By Miguel Rivera

Former WBC middleweight champion Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. has finally broken his silence regarding several controversial videos that began circulating last week.

The video were shot last Monday in Las Vegas, two days after his lopsided defeat to country rival Saul "Canelo" Alvarez at T-Mobile Arena.

Chavez Jr. was intoxicated in the videos, but one of them in particular showed the boxer laying on a bed with several women surrounding him. The women wore revealing outfits and at least two of them were removing articles of clothing to showcase their bodies.

It was later revealed that Chavez Jr. was hustled by the women and some of men who took him out drinking earlier that night.

The boxer was robbed of his $40,000 watch, his seven-figure check for fighting Canelo, and he also noticed that his cell phone was missing.

Chavez Jr. believes the entire situation was a planned scheme from the star. He says the men from Tamaulipas, who approached him at a local bar and began buying him drinks, were the likely ringleaders of what happened.

"I think all this and the video was planned, it was something done to burn me. They did what they did with the video and then they left. I have never paid for any woman, nor will I," Chavez Jr. explained to the media in Mexico.

"I think they took advantage of me. I am very confident [that it was orchestrated by someone that I know]. I know that it was not the right thing to do [by me], but it's also not right to say that I'm the worst thing out there, to call me an infidel, and say that I'm a bad example for the youth."

Chavez Jr. was not worried about the items that were stolen. He was mostly concerned with how his wife, Frida Muñoz, would react after watching the video with the women.

"For me money comes and goes, but what mattered most to me was that my wife knew that nothing had happened with these other girls," Chavez Jr. said.

"Of course she was angry with me, she is my wife, but I spoke with one of the boys who appeared in the video and I demanded he explain what happened; he got scared.

"I said, 'The problem here is not the watch, the money comes and goes, I want you to tell my wife that nothing happened with the other girls.' He replied: 'The women came and went.' What happened gave me a problem with Frida."

Chavez Jr. also made it clear, once again, that he plans to continue his career in the wake of that defeat.

"I'm not retiring, this was a major fight; I had gone a long time without fighting at the weight [of 164.5 that was contracted]," Chavez Jr. said.