In recent weeks, there has been a flurry of feature
stories and opinion columns that have been released regarding the
decision on the part of the USADA to strip Lance Armstrong of his 7 Tour
de France victories and ban him from cycling
for life. I've never been a fan of cycling or any other sport, for that
matter. Despite that, I have admired Mr. Armstrong over the years
because of his athletic abilities and disciplined regimen he maintained
after a battle with cancer. Even if he had not
become famous and known throughout the world - his grit and
determination displayed after overcoming such a life-altering brush with
death made him someone I would look up to.
Over the years that I observed his career, I made
note of the accusations made against Mr. Armstrong - all of which
fizzled out and seemed to be cast aside. As time went on, he continued
his training and participation in cycling events
- having passed the drug tests administered to him by the proper
authorities. When Mr. Armstrong retired from racing back in 2005, he
dropped off my radar for the most part, although I know he did not
retire fully from cycling until early 2011.
The way the USADA had specifically pursued Mr.
Armstrong did not pass the smell test with me for many reasons. I am not
a trial attorney by any means, but when I looked at the case from the
standpoint of an outside observer, I began to
formulate a comparative reference to the story.
Imagine that you are a prominent District Attorney
for a large city and a case is brought before you for your
consideration. Charges are being sought against a defendant for hundreds
of instances of larceny. He has not only been accused
of participating in the thefts, but is also being accused of being the
ringleader of a massive criminal enterprise of other thieves. Members of
the supposed criminal organization are ready to testify.
Only as you are considering taking up the case -
some details come to light that give you pause. First, the laws
regarding the statute of limitations are in play because the accused
instances of larceny occurred beyond the specified time
limit for prosecution. You then come to find out that a considerable
number of the people who are coming forward to accuse the defendant were
themselves caught in their own acts of theft and were offered immunity
or lesser sentences for their crimes in exchange
for their testimony, tainting their motivation. Even worse? The
defendant in the case has a documented receipt for every item he was
accused of stealing showing that they were legitimately purchased, along
with witnesses who have come forward to - in many
cases - corroborate his purchases.
Unless you were interested in being humiliated with
a resounding loss in court and becoming a laughing stock of the legal
community - very few D.A.s would ever pursue such a case because of risk involved with winning the case because of exculpatory
evidence being present or a lack of hard
evidence needed to substantiate the charges.
A federal investigation took place where Armstrong
was accused of doping during his tenure as a member of the USPS Cycling
Team from 1999 through 2004. When the charges did not pan out because
they were not substantiated through the evidence
presented, they were dropped. That was when the USADA stepped in.
The USADA is not a governmental entity, but rather a
non-profit organization. They became active in the year 2000 as an
offshoot of the USOC. They took it upon themselves to charge Lance
Armstrong after the federal case was lost, only instead
of a normal hearing - the USADA demanded that the process be settled
through arbitration.
At that point, Mr. Armstrong took the USADA to
court. The argument made by Armstrong was that the USADA lacked any
jurisdiction in the case because it not only did not have the authority
to press charges of their own, but also had no bases
for the charges levied because the instances of doping he was accused
of fell beyond the 8 year statute of limitations imposed on the USADA by
their own charter. In effect, the USADA was engaging in a move that is
likened to Double Jeopardy - where a person
who has been found not guilty of a crime is charged all over again.
Arbitration, in this case, was a panel of people
working for the USADA who would determine guilt or innocence, but unlike
a court of law, the burden of proof does not necessarily rest on the
prosecution. In addition, the presumption of
innocence is also not automatically granted to the accused, and
evidence that normally would be considered hearsay, libel or otherwise
be inadmissible or easily objected to in a court of law can be presented
and considered there. The case the USADA was building
against Mr. Armstrong was based primarily off of testimony given by
other cyclists and other non-cycling related people - testimony that in
many cases had been heard in other venues that failed to meet the burden
of proof. The only thing the USADA had to do
was merely show that there were enough accusations or reasonable
suspicions to meet a determination of guilt or innocence.
Mr. Armstrong wasn't going to have any part of it.
When the USADA was allowed by the court to legally bypass the
limitations of its charter to bring about it's own set of charges - he
knew that there was no chance that the process was going
to be fair. He was right, because from everything I've seen - the move
made by the USADA was never meant to give him a fair hearing.
Stop and think about this for a moment: Imagine if
you and other people had engaged in a series of long-term legal
arguments and fights with one another, and every single time you walked
away the victor because a court sided with you. Then,
out of nowhere - a fabricated 3rd party entity steps in and is given
the authority to find you guilty anyway.
To me, the issue is not whether Lance Armstrong
used drugs. He probably did. That is not the point and not the focus of
my disagreement. I simply cannot abide by the idea of people tolerating
or accepting the creation of a group who's presumptive
authority supersedes its mandate and bypasses its own limitations in
special circumstances to arbitrarily declare the guilt of a single
individual. That negates every notion of fairness or justice I know.
When I look online, I find a lot of stories about
people who had made accusations against Mr. Armstrong prancing around in
a victory lap declaring themselves to be vindicated. In one such
instance, a woman had previously accused Mr. Armstrong
of confessing his drug use to doctors while at a hospital when he was
being treated for cancer. Intrigued, I had to find an article back from
2006 to find out why such an accusation made so many years before did
not gain traction. It turned out that members
of the hospital staff who were also present at the time of the
examination countered her story by claiming that no such conversation or
confession took place, so the matter was dropped.
That the USADA has come out and declared Mr.
Armstrong to be guilty is not a vindication for her or anyone else. She
made an accusation, the case was heard, witnesses countered her
testimony and in the end her accusations were (for right or wrong) dismissed. Having someone
else declare you to be right doesn't make you right, it just means
someone else has chosen your side. At this point, that type of vindication can only come from a mea culpa by Mr. Armstrong himself.
The USADA has stripped Lance Armstrong of his Tour
de France victories, Olympic medals and banned him for life from
cycling. Because of this - he no longer has sponsors, cannot participate
in the sport he loves, is no longer head of his
Live Strong Foundation to fight cancer and is most likely going to be
financially destroyed by the demands to have various bonuses and
monetary awards returned, not to mention the cost of legal fees in the
foreseeable future. If a non-legal entity like the
USADA ultimately has the power to do this to anyone involved in
professional sports and in effect devastate their lives while requiring a
diminished threshold for the determination of guilt, then it doesn't
say much for the sports community as a whole that
they would tolerate its existence and capitulate to their flexible
standards and targeted application of justice.
*** UPDATE ***
Rumor has it that Lance is going to appear on Oprah to ask her for absolution. I don't see the point, but then again I don't see the point of using drugs to begin with. I will comment more once the rumor is confirmed or refuted.
*** UPDATE II ***
Now that Lance Armstrong has confessed to his use of PEDs, I find my biggest disappointment in Mr. Armstrong's drug use is that it now gives a veil of legitimacy to the USADA where it should not exist. To understand why, I have to again point out that the reduced standards for the determination of guilt, the burden of proof being placed on the accused and the failure of the organization to abide by the regulations mandated by their own charter have unintended consequences.
Lance Armstrong did do the things he was accused of, so from a casual glance it would appear that the steps taken by the USADA were legitimate. But the fact that Lance Armstrong is now definitively known as a user of PEDs is a direct result of his confession and not because the USADA actually proved anything.
Up until the USADA intervened, Mr. Armstrong had won every single challenge because none of the evidence or accusations were able to meet a standard that is meant expressly to reduce the possibility of an innocent person being falsely accused or worse - convicted. To see this point, use yourself as an example and place yourself in a similar situation:
You are a professional athlete and have won a series of championships or awards from a set of yearly competitions. People start to accuse you of cheating, claiming you doped. Some even say they've seen you taking strange looking pills. One of your hundreds of drug tests came back within the bounds of acceptability, but is on the borderline of being abnormal is some fashion. The USADA holds hearings, brings in witnesses, entertains hearsay evidence and points out that people you defeated in previous competitions have either tested positive or confessed to their own drug use and insinuated your possible involvement. The process will be conducted through arbitration, and the people running the show don't have to prove anything.
For the sake of argument, you are absolutely 100% innocent of any drug use. You are clean.
How would the situation you are in be any different from Lance Armstrong? The fact that you've passed your tests doesn't matter. The fact that admitted (or discovered) cheats who are implicating you or suggesting your involvement are at times being given lesser punishments in exchange for their voluntary testimony doesn't matter. It's your word against theirs, and that proving a negative is a much, much higher standard to bear than putting the onus on the people accusing you does not matter either. Guilt is determined by a consensus of opinions made by the people in charge of the arbitration, and their word is final.
Effectively, your fate in such a situation would probably be no different than Lance Armstrong, but imagine how much worse it would be knowing you are innocent. In such a case, would the legitimacy of the actions taken by the USADA be any different? Would it be fair, or just?
I say no.
*** UPDATE ***
Rumor has it that Lance is going to appear on Oprah to ask her for absolution. I don't see the point, but then again I don't see the point of using drugs to begin with. I will comment more once the rumor is confirmed or refuted.
*** UPDATE II ***
Now that Lance Armstrong has confessed to his use of PEDs, I find my biggest disappointment in Mr. Armstrong's drug use is that it now gives a veil of legitimacy to the USADA where it should not exist. To understand why, I have to again point out that the reduced standards for the determination of guilt, the burden of proof being placed on the accused and the failure of the organization to abide by the regulations mandated by their own charter have unintended consequences.
Lance Armstrong did do the things he was accused of, so from a casual glance it would appear that the steps taken by the USADA were legitimate. But the fact that Lance Armstrong is now definitively known as a user of PEDs is a direct result of his confession and not because the USADA actually proved anything.
Up until the USADA intervened, Mr. Armstrong had won every single challenge because none of the evidence or accusations were able to meet a standard that is meant expressly to reduce the possibility of an innocent person being falsely accused or worse - convicted. To see this point, use yourself as an example and place yourself in a similar situation:
You are a professional athlete and have won a series of championships or awards from a set of yearly competitions. People start to accuse you of cheating, claiming you doped. Some even say they've seen you taking strange looking pills. One of your hundreds of drug tests came back within the bounds of acceptability, but is on the borderline of being abnormal is some fashion. The USADA holds hearings, brings in witnesses, entertains hearsay evidence and points out that people you defeated in previous competitions have either tested positive or confessed to their own drug use and insinuated your possible involvement. The process will be conducted through arbitration, and the people running the show don't have to prove anything.
For the sake of argument, you are absolutely 100% innocent of any drug use. You are clean.
How would the situation you are in be any different from Lance Armstrong? The fact that you've passed your tests doesn't matter. The fact that admitted (or discovered) cheats who are implicating you or suggesting your involvement are at times being given lesser punishments in exchange for their voluntary testimony doesn't matter. It's your word against theirs, and that proving a negative is a much, much higher standard to bear than putting the onus on the people accusing you does not matter either. Guilt is determined by a consensus of opinions made by the people in charge of the arbitration, and their word is final.
Effectively, your fate in such a situation would probably be no different than Lance Armstrong, but imagine how much worse it would be knowing you are innocent. In such a case, would the legitimacy of the actions taken by the USADA be any different? Would it be fair, or just?
I say no.
3 comments:
Exactly the point. You hit it. I don't understand how this is allowed to occur. Anyone they target can be attacked in this way. ..Very scary.
WAAAHHHHHH I'm all broken up...
POOR LANCE :(cheater,lier...aka clinton of sport)
I think there are a few million souls (infants) that more deserve defending.. don't you?
Re: "(cheater,liar...aka clinton of sport)"
I think there are a few million souls (infants) that more deserve defending.. don't you?
I commented on this topic for precisely the reason that the nature of how this event played out is not something that is going to remain in a vacuum. I do not take the steps taken here too lightly, and I certainly am not defending Lance Armstrong because of his notoriety. If the process used by his detractors were applied to you or any other citizen, my commentary and reasoning would be no different. The application of the law and the consistency of the standards in applying them are the heart of our Republic...and make no mistake: the Left - who are singularly dedicated to acting as detractors against the self-motivated and achieved - took notice and started taking some hard notes. Given their history of how they have no qualms about subverting the laws and institutions that are the foundation of our society, speaking out against this process and the trend it demonstrates is absolutely worthy of defense.
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