LOS ANGELES – Lance Armstrong is used to winning, but his most recent victory was unlike any he had experienced before.
Federal prosecutors dropped their investigation of the seven-time Tour de France
champion Friday, ending a nearly two-year effort to determine whether
the world's most famous cyclist and his teammates joined in a doping
program during his greatest years.
Armstrong steadfastly denied he doped during
his unparalleled career, but the possibility of criminal charges
threatened to stain not only his accomplishments, but his cancer charity
work as well. Instead, another attempt to prove a star athlete used
performance-enhancing drugs has fallen short, despite years of evidence
gathering across two continents.
"I am gratified to learn that the U.S.
Attorney's Office is closing its investigation," Armstrong said in a
statement. "It is the right decision and I commend them for reaching
it."
The probe, anchored in Los Angeles where a
grand jury was presented evidence by federal prosecutors and heard
testimony from Armstrong's former teammates and associates, began with a
separate investigation of Rock Racing, a cycling team owned by fashion
entrepreneur Michael Ball.
U.S. Attorney AndrDe Birotte Jr. announced
in a press release that his office "is closing an investigation into
allegations of federal criminal conduct by members and associates of a
professional bicycle racing team owned in part by Lance Armstrong."
He didn't disclose the reason for the
decision, though Birotte has used discretion in pursuing high-profile
criminal cases before. Last February, his office closed an investigation
of mortgage giant Countrywide Financial Corp.
Investigators looked at whether a doping
program was established for Armstrong's team while, at least part of the
time, it received government sponsorship from the U.S. Postal Service.
Authorities also examined whether Armstrong
encouraged or facilitated doping on the team. He won the Tour de France
every year from 1999-2005.
The pronouncement comes after a pair of less-than-successful cases against top sports figures accused of doping.
Home run king Barry Bonds
was found guilty of obstruction of justice and sentenced in December to
30 days' home detention -- a conviction he's appealing -- but
prosecutors were unable to convince a jury he lied about using steroids.
Roger Clemens'
steroid trial is slated for April 17 after a judge declared a mistrial
last summer when prosecutors showed jurors inadmissible evidence.
The hurdle for prosecutors wasn't so much to
prove whether any particular cyclist used drugs, but to determine if
Armstrong and other team members violated federal conspiracy, fraud or
racketeering charges. Unlike Bonds and Clemens, who testified before a
federal grand jury and Congress, respectively, and were accused of lying
under oath, Armstrong was not questioned in front of the grand jury.
Betsy Andreu, who with her husband and
former Armstrong teammate, Frank, accused the cycling champion of
doping, said the "legal system failed us."
Led by federal agent Jeff Novitzky, who also
investigated Bonds and Clemens, U.S. authorities sought assistance
overseas, requesting urine samples of U.S. Postal riders from France's
anti-doping agency and also meeting with officials from Belgium, Spain and Italy.
Prosecutors also subpoenaed Armstrong
supporters and ex-teammates to testify in Los Angeles. Among them were
Ukrainian cyclist Yaroslav Popovych, who rode on three Armstrong teams
dating back to 2005; Allen Lim, an exercise physiologist for Team
Radioshack; and longtime Armstrong friend Stephanie McIlvain.
The investigation began after Novitzky was
told about a cache of PEDs found by a landlord in the vacated apartment
of Kyle Leogrande, a cyclist who rode for Rock Racing and had a doping
ban, according to several people familiar with the case.
The case also was spurred by disgraced cyclist Floyd Landis,
who claims Armstrong had a long-running doping system in place while
they were teammates. Landis, who was stripped of the 2006 Tour de France
title for drug use, acknowledged in 2010 he used performance-enhancing
drugs after years of denying he cheated.
One of the most serious accusations came during a "60 Minutes"
interview last May when former teammate Tyler Hamilton said he saw
Armstrong use EPO during the 1999 Tour de France and in preparation for
the 2000 and 2001 tours.
U.S. anti-doping officials said Friday they
will not be dissuaded by the government's decision to close the
Armstrong probe and will continue their investigation into doping in
professional cycling.
As the investigation progressed, Armstrong
assembled a legal team, hired a spokesman and briefly created a website
to address any of the allegations reported by the media.
Frustrated by a slew of news articles about
the investigation, Armstrong's attorneys filed a motion in July, asking a
judge to order federal agents to testify about their contacts with
reporters.
Armstrong consciously maintained a high
profile throughout the investigation, raising money for his cancer
charity, Livestrong, and racing in events such as off-road triathlons.
He had no reason to hide, he said.
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