An Austin boxer and one-time Golden Gloves finalist who was convicted of failure to stop and render aid in 2010 was behind bars again over the weekend on charges of slamming into a woman while driving a Ferrari in Pflugerville.

Curtis Lee Meeks Jr., 33, faces a charge of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon, according to an arrest affidavit.

The document said Pflugerville police officers received multiple reports of a disturbance in the 18900 block of Canyon Sage Lane around 10:10 p.m. on Saturday.

Authorities arrived and found a woman with visible bruises on her face, a busted lip and scrapes on her palms that appeared to have been caused by concrete.

The report said witnesses told police they heard screaming, and saw a man bolt from the driveway and hop into a red Ferrari driven by Meeks.

"The neighborhood witnesses then watched (the woman) try to prevent the vehicle from fleeing, possibly because the occupants had taken her keys," the document said.

Another witness told police he saw the driver of the Ferrari "aggressively rush her" and strike her with the car, causing her to fall to the ground.

Nearby officers spotted the vehicle shortly after the incident in the 17700 block of Texas 130 and conducted a traffic stop.

Officers identified Meeks as the driver and placed him under arrest.

A story from the American-Statesman detailing his arrest in 2008 said Meeks rear-ended a truck at a red light at Manor Road and Airport Boulevard on May 10.

The driver of the truck, Ines Marquez-Morales, got out of the car with three passengers to exchange insurance information, as did Meeks and his passenger.

Marquez-Morales began speaking in Spanish to his passengers, directing them to call the police, according to an affidavit filed shortly after the incident.

As Meeks tried to leave the scene, he slammed into 28-year-old Jose Fuentes-Reyes, Marquez-Morales' son.

Meeks took off without reporting the incident to authorities, police said at the time.

Travis County Court records show that Meeks was initially booked on a charge of manslaughter. That charge, however, was dismissed.

Authorities at the court said he was indicted on a charge of failure to stop and render aid and convicted in 2010. He served four years of a 10-year probation sentence before being released in 2014.