Sean Strickland says Tiki Ghosn allegations worse than he thought after DMs from women, slams other fighters for remaining silent
It appears Sean Strickland isn't planning to ease up on Tiki Ghosn and recently took to social media to continue leveling allegations on the MMA manager. The former UFC middleweight champion recently claimed to have received messages from more of Ghosn's alleged victims, and the matter was "worse" than he thought.
Earlier this week, Strickland took to social media and claimed he met someone who told him about Ghosn allegedly engaging in predatory behavior. 'Tarzan' then revealed that he contacted the girl's father to confirm the story and offered to crowdfund legal action against the veteran MMA manager.
After receiving a positive response from the victim's father and the victim, Strickland warned Ghosn against suing him and vowed to file a case to bring him to justice.
In a series of follow-up X posts, the former 185-pound king claimed to have received messages from other girls regarding Ghosn and vowed to ask them for permission to share their stories with the UFC. He wrote:
"I have received a couple messages from girls who are very credible. Really bad.. worse than I thought. If they want to stay in the shadows, I will respect that. But I am going to ask them if I can share their messages with the UFC. Tiki, you don't deserve the life you have."
Sean Strickland continues campaign against Tiki Ghosn on social media
After revealing that he'd been contacted by females who've allegedly been Tiki Ghosn's victims, Sean Strickland opened up about second-guessing himself on this matter and opined that the fighters under his management were afraid to speak up.
In a follow-up tweet, 'Tarzan' credited his fans for giving him the push he needed to speak up and wrote:
"There was a part of me that thought, 'Sean this guy is friends with everyone, just shut the f**k up and don't ruin your career.' Because of you guys it doesn't matter. I am above Tiki because you guys... Other people/fighters knew. They were just afraid to ruin their careers."
Strickland then speculated upon the "worst" case scenario and vowed to seek legal counsel with all the messages and alleged victim's statements he had. Promising not to let this story die down, he wrote:
"The worst things Tiki could do is sue me. I will show a lawyer the messages. The girls, the father. They will all have to give a statement in discovery. And it will be forced public. I think he best thing is trying to hide out until the next news cycle, I ain't letting it die."