A movement is forming.

One day after UFC fighter Henry Cejudo said he would no longer be fighting in Nevada after its treatment of Nick Diaz, Leslie Smith is jumping on the bandwagon. Smith wrote on Sqor that she won't compete in the state following the Nevada Athletic Commission hitting Diaz with a five-year suspension. In the post, Smith also mentions her support for a MMA fighters association.

Diaz, 31, was banned Monday following a third positive drug test for marijuana. He was also fined $165,000. The commission ignored the fact that Diaz had tested negative in two other tests on fight night at UFC 183 when he lost to Anderson Silva. Also, Silva failed a drug test that night, too, for steroid metabolites and he was only given a one-year suspension. He'll be able to fight again in February.

Diaz's attorney Lucas Middlebrook said he'll be filing a petition for judicial review in order to get Diaz's case in front of an actual judge.

Smith (7-6-1), Diaz's Skrap Pack teammate, competes in the UFC's women's bantamweight division. The California native is coming off a loss to Jessica Eye at UFC 180 last November when the doctor stopped the fight due to Smith's ear exploding and nearly falling off. Smith, 33, owns wins over the likes of Raquel Pennington and Jessamyn Duke.

On Wednesday, Cejudo's manager Bill MacFarlane told MMA Fighting's Ariel Helwani that Cejudo would not fight in Nevada.

"I am absolutely appalled at how the NAC handled the Nick Diaz matter," MacFarlane wrote in a statement. "The issue here is not the magnitude of the penalties assessed to Nick Diaz, it is the process, or lack thereof, in determining Nick Diaz's guilt or innocence. Significant discrepancies existed between the test samples, and the NAC has an absolute obligation to resolve those discrepancies before the penalty phase of the disciplinary hearing was heard. What the NAC did was ignore due process and go straight to the penalty phase."