Overview
- Becker says he alone is responsible for the insolvency offenses and faults his choice of advisers and personal environment.
- He recounts 231 days in British prisons as dangerous and dehumanizing, describing Wandsworth as a place where "you die in there" and the loss of control as crushing.
- Following his 2022 conviction and subsequent deportation, he says he is working with the UK Home Office and Ministry of Justice to regain permission to enter as a visitor or for work, not to live in London.
- He reflects that being a wunderkind nearly cost him his life and argues his Wimbledon triumph at 17 was "too early."
- He says roughly €30 million in career earnings were eroded by divorces, maintenance and poor investments, as he promotes his memoir "Inside" about his prison years, due out this month.