View Full Version : Feds Investigating Bonds For Perjury
H1Man 03-29-2006, 06:38 PM Mitchell to head steroid investigation
SPN has learned that George Mitchell, former U.S. Senate majority leader from Maine, will be hired by Major League Baseball to head an investigation into past steroid use by major-league players, most prominently Barry Bonds.
Mitchell will not be the lead investigator, but he will head the investigation effort.
ESPN's confirmation of Mitchell as the head of the investigation comes after Wednesday's New York Times reported that commissioner Bud Selig was on the verge of announcing an investigation into steroid use by Bonds and other players as detailed in the book "Game of Shadows" and that Mitchell's name was being floating around baseball circles as the outside person to head such an investigation.
ESPN has learned that Bonds and any other current player who may be part of this investigation will be allowed to play while the investigation is ongoing.
Commissioner Bud Selig has been under pressure for weeks to form an investigation. Two books that are being released this spring accuse Bonds of using steroids, human growth hormone and insulin for at least five seasons beginning in 1998 -- "Game of Shadows," written by two San Francisco Chronicle reporters, and "Love Me, Hate Me: Barry Bonds and the Making of an Antihero" by Jeff Pearlman. Baseball did not ban performance-enhancing substances until after the 2002 season, and Bonds has denied ever knowingly using performance-enhancing drugs.
Selig also faces pressure from Congress. Two weeks ago, Rep. Cliff Stearns, who previously sponsored legislation calling for tougher drug testing in pro sports, sent the commissioner a letter asking about his role in policing steroid use from 1998 to 2002.
Mitchell is the chairman of the board of the Walt Disney Company, the parent company of ESPN.
http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/news/story?id=2389391
Anthony 03-30-2006, 11:33 AM Who's willing to bet they dont turn up anything?
Glenn 04-04-2006, 10:41 AM http://sports.yahoo.com/mlb/news?slug=ap-bonds-syringe&prov=ap&type=lgns
Fan tosses syringe near Bonds
April 3, 2006
SAN DIEGO (AP) -- A fan tossed a syringe near Barry Bonds as he came off the field in between innings on Monday at Petco Park, and the San Francisco Giants slugger said he picked it up in his glove and carried it off the field.
The syringe apparently did not have a needle.
"I just put it off the field so no one would get hurt," said Bonds, who is under investigation by baseball for alleged steroid use.
The syringe toss occurred after the bottom of the eighth inning of the San Diego Padres' 6-1 win over the Giants.
"If that's what they want to do, embarrass themselves, then that's on them," Bonds said. "That has nothing to do with me at all."
According to the book "Game of Shadows," written by two San Francisco Chronicle reporters, Bonds used a vast array of performance-enhancing drugs, including steroids and human growth hormone, for at least five seasons beginning in 1998. According to the book, Bonds used several substances in various forms, including by injecting himself with a syringe and taking injections from his personal trainer.
Bonds, who has denied using performance-enhancing drugs, was booed often by the sellout crowd of 43,767 on Monday.
"I don't judge them," Bonds said. "I have to concentrate on baseball. I leave that up to you guys to make those statements in the paper."
Richard Andersen, the Padres executive in charge of Petco Park, didn't immediately return a telephone call seeking comment.
WTFchris 04-04-2006, 10:50 AM "If that's what they want to do, embarrass themselves, then that's on them," Bonds said. "That has nothing to do with me at all."
Yeah, I'm sure that person is real embarrassed Barry. I'm sure that guy got the bad exposure and not you.
BigggChris04 04-04-2006, 10:56 AM Thats wrong as hell
Vinny 04-04-2006, 12:50 PM Word is Barry was only upset that the syringe was empty. Apparently his supply's running low since they shut Balco down...
(Ba-Dum-Dum-Ching....sorry, that was terrible...)
BigggChris04 04-04-2006, 02:22 PM Dum-Dum-Ching
...
LMAO!!!!!
Black Dynamite 04-05-2006, 12:34 PM are they gonna probe pudge like they do Bonds?
And for the fag capital of nation to show no class or tolerence on Bonds using steroids(like much of the league had done during that period). has some irony to it.
H1Man 04-13-2006, 09:57 PM Feds investigating if Bonds committed perjury
Baseball isn't the only organization investigating Barry Bonds.
CNN reported Thursday that the federal government is investigating whether Bonds committed perjury when he testified during his grand jury testimony in the BALCO case in 2003.
Multiple sources told CNN that a federal grand jury has been hearing evidence for more than a month about whether Bonds perjured himself during his Dec. 4, 2003, testimony. The U.S. attorney's office in San Francisco would neither confirm nor deny to CNN that a grand jury is sitting, and Bonds' lawyers told CNN that they were unaware a grand jury is convened.
The Giants declined to comment on the CNN report to ESPN's Colleen Dominguez on Thursday night. Baseball commissioner Bud Selig also had no comment.
A number of professional athletes were given immunity from prosecution in exchange for their truthful testimony. They were also told that if it was later discovered they had lied, they would be prosecuted.
Bonds, who testified before a San Francisco federal grand jury looking into steroid use by top athletes, has repeatedly denied knowingly using performance-enhancing drugs.
Two books being released this spring accuse the Giants slugger of using steroids, human growth hormone and insulin for at least five seasons beginning in 1998 -- "Game of Shadows," written by two San Francisco Chronicle reporters, and "Love Me, Hate Me: Barry Bonds and the Making of an Antihero" by Jeff Pearlman. Baseball did not test for performance-enhancing substances until after the 2002 season.
BALCO founder Victor Conte insisted in March that he never gave performance-enhancing drugs to Bonds and that "Game of Shadows" is "full of outright lies."
Conte spoke to The Associated Press outside his San Mateo home hours after his release from prison, where he spent four months after pleading guilty to orchestrating an illegal steroids distribution scheme that allegedly involved many high-profile athletes, including Bonds.
Asked whether he gave Bonds performance-enhancing drugs, Conte said: "No, I did not."
"Game of Shadows" chronicles the founding of the Bay Area Laboratory Co-Operative and details alleged extensive steroid use by Bonds and other baseball stars. Baseball commissioner Bud Selig announced in March that former Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell will lead an investigation into the claims.
"I plan to provide evidence in the near future to prove that much of what is written in the book is untrue," Conte told the AP. He declined to list specific inaccuracies or what evidence he would provide but said the book is "about the character assassination of Barry Bonds and myself."
"It's my opinion that the two writers of the book have a disease called fabrication-itis," Conte said, holding a copy of "Game of Shadows" as he stood on his front steps.
Conte founded and managed the Burlingame-based BALCO, where the steroids were sold. He pleaded guilty to money laundering and a steroid distribution charge, and dozens of other charges were dropped as part of his plea deal.
Conte was sentenced in October to four months in prison and four months' home confinement in a plea deal with federal prosecutors.
Baseball investigators could seek to interview Conte about steroid use in the game.
Bonds, who has denied using steroids, was the most prominent athlete linked to BALCO. He testified in December 2003 to the federal grand jury investigating the case but has not been charged with a crime.
Other baseball players linked to BALCO include New York Yankees stars Jason Giambi and Gary Sheffield.
Olympic track and field stars Marion Jones and Tim Montgomery and former NFL player Bill Romanowski were also called to testify in front of the grand jury. No athletes were charged in the scheme.
Greg Anderson, Bonds' personal trainer, was sentenced to three months behind bars and an additional three months of home confinement after pleading guilty to money laundering and a steroid distribution charge.
BALCO vice president James Valente was sentenced to three years' probation, and track coach Remi Korchemny received a year of probation.
Meanwhile, baseball star Rafael Palmeiro will not be prosecuted on perjury charges after lawmakers said there isn't enough evidence to prove he lied when he told Congress under oath that he had "never used steroids" -- six weeks before failing a steroid test.
The investigation did not conclude whether the former Baltimore Orioles slugger had actually ever used performance-enhancing substances prior to his testimony before the House Government Reform Committee.
"We couldn't find any evidence of steroid use prior to his testimony," Chairman Tom Davis, R-Va., said in releasing a 44-page report. "That's not a finding of innocence, but it's a finding that we could not substantiate perjury."
At issue was Palmeiro's statement at a March 17 hearing: "I have never used steroids. Period." On May 4, he failed a Major League Baseball drug test, coming up positive for an anabolic steroid. In August, shortly after baseball suspended Palmeiro for 10 days, Davis said Congress would look into whether the player committed perjury.
"We have a responsibility, an obligation, to investigate it, and that's what we've done," Davis said during a news conference in the same hearing room where Palmeiro had testified.
Davis said the steroid for which Palmeiro tested positive is detectable for three to four weeks, shorter than the gap between his failed test and Capitol Hill appearance, and therefore "could not have been in his system the day he testified."
"We were not concerned with why he tested positive or how he tested positive except for how that related to his testimony," Davis added.
http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/news/story?id=2407968
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