FLINT, MI - A federal judge has issued an arrest warrant for former NFL Pro Bowler Andre Rison after he allegedly failed to make child support payments and tested positive multiple times for marijuana.

Flint U.S. District Judge Linda V. Parker issued the warrant Tuesday, Aug. 9, after authorities claimed Rison violated his federal probation.

Rison was ordered in July 2012 by an Arizona federal judge to pay roughly $323,000 after he pleaded guilty to two counts of failure to pay child support. The judge ordered that he make payments of at least $1,000 per month while on five years of probation.

However, authorities claim the court was notified in September 2015 that he was delinquent in his payments. They allege he's paid less than $35,000 since being placed on probation.

There is no attorney on file for Rison.

The U.S. Attorney's Office filed motions April 6 in Flint U.S. District Court seeking to garnish Rison's NFL retirement, his state income tax returns and his earnings as a football coach at Ann Arbor Skyline High School.

However, authorities claim they were told his pension was already being garnished and were unlikely to receive anything from it. They also were unable to garnish his earnings from the school, where he was appointed associate head coach in May 2016, due to him being hired by a third party and not directly by the school, according to court records.

Authorities were able to secure nearly $9,000 from Rison in March through his state income tax return, court records show. Rison made two other payments in 2016 totaling $725.

Court records also claim Rison tested positive for marijuana multiple times while on probation.

After testing positive in November 2013, he was referred for outpatient drug treatment. Court records show he successfully completed treatment in May 2014.

However, authorities claim he relapsed in April 2016 when he again tested positive. A random drug test on July 25 also yielded positive results.

Rison previously violated his probation in 2013 by failing to make adequate payments, and he faced up to 15 months in federal prison. However, the judge agreed to extend his probation by an extra year rather than incarcerate him.

His probation was eventually transferred to Michigan and is scheduled to last until 2018, according to federal court records.

A five-time Pro Bowler and standout player at Flint Northwestern High School and Michigan State University, he later went on to serve as an assistant football coach at Flint's Beecher High School and head coach for two years at Flint Northwestern.

ESPN included Rison in its 2012 documentary "Broke," spotlighting professional athletes who squandered their wealth, in which the 1989 first-round NFL Draft pick admitted to spending $1 million on jewelry.