing.
"No matter how much boxing meant to me and motivated me, my biggest
fight was for my freedom," said Bozella. "I never gave up. I knew I was
getting out of prison. Either I was going to die in there and go out in
a box or I was going to walk out of there a free man."
Finally, after repeatedly refusing to admit to and apologize for
committing the murder for which he was convicted in exchange for parole,
Bozella's conviction was overturned when the Wilmer Cutler Pickering
Hale and Dorr law firm took his case pro bono and discovered new
evidence establishing his innocence and setting him free.
Bozella is now determined to use his experience to help others. He has
organized the Dewey Bozella Foundation (thedeweybozellafoundation.org ), a charity organized to open a boxing gym in Newburgh, New York where
he can train youth as a way to keep them off the streets.
"A lot of people helped me get to this point," said Bozella. "I want to
be able to pay some of that forward, open my own gym and help others. My
main focus is kids, but my gym will be for anyone who wants to come."
For now, Bozella has his eye on Larry Hopkins and his dream of a pro
debut. His new mentor and friend Bernard Hopkins thinks that his hard
work will pay off.
"Everyone deserves a second chance to fulfill their dream," Hopkins
said. "Dewey was robbed of half of his life. I am happy that I'm able to
provide the platform for him to achieve his dream on October 15. Now I
want him to go into that ring and show the world that he not only
deserved this chance, but he earned it."