Lance Armstrong nailed for doping; more than
1,000 pages of evidence for 'the most sophisticated doping program the
sport has ever seen'
(NaturalNews) Millions of his fans didn't want to believe it. He himself repeatedly and vehemently denied it.
But apparently, if the
(www.documentcloud.org)
is accurate (and there's no reason to assume it's not), then it's true:
Cycling "hero" and "legend" Lance Armstrong is nothing more than a
cheat.
The report - a 202-page indictment of Armstrong's career -
accused him of being part of "the most sophisticated, professionalized
and successful doping program that sport has ever seen."
The
charges, all backed up with substantial evidence, put a huge red circle
with a line through the center over Armstrong's seven
Tour de France wins.
The
evidence the agency accumulated against the entire U.S. Postal
Service-sponsored team to which Armstrong belonged involves "direct
documentary evidence including financial payments, e-mails, scientific
data and laboratory test results that further prove the use, possession
and distribution of performance-enhancing drugs by Lance Armstrong,"
said the report.
The allegations, which follow an announcement
Aug. 24 from the USADA in which the agency "imposed a sanction of
lifetime ineligibility and disqualification of competitive results"
achieved by Armstrong since Aug. 1, 1998 - effectively stripping the
cyclist of his titles - are backed up by a multitude of evidence,
including 11 riders who the agency said came forward "to acknowledge
their use of banned performance-enhancing drugs while on the team,"
CNN reported.
One of the witnesses is George Hincapie, a close teammate of Armstrong's during his
Tour de France winning streak.
"I
would have been much more comfortable talking only about myself, but
understood that I was obligated to tell the truth about everything I
knew. So that is what I did," Hincapie said in a statement.
I'm not suggesting they are all lying, but..."The
evidence shows beyond any doubt that the US Postal Service Pro Cycling
Team ran the most sophisticated, professionalized and successful
doping program that sport has ever seen," added USADA chief executive Travis Tygart added.
Pretty damning stuff.
In explaining the charges, the report said:
This Reasoned Decision includes a summary of the overwhelming evidence
that demonstrates that Mr. Armstrong doped through the majority of his
professional cycling career. Among the evidence in this case are the
sworn statements of more than two dozen (24+) witnesses, including
fifteen (15) professional cyclists, and a dozen (12) members of
Armstrong's cycling teams, including eleven (11) former teammates and
his former soigneur (masseuse). Nine (9) of the professional cyclists
were, like Mr. Armstrong, clients of Dr. Michele Ferrari and have
firsthand knowledge of his doping practices.Not surprising, Armstrong's lawyer, Tim Herman, dismissed the
report as a "one-sided hatchet job" that resulted from a "government-funded
witch hunt." He went on to question the veracity of some of the
witnesses against his client.
"I'm not suggesting that they are
all lying, but I am suggesting that each witness needs to have
confrontation and cross examination to test the accuracy of their
recollection," Herman told
CNN.
Armstrong has said, in essence,
Hey - I've never failed a doping test, so I'm innocent. Yet, according to the report, many of those who talked to the USADA
explained how Armstrong was far from innocent, and instead merely
figured out a way to beat the tests or, often, avoid test administrators
altogether.
'Tens of millions' in taxpayer dollarsIn
further summarizing its evidence against the cheating cyclist, the
USADA said it had obtained "direct documentary evidence including
financial payments, emails, scientific data and laboratory test results
that further prove the use, possession and distribution of performance
enhancing drugs by
Lance Armstrong and confirm the disappointing truth about the deceptive activities of
the USPS Team, a team that received tens of millions of American
taxpayer dollars in funding."
"Together these different
categories of eyewitness, documentary, first-hand, scientific, direct
and circumstantial evidence reveal conclusive and undeniable proof that
brings to the light of day for the first time this systemic, sustained
and highly professionalized team-run doping conspiracy," said the
report.
No word yet on whether Armstrong and Co. will have to repay the "tens of millions" in taxpayer dollars.
In
addition to Hincapie, six of the 11 other active riders who testified
against Armstrong - Frankie Andreu, Michael Barry, Tom Danielson, Tyler
Hamilton, Floyd Landis, Levi Leipheimer, Stephen Swart, Christian Vande
Velde, Jonathan Vaughters and David Zabriskie - were given six-month
suspensions.
It obviously took getting caught to admit to it, but
Hincapie, for the first time, has confessed to doping early and,
apparently, often.
"Early in my professional career, it became
clear to me that, given the widespread use of performance-enhancing
drugs by cyclists at the top of the profession, it was not possible to
compete at the highest level without them," he said. "I deeply regret
that choice and sincerely apologize to my family, teammates and fans."
Hincapie
testified that Armstrong specifically used the drug EPO, or
erythropoietin, which boosts the number of red blood cells. Red blood
cells carry oxygen to tissues; in Armstrong's case, the drug carried
boosted red blood cells so they could carry more oxygen to the muscles.
In addition, the teammate said, Armstrong utilized blood transfusions.
Goal was to win 'greatest bike race' and win it oftenAlso, he said, Armstrong dropped out of a race in 2000 over fears he would test positive for drugs.
Red flags went up regarding the highly competitive Armstrong's possible guilt in recent weeks, when he
refused to take part in a USADA arbitration proceeding in August, in which the USADA said it planned to feature eyewitnesses -
no doubt some who are mentioned in the just-released report - against
him.
The agency mentioned that in its report:
While
this Reasoned Decision summarizes overwhelming evidence of Mr.
Armstrong's doping that would have been at the hearing had Mr. Armstrong
not refused to challenge the charges against him, it necessarily cannot
include all of the evidence that would have been presented at such a
hearing. Had there been a hearing even more evidence would have been
presented, including evidence obtained through arbitration panel
subpoenas and potentially evidence from government investigations.Unmoved,
Armstrong tweeted Wednesday night, "What am I doing tonight? Hanging
with my family, unaffected, and thinking about this..."
Rules
mandated by the World Anti-Doping Code guided the USADA to release a
detailed report regarding its charges and allegations against Armstrong,
especially any evidence it had.
The agency noted that Armstrong had help:
As
discussed in this Reasoned Decision, Mr. Armstrong did not act alone.
He acted with a small army of enablers, including doping doctors, drug
smugglers and others within and outside the sport and on his team.
However, the evidence is also clear that Armstrong had ultimate control
over not only his personal drug use, which was extensive, but also over
the doping culture of his team. Final responsibility for decisions to
hire and retain a director, doctors and other staff committed to running
a team-wide doping program ultimately flowed to him.The
agency noted that Armstrong himself, at one point, declared that "we
had one goal and one ambition and that was to win the greatest bike race
in the world and not just win it once but keeping winning it."
No matter what it took, obviously.
Source:-
http://www.naturalnews.com/037546_Lance_Armstrong_doping_evidence.html