[ In December 2015, Abdelaziz left his position following a Nevada Athletic Commission (NAC) hearing in which "administrative and some operational concerns" were cited, relating to lawsuits and media reports regarding conflict of interest and potential violations of Nevada regulations against promotion officials also serving as a fighter’s manager.] Standard 467.104 of the Code of Unarmed Combat of the Nevada State Athletic Commission prohibits "a promoter or any of its members, stockholders, officials, matchmakers or assistant matchmakers act directly or indirectly as his or her manager; or hold any financial interest in the unarmed combatant’s management or earnings from contests or exhibitions." Abdelaziz later made a statement about his conflict of interest, stating that he "never did mismatches" when matchmaking.
Despite a public announcement of his departure, it was alleged in a legal complaint filed against the promotion and its new owner, MMAX Investment Partners (doing business as PFL), that the organization "continued to use Abdelaziz throughout 2016".[
]
Vitaly Minakov contract lawsuit
On January 16, 2019, Abdelaziz and former Bellator MMA heavyweight champion Vitaly Minakov were sued by RusFighters LLC. The lawsuit claims Minakov breached an exclusive agent agreement with RusFighters signed in 2016 when he used Abdelaziz to sign a new contract. The agreement obligated Minakov to pay 20% of his gross performance compensation to RusFighters LLC. Using Abdelaziz, Minakov signed an agreement with Bellator for "six fights with minimum performance compensation to Minakov of $300,000 per fight, for a total minimum value of $1,800,000."
Personal life
Abdelaziz has publicly supported current US president Donald Trump.
Informant work
In 2002, Abdelaziz was imprisoned in Colorado on charges of document forgery. While in jail, he was recruited by the New York Police Department's Deputy Commissioner of Intelligence, David Cohen, to work undercover within a Virginia-based arm of a group called Muslims of America. Abdelaziz became one of Cohen's highest-paid informants at the time, "earning hundreds of thousands of dollars". The NYPD shared Abdelaziz with the FBI, becoming known as Confidential Informant 184. He was issued a green card, allowing him to leave and re-enter the United States. Abdelaziz worked in Trinidad and Tobago, Venezuela, and elsewhere in the world. The FBI eventually began to suspect he was operating as a double agent, having told people in Egypt of his life, particularly after he was reportedly administered a polygraph examination. The FBI ended its relationship with Abdelaziz and the American government unsuccessfully attempted to deport him. This information was publicized in the book Enemies Within, written by American journalists Adam Goldman and Matt Apuzzo, and was used by Conor McGregor in an attempt to antagonise Abdelaziz at the UFC 229 press conference.[
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Abdelaziz's time as an informant was also documented in the book Twilight in America, written by Christian Action Network founder Martin Mawyer and Patti Pierucci. In the book, Abdelaziz spoke of his eight years of experience gathering information about The Muslims of the Americas, a group founded in 1980 by Sheikh Mubarak Ali Gilani, allegedly connected with the terrorist organization, Jamaat ul-Fuqra.
Mixed martial arts record
|-
|Loss
|align=center|1–3
|Caol Uno
|Submission (armbar)
|K-1 HERO'S 8
|
|align=center|1
|align=center|1:58
|Nagoya, Japan
|
|-
|Loss
|align=center|1–2
|Rocky Johnson
|Submission (armbar)
|Ring of Fire 26
|
|align=center|1
|align=center|2:50
|Castle Rock, Colorado, United States
|
|-
|Loss
|align=center|1–1
|Takuhiro Kamikozono
|Submission (heel hook)
|Ring of Fire 19
|
|align=center|1
|align=center|1:11
|Castle Rock, Colorado, United States
|
|-
|Win
|align=center|1–0
|Chee Bates
|Submission (guillotine choke)
|Ring of Fire 12
|
|align=center|1
|align=center|1:44
|Castle Rock, Colorado, United States
|
|-
Submission grappling record
External links