Boxing champ Terence ‘Bud’ Crawford posted $10,000 for his bond Thursday.

Crawford is facing 90 days in jail and two years probation in connection with a disturbance at a metro auto body shop. Crawford was sentenced Thursday.

In addition to the jail time and probation, Crawford has been ordered to pay restitution. It's not clear what that amounts to but the damage to the lift has been placed at $4,647.47.

The judge told Crawford he has acted as though he is above the law. She also blamed him for showing no remorse.

"I don't know what was going through Mr. Crawford's mind when this happened or why he did what he decided to do on that day but I think Judge Hendrix makes a very good point,” said City Prosecutor Matt Kuhse. "I think the sentence that she imposed is fair.”

Crawford's lawyer filed an immediate appeal.

In September, Crawford was found guilty of disorderly conduct and property damage connected to the incident earlier this year.

That incident involved a clash over work done on his vehicle at Extreme Custom Fleet and Auto Spa. He was found guilty of disorderly conduct and property damage. He was found not guilty on a trespassing charge.

Surveillance video shows the light welterweight champion walking into the garage and then, with four others, trying to take back his '84 Monte Carlo.

Shop owner Michael Nelson said Crawford had initially brought the car in last November. Months passed. An invoice shows Nelson wanted Crawford to pay for replacing a front windshield, sanding, paint work and more. But on April 14, Nelson said Crawford wouldn’t pay.

Surveillance video shows Crawford and another man moving a motor out from underneath his car, which was up on the hydraulic lift.

Nelson said Crawford knocked his hands down. Eventually, the men got Crawford's vehicle down, breaking the lift in the process.

Nelson then tried to block the garage door but Crawford stood in the way, while the other men got the Monte Carlo out. They hooked it up to a truck and drove it away.