Antonio Brown wasn’t innocently fending off would-be jewel thieves at Friday’s shootout in Miami, as he’s claimed, one combatant tells Daily Mail.
That man, Zül-Qarnaįn Nantambu, instead says the troubled former NFL star instigated the violent incident and personally fired the shots, possibly in response to a legal battle between the two in federal bankruptcy court.
As seen in court files obtained by Daily Mail, Nantambu claimed during a 2022 encounter with Brown in Dubai that the Super Bowl winner stole a valuable pendant he had designed and produced. Nantambu further said Brown lied to police in the United Arab Emirates, accusing him of theft and resulting in Nantambu’s brief imprisonment.
Nantambu sued Brown in Florida in 2022 and ultimately won a $968,960 verdict that was later vacated in 2024 before the case was dismissed. However, Nantambu is now pursuing a partial reduced judgement of $123,600 in federal bankruptcy court as Brown has continued to deny his allegations, as seen those filings.
So it came as a tremendous surprise to Nantambu on Friday when he noticed Brown had ‘locked eyes’ with him at a Miami boxing event. Rather than discussing their dispute or ignoring his legal rival entirely, Brown immediately called over to security to falsely claim he was being jumped, Nantambu said.
‘He plays gangster and plays the police at the same time, then he blames CTE,’ Nantambu told Daily Mail, referencing Brown’s frequent claims of traumatic brain injuries.
As Nantambu told Daily Mail, he now wonders if the retired Pittsburgh Steelers and Tampa Bay Buccaneers star called security on him to create a false pretense for Friday’s shooting.

Antonio Brown has been accused of lying about the shocking brawl he was involved in Friday by Zül-Qarnaįn Nantambu, 43, who claims he was grazed by a bullet from Brown’s gun
Zül-Qarnaįn Nantambu, who goes by ‘@fff_zulqarnain’ on Instagram, shared photos of his injuries with Daily Mail. Nantambu says a bullet grazed his neck and he broke a finger
A brawl unfolds outside the event moments before Antonio Brown is seen returning with a gun
‘I don’t know if [Brown] premeditated a thought in his mind, like: “Okay, I’m gonna say that he tried to take my chain and I’m gonna kill him and I don’t have to pay him his judgment,”‘ Nantambu told Daily Mail.
‘He thought he would get a free kill,’ Nantambu said, referencing Florida’s notorious ‘Stand Your Ground’ law that permits deadly force under certain heightened circumstances.
One video, provided to Daily Mail by Nantambu, shows him fighting with a group of men before an individual matching Brown’s description abruptly flees. Another viral video of the incident appears to show Brown returning to the melee with a gun in hand.
‘He ran to get the gun. He shot at me. I think he grazed my neck. We started fighting for the gun,’ Nantambu said. ‘The adrenaline is going crazy. He ran into me. I threw him on the ground. A gun fell. We start scrambling for the gun on the ground.’
It was at this point cops arrived, according to Nantambu.
‘The police are screaming: “Who has the gun?”‘ Nantambu told Daily Mail. ‘Kids are screaming: “AB shooting! AB shooting!” He could have hit one of them kids.’
He said he put his hands in the air as frantic cops began to pursue Brown, whom Nantambu said ran inside the venue, where he was apprehended.
Despite the violent uproar, Miami police made no arrests and Brown wrote on X he’s considering potential legal action against ‘the individuals that jumped me.’
Meanwhile, the police apparently ignored Nantambu, who claimed to walk away from the scene with one shoe ‘like Cinderella’ and blood dripping from a neck wound that could have been far worse.
‘I’m feeling this burning sensation on my neck,’ Nantambu told Daily Mail. ‘I thank God I’m not murdered. God spared me from getting shot in the face.’
From there, Nantambu went to the hospital for the neck wound and a broken finger before flying to the Beltway the following morning for an event supporting Sudanese refugees.
Brown is purportedly seen wearing the pendant he’s accused of stealing from Nantambu
In a picture purportedly from Dubai in 2022, Zül-Qarnaįn Nantambu is seen standing on a yacht. As he told Daily Mail, it’s Antonio Brown who is pictured wearing red in the background
Zül-Qarnaįn Nantambu is pictured alongside Floyd Mayweather prior to a 2022 fight in Dubai
An outspoken supporter of Sudan and Palestine who also works in filmmaking, fashion and music, Nantambu made national headlines in February when he was among the protestors who stormed the field during halftime at Super Bowl LIX.
But it was three years earlier, prior to a Floyd Mayweather Jr. exhibition in Dubai, that Nantambu said he first became involved with Brown.
A proud Muslim already familiar to the area, Nantambu said he arrived in Dubai in May of 2022 to discover a shirtless Brown being ‘disrespectful’ to customs officials at the airport.
‘He was cursing them out and all that,’ Nantambu told Daily Mail.
Nantambu was in Dubai hoping to convince Mayweather to help him promote a pendant necklace he was selling. And since Brown and Mayweather were known acquaintances, Nantambu used the bit of Arabic he speaks to help calm tensions at the airport: ‘I intervened to try to quell it, because they weren’t going to let him in the country.’
Brown was, perhaps, at the height of his infamy at the time. It was only a few months earlier that he ended a sideline spat with Buccaneers coaches by removing his uniform and running off the field during a game, never to play in the NFL again.
But despite Brown’s well-reported personal and professional problems, Nantambu approached him as they waited for their baggage. The two began talking, and as Nantambu remembers, they ended up hanging out on a yacht with Mayweather prior to the fight.
Nantambu was among protestors who stormed the field at Super Bowl LIX to support Sudan
When fight night came around, Nantambu said, he agreed to let Brown wear the pendant with disastrous consequences.
‘He basically tried to steal it,’ Nantambu said. ‘He moved hotel rooms, left the hotel, stopped answering calls. And then when I confronted him about the pendant, he acted like he lost it.’
Nantambu said Brown gave him some of his own jewelry to hold as collateral, but later allegedly lied to police in Dubai, falsely claiming that the valuables were stolen from Brown by Nantambu.
‘He told them that I stole $2 million worth of jewelry from him,’ said Nantambu, who has yet to get his pendant back from Brown.
Nantambu was released approximately one month later after presenting evidence to a local prosecutor that proved Brown made false claims to police, according to the court filing obtained by DailyMail.com.
Since then, Nantambu has waged a legal battle with Brown, who continues to go through bankruptcy proceedings despite boasting on a podcast in November he has ‘the freedom that comes with having money.’
However, according to Nantambu, mounting debt has forced Brown to sell his jewelry collection, which he’s replaced with faux gems.
‘Well, first off, I know that chain is fake that he’s wearing,’ Nantambu said of Brown. ‘He pawned all his real jewelry, the jewelry that he used to have in Dubai, like the gold Cuban-link [necklace] and the Richard Mille [watch] and the gold medallion that said “A B” – he got rid of all that.’
Daily Mail has reached out to Brown’s attorney for comment and to Miami police for further information.