You gotta love Greg Anderson
Out of this whole steroid/MLB mess he is one of the very few I have respect for at this point. Tell the Grand Jury to go **** themselves Greg.
http://sports.iwon.com/news/07262006...=home&SEC=news Bonds' Trainer Set to Appear Before Grand Jury, But Not Expected to Talk Jul 26, 3:36 PM (ET) Email this Story By PAUL ELIAS and DAVID KRAVETS SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Lawyers for Barry Bonds' personal trainer say he'd rather go back to prison for a third time than take part in the grand jury investigation of his childhood friend for tax evasion and perjury. Fresh off a 15-day jail term for refusing to cooperate in an earlier phase of the probe, Greg Anderson is expected to be called Thursday before a new grand jury investigating the San Francisco Giants slugger. But the trainer is expected to renew his vow of silence. "He's resigned to do whatever it takes to maintain his integrity," said Paula Canny, an attorney and close friend of Anderson. Anderson was released from prison last week on the same day prosecutors announced a grand jury investigating Bonds had expired without issuing an indictment. The new grand jury quickly was assembled, and Anderson received what was believed to be the first subpoena - ordering him to appear before the panel on Thursday. If he again refuses to testify, he'll be hauled in front of a federal judge who will demand to know why he should be excused from testifying to a grand jury, a requirement even the president of the United States has to honor. Since Anderson's legal arguments remain largely the same, the judge likely will send the trainer back to prison. It would be his third trip to a federal lockup in less than a year; Anderson served three months after pleading guilty to steroid distribution and money laundering stemming from the government's investigation of the Bay Area lab that allegedly supplied Bonds and other elite athletes with performance-enhancing drugs. Authorities are investigating whether Bonds lied under oath when he told an earlier grand jury he didn't know whether the substances given to him by Anderson were steroids. The probe also reportedly is focused on whether Bonds paid taxes on the sale of hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of sports memorabilia. Bonds' attorney, Michael Rains, says his client is guilty of nothing more than being famous. "They're harassing Greg Anderson to get to Barry," Rains said. Some legal experts see Anderson as the key to proving the perjury allegations, since Bonds reportedly testified the trainer gave him two substances that fit the description of "the cream" and "the clear" - two performance-enhancing drugs linked to the Bay Area Laboratory Co-Operative. In 2003, Bonds reportedly testified to the grand jury investigating BALCO that he believed the substances were flaxseed oil and arthritis balm, not steroids. Anderson also could offer insight into the doping calendars bearing Bonds' name that were seized when federal agents raided Anderson's house, according to court papers connected to the steroids probe. But Anderson's lawyers say he shouldn't have to testify because of the numerous leaks of secret grand jury testimony to the San Francisco Chronicle over the course of the four-year investigation. Chronicle reporters Lance Williams and Mark Fainaru-Wada have written a book based largely on leaked testimony. "The gross, callous and destructive breaches of grand jury secrecy in this case create ample just cause for Mr. Anderson's refusal to testify," said one of Anderson's attorneys, Mark Geragos. His lawyers also say the agreement he made with prosecutors to plead guilty last year in the BALCO case stipulated he wouldn't have to cooperate in the investigation. "The government is violating the terms of the plea bargain," Canny said. Anderson also claims he should not have to testify because he was the target of an illegal wiretap. The new grand jury ordering Anderson's testimony can stay in session for as long as 18 months. By law, an intransigent Anderson can be locked up for the grand jury's full term, though a judge can free him sooner if convinced Anderson never will talk. |
Come on guys I mean you may not agree with how he got here but he sure has handled it better than the rest of these clowns.
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2. We are already raising a country full of snitches. If snitching is ****ing up the legal system then so be it. Besides this guy has no reason to believe anything coming from the grand jury as they have done nothing but lie to the guy right from the start. 3. The tax evasion charge is complete BS. This case has become so ridiculous that it's becoming embarrassment at this point. They have spent a fortune and accomplished jack shit. The government should stick to running the country. |
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Since when did telling the truth regarding whether or not you supplied illegal, banned substances to someone come to be considered "snitching". Bonds is a lying cheat and IMO he deserves whatever he gets. Sadly, the owners and agents that let this stuff go on for far too long will probably walk, unscathed. |
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Why dont they go after Rafeal Palmeiro? He blatantly DENIED allegations of doing steroids... what did he test positive for?
What has Bonds tested positive for? Nothing. |
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IYRC I responded to an earlier post that took issue with the governments' involvement, not who should be their focus. Sure, they should look at many other players besides Bonds and owners and the MLB Players Union for that matter. However, that said, I have no sympathy for Bonds or Anderson, and I hope they go after them with both barrels. |
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As far as the grand jury goes **** them too. He has every right not to answer a god damn thing as he was involved. Their never going to convict Bonds of shit. Hell his own attorney says they couldn't convict a ham samich. They haven't changed sports much either. They have also spent a bizzillion dollars for these remarkable accomplishments. Athletes are currently taking and always going to take whatever supplement they think they can get by with that will increase performance. That isn't ever going to change. If you think athletes are not using in all sports right now then you don't have the brains god gave grapes. All of this has changed nothing but the way the athlete will approach it now. |
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[QUOTE=BIG_DADDY]
2. We are already raising a country full of snitches. If snitching is ****ing up the legal system then so be it. Besides this guy has no reason to believe anything coming from the grand jury as they have done nothing but lie to the guy right from the start. QUOTE] So I guess we'll expect to see Barry next to 'Melo in the next street video where they threaten to kill snitches. They are going after Barry on a witchhunt and I love. It couldn't happen to a more deserving person. The purgery probably won't stick. Tax evasion is a different case though. He will serve time for that. He should have just backed-off the record and all of this would have gone away. I love it. It's almost like the feds are defending Hammering Hanks record! |
[QUOTE=Mojo Rising]
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It's great to know that you are able to know what the Grand Jury will or will not be able to prove against Bonds, especially using his own, paid attorney as your proof source. I think I'll let the system work, and then we will know if Bonds is as squeaky clean as you somehow know he is. |
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I'm not trying to be argumentative either, and I'm not sure how my comments were turned into being part of some witch hunt for Bonds. Simply not the case First, Sosa is not playing MLB any longer, and to my knowledge, Palmiero hasn't played since he was caught lying. I wish they, and all thoe who have lied could all be dealt with accordingly, and hopefully they will be over time. I do think Bonds probably is taking some extra heat due to the fact he is highly visible, still playing, and given the amount of info they have on him via the whole BALCO findings. However, I don't understand all the sympathy towards Bonds, especially when those sympathizing with him accuse our govt. of "meddling" into a serious situation. Congress gave MLB a warning to clean up its act a couple of years ago and MLB refused to put any policies of consequence into place. Because MLB refused to take the warning seriously, they are now paying the price, and I am glad to see it. |
The whole idea that Bonds shouldn't be pursued for his crimes is ludicrous. You don't get to pick which laws you like today and who they get to apply to. Bonds probably used steroids, evaded taxes, and lied to the grand jury. His guilt or innocence has nothing to do with who did and didn't get punished already and whether or not MLB is at fault. This argument didn't work in third grade and it hasn't gotten better since.
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I am NOT saying that Bonds souldn't be convicted of crimes that he has committed. I am saying that everyone is wanting his head...for a probably, yet Palmiero is not being discussed. It is a witch hunt. Let's see...Palmiero...proven criminal....just quit baseball...scott free. Bonds 'Probably" a criminal...and everyone has him convicted. Even a 3rd grader can figure this one out....it's a witch hunt... |
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I do think that steroids in sports is an abomination...but for christs sake...we are in a war....and looking for Osama...I think congress has much more to be worried about. And couple that with the fact that they are going after a "probable" criminal, whilst letting the proven criminal walk.... it is a sad state of affairs. But baseball has lost all it's integrity and is no longer the national pastime.... |
palmeiro is no longer playing.
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Course I follow football not baseball....generally speaking. |
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Bonds on the other hand had a shit load of circumstantial evidence against him that all happend before he testified. |
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what mean this "baseball"? :shrug: :shrug: :shrug:
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So I guess if you are famous-you can get busted for steroids and tax evasion for $ made signing your name?
Why is Bonds still allowed in the game? |
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