User Box
Facebook Connect
Search
  • Sat
    11
  • Sun
    12
  • Mon
    13
  • Tue
    14
  • Wed
    15
  • Thu
    16
  • Fri
    17
heART on Center Feb 11, 2012 A free arts education event in South Bay featuring live music, food, local live art, and much more. Happening on Center St. in Chula Vista. 74 other things to do on Saturday, February 11
 
Last Blog on Earth | News
Tiny Tots program director says mayoral candidate's staffer asked them to leave so he could promote volunteerism
The Enrique Experience
Local queen is going to ‘drag Disneyland’
News
Consultant stands to gain financially by convincing SDUSD to sell more bonds

 

 
. . . . .
Tuesday, Jan 15, 2008

Willie Jewell

Our weekly series putting names on the faces of San Diego's homeless

By David Rolland
homeless-prime

On any given day, a dozen or so homeless citizens can be found soliciting change or just hanging out by the fountain at the corner of Fourth Avenue and Broadway downtown. That’s where Willie Jewell was Tuesday morning, asking passers-by for a little bit of spending money.

Jewell’s been homeless for nearly the entire 21 years he’s lived in San Diego. He says he came out to California from Ohio on a two-year pro-boxing contract and fought professionally three times, including at the old ring in the El Cortez Hotel.

But, he says, the California Boxing Commission revoked his license after he lost his last fight by a technical knockout a year-and-a-half into his contract. He may have also been banned by the commission from boxing for a 20-year period, but this part of his story was difficult to understand.

In any case, once he “retired” from boxing, Jewell says, he went to school for a time, received government assistance and worked a bit as a sparring partner, but he “started smoking marijuana a little more than I already do” and wasn’t able to cobble enough money for an apartment.

He’s been hanging out downtown ever since, at times earning jail stints on burglary or drug charges.

Asked for his thoughts on the future, Jewell strikes an expression that suggests that his questioner hasn’t been paying attention. Now 47 and past the apparent 20-year ban, Jewell says he could end up back in the ring. “I completed 20 years,” he says. “There’s a chance I might be fighting for a championship belt. I don’t know how it’s gonna go.”

 
 
 
 
 
 
Close
Close
Close