There are some very questionable looking records on BoxRec. Some so phony looking they may have even been falsified. Let's hear some of them...
Bash Ali's career record on BoxRec reads 66-14. But his record looks suspect. In the latter half of Bash Ali's career, there are entries for 14 fights against novices and each and every one of them never fought again. BoxRec: Bash Ali Unusual? Definitely. Suspect? I would suggest so.
Jeff Warner First and only time I've seen one of the opponents titled as unknown https://boxrec.com/en/box-pro/24256
The comment against that 'Unknown' opponent is hilarious: Opponent listed as Bill Corrigan, but Corrigan claims that he did not fight Warner, and that the opponent was an imposter fighting under his name. Warner actually fought and lost by KO to Bill Corrigan earlier in his career. Perhaps he thought the best way to avenge the loss was to fight someone else and have it recorded on BoxRec as having been Corrigan?
As crap as DeMori's record is, I think it is genuine. BoxRec: Mark De Mori He must be just about running out of stiffs to fight.
Is that JW Storm? Yeah, definitely phony. This is a fantastic idea for thread! Kudos. I don't have a name to contribute, but some of the fighters associated with Rick "Elvis" Parker would be worth looking at. https://boxrec.com/wiki/index.php/Elvis_Parker POSt SCRIPT: This guy might have some janitors on his record: https://boxrec.com/en/box-pro/682283
Jake Paul and his list of former NBA players, 50 y.o. former MMA fighters and 60 y.o. Mike Tyson who wasn't allowed to hit the golden goose
Wow! What a story. Had never heard of Rick 'Elvis' Parker. What a total scumback. As you said, everything he had anything to do with has to have a question mark placed against it and he worked at a reasonably high level, having managed and promoted the likes of Bert Cooper, James 'Quick' Tillis etc.
Parker managed and promoted James 'Quick' Tillis. Tillis suffered from a mysterious, recurrent fatigue midway through his fights. A doctor provided Tillis with a more suitable diet, in his training leading up to his fight with Mike Tyson, a red-hot prospect at the time with a 19–0 (19 KOs) record. Tillis appeared to be a new man, as he exchanged with Tyson and gave the future 2 time champion a very tough fight. Although ultimately outpointed, Tillis was the first person to take Tyson the distance. Perhaps Rick 'Elvis' Parker was backing against his man Tillis and the bottle he was drinking from between rounds was the source of his fatigue? It makes sense they wouldn't think they needed to use it against Tyson? Parker became known for tricks like that.
I would say it is more likely than not. I read a more extended article about the Doc Anderson situation. Anderson used to spar Foreman, and Parker had an agreement with Foreman that if he could get Gastinaeu to 10-0, Foreman would give him a fight. He told Anderson, "You are going to go down in the second. After the fight, you are going to say, 'I spar with George Foreman, and he hits as hard as Foreman.'" Anderson, of course, refused, and beat Gastinaeu easily, setting up the rematch where he was drugged.
There was a fascinating thread in the Classic Forum about "Fake Archie Moore". @Saintpat https://www.boxingforum24.com/threads/the-mysterious-saga-of-fake-archie-moore.695286/