Armstrong the latest in the BULLSHIT war on AAS.............
Seven-time Tour de France champion Lance Armstrong, who two former teammates say took banned performance-enhancing substances, is facing a legal process that eventually proved similar allegations against other professional athletes accused of doping.
Armstrong, former leader of the U.S. Postal Service cycling team, injected himself with strength-enhancing drugs on numerous occasions and encouraged the practice, former teammate Tyler Hamilton said on “60 Minutes” May 23. Hamilton said he testified before a federal grand jury investigating Armstrong, who has repeatedly denied taking banned substances.
Similar investigations that garnered evidence from teammates, associates and other athletes eventually led to indictments and convictions for Barry Bonds, baseball’s homerun record-holder, Olympic sprinter Marion Jones and her coach Trevor Graham, Dana Stubblefield, an 11-season veteran of the National Football League, and other professional sports figures.
“You could assume this dance will be the same with regards to Armstrong,” William Gould, a Stanford University law professor, said. “This has been a theme that has run through all these cases and will play out yet with Armstrong.”
Armstrong is being investigated by federal prosecutors in Los Angeles, said a person familiar with the matter who declined to be identified because the matter isn’t public. Bryan Daly, an attorney for Armstrong, didn’t return a call seeking comment yesterday.
Floyd Landis, an Armstrong teammate stripped of his 2006 Tour title for doping, said last May that he and Armstrong were among members of the U.S. Postal Service team who used drugs to improve performance.
Armstrong, 39, has had 500 clean drug tests, said his spokesman, Mark Fabiani.
Seven-time Tour de France champion Lance Armstrong, who two former teammates say took banned performance-enhancing substances, is facing a legal process that eventually proved similar allegations against other professional athletes accused of doping.
Armstrong, former leader of the U.S. Postal Service cycling team, injected himself with strength-enhancing drugs on numerous occasions and encouraged the practice, former teammate Tyler Hamilton said on “60 Minutes” May 23. Hamilton said he testified before a federal grand jury investigating Armstrong, who has repeatedly denied taking banned substances.
Similar investigations that garnered evidence from teammates, associates and other athletes eventually led to indictments and convictions for Barry Bonds, baseball’s homerun record-holder, Olympic sprinter Marion Jones and her coach Trevor Graham, Dana Stubblefield, an 11-season veteran of the National Football League, and other professional sports figures.
“You could assume this dance will be the same with regards to Armstrong,” William Gould, a Stanford University law professor, said. “This has been a theme that has run through all these cases and will play out yet with Armstrong.”
Armstrong is being investigated by federal prosecutors in Los Angeles, said a person familiar with the matter who declined to be identified because the matter isn’t public. Bryan Daly, an attorney for Armstrong, didn’t return a call seeking comment yesterday.
Floyd Landis, an Armstrong teammate stripped of his 2006 Tour title for doping, said last May that he and Armstrong were among members of the U.S. Postal Service team who used drugs to improve performance.
Armstrong, 39, has had 500 clean drug tests, said his spokesman, Mark Fabiani.
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