Lance Armstrong To Lose All Tour de France Medals...

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Re: Lance Armstrong To Lose All Tour de France Medals...

Post by EnterpriseSovereign »

PhilosopherOfSorts wrote:If doping is so prevalent that they have to declare that for a six year period there were no winners because of it, I say they should just make it an official part of the sport, dose the bikers up on whatever combination of steroids and PCP gets results and turn 'em loose.
Broomstick wrote:Here's an idea:

Let's simply invalidate any and all cycling competitions from, say, 1990 onward. If the sport is that rotten then it's all meaningless anyway.

Either that, or just admit it's a race between pharmaceutical companies and not actual humans, allow anything and everything, and we can just sit back and watch these "athletes" die of drug complications a few years after spectacular wins. That's if they don't just simply start dropping dead mid-race.
I'd like to see this, even if it is out of sheer morbid curiosity. If nothing else it would be interesting to see what kind of performance gains would result from this :shock: :lol:
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Re: Lance Armstrong To Lose All Tour de France Medals...

Post by Broomstick »

Not to mention it would make at least some of the transhumanists cream their pants - Look! We're enhancing to better than natural!
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Re: Lance Armstrong To Lose All Tour de France Medals...

Post by Terralthra »

Broomstick wrote:Not to mention it would make at least some of the transhumanists cream their pants - Look! We're enhancing to better than natural!
Most transhumanists I know wouldn't call performance-enhancing chemicals transhuman to begin with. They aren't improving the species as a whole, they're improving one individual, and even that is debatable, given the health impacts.
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Re: Lance Armstrong To Lose All Tour de France Medals...

Post by Scrib »

EnterpriseSovereign wrote:
PhilosopherOfSorts wrote:If doping is so prevalent that they have to declare that for a six year period there were no winners because of it, I say they should just make it an official part of the sport, dose the bikers up on whatever combination of steroids and PCP gets results and turn 'em loose.
Broomstick wrote:Here's an idea:

Let's simply invalidate any and all cycling competitions from, say, 1990 onward. If the sport is that rotten then it's all meaningless anyway.

Either that, or just admit it's a race between pharmaceutical companies and not actual humans, allow anything and everything, and we can just sit back and watch these "athletes" die of drug complications a few years after spectacular wins. That's if they don't just simply start dropping dead mid-race.
But what about teh children???!!
I'd like to see this, even if it is out of sheer morbid curiosity. If nothing else it would be interesting to see what kind of performance gains would result from this :shock: :lol:
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Re: Lance Armstrong To Lose All Tour de France Medals...

Post by Broomstick »

Terralthra wrote:
Broomstick wrote:Not to mention it would make at least some of the transhumanists cream their pants - Look! We're enhancing to better than natural!
Most transhumanists I know wouldn't call performance-enhancing chemicals transhuman to begin with. They aren't improving the species as a whole, they're improving one individual, and even that is debatable, given the health impacts.
And their wanking of cyborgs, computers, etc. are the same - improving individuals, not the species.
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Now I did a job. I got nothing but trouble since I did it, not to mention more than a few unkind words as regard to my character so let me make this abundantly clear. I do the job. And then I get paid.- Malcolm Reynolds, Captain of Serenity, which sums up my feelings regarding the lawsuit discussed here.

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Re: Lance Armstrong To Lose All Tour de France Medals...

Post by General Brock »

I also have to agree with Simon_Jester in that the motivations behind getting Armstrong don't seem to have as much to do with justice and fairness in the sport as with bureaucratic gamesmanship that may have happened to work out for the USADA in the long run. That could be just a PR failing on their part versus the Armstrong machine, [edit: and the news bits and opinions I've come across] but at times it seemed like they're dictating to the UCI because they are the USADA, moreso than the substance of their report.

It would be best if the International Cycling Union took it all the way to the Court of Arbitration for Sport in Switzerland. That may be the only way to settle it for good; a demonstrably neutral and (hopefully) competent body validating, or dismissing, the USADA's methodology and findings.
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Re: Lance Armstrong To Lose All Tour de France Medals...

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^hey look another one who hasn't read the report
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Re: Lance Armstrong To Lose All Tour de France Medals...

Post by mr friendly guy »

Better yet, read some of my summary with the actual page numbers in it. I posted the most damning evidence, including the laboratory tests. But I will elaborate further as the tests which are damning are

a. Tested positive for EPO when someone went back and looked at his samples in 1999 (ie before a test became available) - this was discounted by the UCI despite 6 samples turning positive on the grounds of the technicality (that is no B sample was provided, because the the laboratory did it only for research purposes, and it took a journalists to match the positive samples to Armstrong)

b. Tested positive for cortisone but had a doctor's certificate backdated - as is alleged, this was a common practice on his team

c. Had suspicious results on EPO testing but was not considered positive in the guidelines at the time. However as we know more about the EPO testing the positive criteria has been revised. The USADA asked the UCI to retest those samples under current criteria. The UCI said Armstrong needed to give permission first. Armstrong refused.

d. Allegedly bribed the UCI when he tested positive for EPO - Armstrong of course denies it, however he does not deny donating money to the UCI even if he doesn't recall the year he did this (see his video testimony in the Four Corners documentary I linked to earlier). The UCI of course admit to having such a meeting at the dates he was alleged to have told team mates he got the EPO charge dropped. Even if you assume Armstrong was just "giving back to the sport" its a blatant conflict of interest, where he is donating to the organisation which is supposed to police him while he is still a competitor.

Of course there is also quite a lot describing how they evaded the tests, but obviously not 100% of else we wouldn't have these positive samples.
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Re: Lance Armstrong To Lose All Tour de France Medals...

Post by General Brock »

Thanas wrote:^hey look another one who hasn't read the report
Would I even understand this PDF, and if I thought I did, would anyone care?

Most of the most damning evidence and arguments were explained in news reports and blogs, which are also further reinforced in the thread. No problems understanding those positions.

Nonetheless, the USADA and UPI both have charges of bias leveled against them.

So, its better for the sport if this is settled by a[n undeniably] neutral intermediary, which just happens to be the CAS in Switzerland, which is what its there for.
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Re: Lance Armstrong To Lose All Tour de France Medals...

Post by mr friendly guy »

Kind of hard for a neutral intermediary to settle it when Armstrong himself has chosen not to contest the allegations.
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Re: Lance Armstrong To Lose All Tour de France Medals...

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General Brock wrote:Nonetheless, the USADA and UPI both have charges of bias leveled against them.
See it is this kind of reaction after claiming to fully understand the USADA and the arguments that lead me to concluding you did not understand or read the massive amount of evidence against Liarstrong.
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Re: Lance Armstrong To Lose All Tour de France Medals...

Post by Nieztchean Uber-Amoeba »

I didn't believe the accusations, but then I saw your use of the cutting epithet "Liarstrong" and the scales fell from my eyes.
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Re: Lance Armstrong To Lose All Tour de France Medals...

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Nieztchean Uber-Amoeba wrote:I didn't believe the accusations, but then I saw your use of the cutting epithet "Liarstrong" and the scales fell from my eyes.
I am glad I have managed to convince you.
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Re: Lance Armstrong To Lose All Tour de France Medals...

Post by Irbis »

Nieztchean Uber-Amoeba wrote:I didn't believe the accusations, but then I saw your use of the cutting epithet "Liarstrong" and the scales fell from my eyes.
Eh, can't blame him, Thanas just saw the original light :wink:

Anyway, have you ever heard about Scott Mercier? He was US Postal cyclist, part of US Olympic Team, some say as good as Armstrong. You know why you didn't heard about him? Because he, faced with mysterious burst of speed of competition, when told to take these innocent little pills tried first to compete clean, then when it became impossible he choose to remain clean.

But I guess to fans of "magic" of Tour de France 1995-2002 he is just sore loser: “I look at what those guys did, and I don’t imagine they feel good or proud about it. But they took things away from guys like myself, and Darren Baker. I suppose we weren’t ‘professional’ enough. We weren’t into winning at all costs. And the cost to me was my integrity, I wasn’t going to give that up.”
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Re: Lance Armstrong To Lose All Tour de France Medals...

Post by Nieztchean Uber-Amoeba »

'Innocent little pills'? To be honest, I can't see any difference whatsover between the legal aid of using creatine to stimulate muscle and testosterone production and the illegal aid of using erythropoietin to stimulate red blood cell production. It's not like athletes don't act as representatives of a whole body of dieticians, doctors, trainers, bicycle engineers, etc., behind them already, and I don't know what makes one pill a dishonour to a sport and another pill a simple 'supplement'.

But then I also think that what supplements Lance Armstrong chose or chose not to take, and his sporting record in general, is infinitesimally unimportant in who it impacted and how it reflects on his character next to his extraordinarily successful charity work, so that's me.
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Re: Lance Armstrong To Lose All Tour de France Medals...

Post by Irbis »

Difference is simple - if you need to do it hidden in dark glassed bus using things from locked fridge, maybe, just maybe you know you're not being honest.

And how you know Lance didn't take spotlight away from someone who would make better charity? Or at least one that might not be carrying completely discredited name on it?

Really, if Lance curbed his ego a bit, stopped at 3-5 wins, then withdrawn devoted his time to charity only, not threatening people with lawsuit, he might have well been untouchable icon now. But he didn't, he outright threatened to destroy with lawsuits lives of everyone who tried to speak simple truth. How that 'reflects on his character'? :|
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Re: Lance Armstrong To Lose All Tour de France Medals...

Post by Nieztchean Uber-Amoeba »

Irbis wrote:Difference is simple - if you need to do it hidden in dark glassed bus using things from locked fridge, maybe, just maybe you know you're not being honest.
So do you believe then that there is a substantive difference, qualitative or quantitative, in the supplements themselves?
And how you know Lance didn't take spotlight away from someone who would make better charity? Or at least one that might not be carrying completely discredited name on it?
This sort of hypothetical worlds defence is a mug's game. He might have taken the limelight away from the next StalinHitler Bonerparte, or maybe if Lance Armstrong had never taken up cycling the Butterfly Effect would lead to Jesus Christ our Lord returning to rapture us all up to enjoy eternal glorious pussy in Heaven. But in the world that did occur he leveraged his celebrity into one of the most well-known cancer charities in the world.
Really, if Lance curbed his ego a bit, stopped at 3-5 wins, then withdrawn devoted his time to charity only, not threatening people with lawsuit, he might have well been untouchable icon now. But he didn't, he outright threatened to destroy with lawsuits lives of everyone who tried to speak simple truth. How that 'reflects on his character'? :|
I suppose it makes him a bit of a dick. Still, the real consequences of the charity beat out the hypothetical consequences of lawsuits he didn't ruin peoples' lives with, and the non-existent consequences of taking chemicals that exist on the wrong side of an arbitrary line that everyone in the sport routinely crosses anyway.
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Re: Lance Armstrong To Lose All Tour de France Medals...

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mr friendly guy wrote:Kind of hard for a neutral intermediary to settle it when Armstrong himself has chosen not to contest the allegations.
He appears to be trying to avoid giving legitimacy to the process, yes.
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Re: Lance Armstrong To Lose All Tour de France Medals...

Post by General Brock »

Thanas wrote:
General Brock wrote:Nonetheless, the USADA and UPI both have charges of bias leveled against them.
See it is this kind of reaction after claiming to fully understand the USADA and the arguments that lead me to concluding you did not understand or read the massive amount of evidence against Liarstrong.
I'm more familiar with amateur sport travails from following Canadian Olympic sport arbitration. Amateur sport disputes are historically problematic because most applicants in need of justice can't afford real courts. Amateur sport in Canada,as elsewhere, has tried to establish their own less formal arbitration institutions. Otherwise sport bodies tended to be judge and jury same.

Usually arbitration is faster and more flexible than real court. Since the processes are so parallel, a well-made arbitration decision will usually stand up in court; that is, as good as going to court minus the cost in cash and time. The CAS may or may not be up to this standard. The American Arbitration Association (AAA), which is the arbitration body chosen by the USADA, is the North American branch of the Lausanne CAS. If the AAA is rejected, the CAS is the next option up.

If an athlete or organization can afford it, they use real court to financially intimidate their opponent if arbitration fails or they figure they have a poor chance, for whatever reason, at arbitration. To prevent this, most sports try and make arbitration binding such that participants give up their right to court.

Not surprisingly, Armstrong will prefer 'real' courts; he has the cash and he has done well there. Real court is also more naturally the place for pro-sporting disputes. Of course, now he faces the taxpayer's purse, or as much as the USADA can tap of it, if he goes there. Letting UPI punt it to the CAS is easier while preserving the court option. Avoiding entering arbitration doesn't change that registered athletes are essentially pressed into the system; its questionable, though, whether that is constitutional.

For Armstrong to make accusations of USADA unconstitutionality is not far-fetched; he has a right to fair due process.

Tygert and the USADA appear to have compromised the independence of the AAA, and is challenging that of the UPI, with an agency power grab. All to get Armstrong, for the good of clean sport... and to expand a bureacratic kingdom? This is a problem.

Separation of powers is considered vital to accountability, and the USADA is already an investigative/enforcement and prosecuting body. Giving them influence over sport judicial and governance functions really screws the system as it had been developing for amateur athletes.

Everyone 'knows" Armstrong must have cheated and pro cycling carries the reputation of being that kind of sport. There isn't going to be a critical mass of hatred towards Armstrong blinding people and backing Tygerts play at being some sort of clean sport crusader czar. Armstrong didn't besmirch the Olympics, and his life outside sport has been more or less exemplary. He's that charitable guy who happens to be from a shady sport that's come back to bite him.

Its more noticeable that the USADA does not know its place; judge, jury, and executioner is not its mandate and its acting like an unaccountable government regulatory body trying to make people hear it roar by making an example of Armstrong. Most law-abiding persons instinctively fear and reject that kind of rogue mentality from officialdom, the way officialdom squirms at vigilantism.

Its too bad Armstrong is 'doable', since if he loses to the USADA, a precedent may be set against athletes' rights to fair due process.
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Re: Lance Armstrong To Lose All Tour de France Medals...

Post by mr friendly guy »

General Brock wrote:
I'm more familiar with amateur sport travails from following Canadian Olympic sport arbitration. Amateur sport disputes are historically problematic because most applicants in need of justice can't afford real courts. Amateur sport in Canada,as elsewhere, has tried to establish their own less formal arbitration institutions. Otherwise sport bodies tended to be judge and jury same.
Mate, at least come out and say you didn't read the USADA report and just got info from pro Armstrong propaganda. commentators.

From page 6 of the USADA report.
On August 24, 2012, the United States Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) announced it had imposed a sanction of lifetime ineligibility and disqualification of competitive results achieved
since August 1, 1998, on United States athlete Lance Armstrong. Mr. Armstrong’s sanction was announced at that time by USADA because Mr. Armstrong had notified USADA that he was
refusing to contest the evidence against him in a hearing before neutral arbitrators
.
Armstrong had the chance to contest it before the neutral arbitrators you want to discuss about. He was only stripped when he refused to contest it? Whats next? Any athlete who knows they are guilty can refuse and hence the process gets stymied. We know thats bullshit. Its hard to justify the USADA is the judge and jury (as opposed to the prosecutor) when the case was to be referred to a neutral arbitrator.

Page 17
On June 28, 2012, USADA issued its charging letter setting forth USADA’s recommended sanctions and specifying that pursuant to the USADA Protocol the Respondents had until July 9, 2012, in which to notify USADA whether Respondents wished to challenge USADA’s proposed sanction by requesting a hearing before a panel of neutral arbitrators.25 Mr. Armstrong subsequently sought and received an extension to July 13, 2012, of his time to request a hearing before neutral arbitrators. That deadline was again voluntarily extended by USADA after Mr. Armstrong filed his federal
lawsuit described below.
So by accounts Armstrong was initially willing but then changed his mind. All this disproves the concept of the USADA being judge, jury and executioner when it was clear this ONLY came about because Armstrong changed his mind and chose not to challenge.

For Armstrong to make accusations of USADA unconstitutionality is not far-fetched; he has a right to fair due process.
Would you like me to summarise this defense?
Founding Father wank regarding due process tick.
USADA is unfair with no explanation of why its unfair - except its harder for the athletes to win in the face of overwhelming evidence.
USADA officials are not democratically elected. :roll: Therefore they are unaccountable. Seriously, this is a serious argument or a blatant ad hominem?
Repeats the same lines which anyone bothering to read the USADA report will know it addressed. But for completeness he repeats the line a) Armstrong was tested 500-600 times (disputed by USADA) b) He never tested positive (actually its not quite simple as that, as I listed above).
Tygert and the USADA appear to have compromised the independence of the AAA, and is challenging that of the UPI, with an agency power grab. All to get Armstrong, for the good of clean sport... and to expand a bureacratic kingdom? This is a problem.
Maybe its just that over here we didn't get that type of reporting. We just got, Armstrong refuses to contest, here is the evidence. So maybe my view isn't coloured by how the USADA officials appears to have behaved. But even if they were dicks in real life, the evidence stands by itself. Plus they were prepared to go to a neutral arbiter so I don't know where this they behave like judge, jury comes from.
Separation of powers is considered vital to accountability, and the USADA is already an investigative/enforcement and prosecuting body. Giving them influence over sport judicial and governance functions really screws the system as it had been developing for amateur athletes.
Since Armstrong was a professional athlete I am not sure why bringing up how amateurs do it matters.
Everyone 'knows" Armstrong must have cheated and pro cycling carries the reputation of being that kind of sport. There isn't going to be a critical mass of hatred towards Armstrong blinding people and backing Tygerts play at being some sort of clean sport crusader czar. Armstrong didn't besmirch the Olympics, and his life outside sport has been more or less exemplary. He's that charitable guy who happens to be from a shady sport that's come back to bite him.
1. What has the Olympics got to do with the Tour de Farce?
2. What has Armstrong's behaviour outside of his sport got to do with the fact that he cheated? In fact, accusations of witness intimidation cast doubt on his life outside of sport being "exemplary" but thats neither here nor there in terms of whether he cheated or not.
Its more noticeable that the USADA does not know its place; judge, jury, and executioner is not its mandate and its acting like an unaccountable government regulatory body trying to make people hear it roar by making an example of Armstrong. Most law-abiding persons instinctively fear and reject that kind of rogue mentality from officialdom, the way officialdom squirms at vigilantism.
As mentioned, they were prepared to go to a neutral arbitrator, and it was Armstrong who refused. Not only is your claim untrue, its a blatant appeal to motive fallacy. Sheesh.

I was a bit dubious myself, but then I actually bothered to look at the evidence the USADA presented, rather than go, USADA IS TEH EVEL. If this is the level of defense Armstrong's supporters can muster, no wonder he folded.
Its too bad Armstrong is 'doable', since if he loses to the USADA, a precedent may be set against athletes' rights to fair due process.
If you mean fair process which means an athlete should be able to argue all but a conspiracy theory / incompetence of the drug laboratories where scientific findings are rejected? In case you wonder where I got that from, its from your own linked article where he rejects the validity of drug testing, on the grounds that a positive test makes an athlete guilty until proven innocent. :D
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Re: Lance Armstrong To Lose All Tour de France Medals...

Post by aerius »

Nieztchean Uber-Amoeba wrote:'Innocent little pills'? To be honest, I can't see any difference whatsover between the legal aid of using creatine to stimulate muscle and testosterone production and the illegal aid of using erythropoietin to stimulate red blood cell production. It's not like athletes don't act as representatives of a whole body of dieticians, doctors, trainers, bicycle engineers, etc., behind them already, and I don't know what makes one pill a dishonour to a sport and another pill a simple 'supplement'.
I don't know why creatine hasn't been banned yet, maybe the creatine supplement companies have more lobbying power and have so far managed to keep their product off the list. I remember reading a study somewhere that creatine gave something like a 10% increase in power for the cyclists they tested, that ought to be illegal but for whatever reason it isn't.

There was also a story on the Lance Armstrong situation on CBC news this morning, it was stated that if the UCI wanted to strip all the winners they'd have to go all the way down to something like the 22nd place finisher before they got to someone who didn't test positive for some kind of banned performance enhancing drug. And that's for something like the last 30 years.
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Re: Lance Armstrong To Lose All Tour de France Medals...

Post by General Brock »

mr friendly guy wrote:
Mate, at least come out and say you didn't read the USADA report and just got info from pro Armstrong propaganda. commentators.
I had it on my hard drive and was already working through it. It took a while to finish, between falling asleep and rereading skimmed portions. Never having read doping prosecutions before, or prosecution documents generally, I'm still not sure what to expect of one.

Its a very convincing narrative, like its supposed to be, but reads less like a research document and more like one of those lurid little 'true-crime' books or news features - except a judge and jury have already signed off on the crime having happened. Or even a fiction except for the citations. There is no easy way to backcheck anything. Common sense suggests with so many people coming forward there must be some substance to the charges, the doping science matches what I've learned of it. There was always a strong probability Armstrong doped; no surprises, even that he was alleged to be a ringleader, since in proven criminal cases, the guys who break always say it was the other guy's fault.

Gosh, the guy sure looks guilty, but apart from tweaking emotional intensity up over what was almost a foregone conclusion, where's anything resembling a neutral third-party assessment of the prosecution's presentation?
From page 6 of the USADA report.
On August 24, 2012, the United States Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) announced it had imposed a sanction of lifetime ineligibility and disqualification of competitive results achieved
since August 1, 1998, on United States athlete Lance Armstrong. Mr. Armstrong’s sanction was announced at that time by USADA because Mr. Armstrong had notified USADA that he was
refusing to contest the evidence against him in a hearing before neutral arbitrators
.
Armstrong had the chance to contest it before the neutral arbitrators you want to discuss about. He was only stripped when he refused to contest it? Whats next? Any athlete who knows they are guilty can refuse and hence the process gets stymied. We know thats bullshit. Its hard to justify the USADA is the judge and jury (as opposed to the prosecutor) when the case was to be referred to a neutral arbitrator.
My understanding is that there were concerns from Armstrong's camp over the full neutrality of the arbitration process. That wasn't explained in the report. Not that they had too, but if they want to play the even hand even though they're not, they might have mentioned that and explained why their arbitration process was sound over Armstrong's objections.
Page 17
On June 28, 2012, USADA issued its charging letter setting forth USADA’s recommended sanctions and specifying that pursuant to the USADA Protocol the Respondents had until July 9, 2012, in which to notify USADA whether Respondents wished to challenge USADA’s proposed sanction by requesting a hearing before a panel of neutral arbitrators.25 Mr. Armstrong subsequently sought and received an extension to July 13, 2012, of his time to request a hearing before neutral arbitrators. That deadline was again voluntarily extended by USADA after Mr. Armstrong filed his federal
lawsuit described below.
So by accounts Armstrong was initially willing but then changed his mind. All this disproves the concept of the USADA being judge, jury and executioner when it was clear this ONLY came about because Armstrong changed his mind and chose not to challenge.
Arbitration usually requires agreement between parties to enter arbitration voluntarily, in agreement and support of the process. Refusing arbitration isn't always an indicator of guilt. Its obviously possible Armstrong only wanted to short-circuit the process. Its also possible he eventually recognized and saw no reason to answer to a kangaroo court, guilty or no.

So, why no effort to validate the process with Armstrong in-absentia or determine what would be an acceptable arbitration process? Armstrong didn't plead no-contest. Armstrong rejected the process as unfair and invalid, and that needed to be addressed more thoroughly than it was. Isn't there a problem with the process in the first place if the USADA can almost be undone by the respondent simply ignoring them?

For Armstrong to make accusations of USADA unconstitutionality is not far-fetched; he has a right to fair due process.
Would you like me to summarise this defense?
Founding Father wank regarding due process tick.
USADA is unfair with no explanation of why its unfair - except its harder for the athletes to win in the face of overwhelming evidence.
USADA officials are not democratically elected. :roll: Therefore they are unaccountable. Seriously, this is a serious argument or a blatant ad hominem?
Repeats the same lines which anyone bothering to read the USADA report will know it addressed. But for completeness he repeats the line a) Armstrong was tested 500-600 times (disputed by USADA) b) He never tested positive (actually its not quite simple as that, as I listed above).
The USADA can investigate, but it can't demand of the UPI that its findings be ratified without third-party oversight while implying the UPI was covering for Armstrong. That's just bureaucratic point scoring, because had the report been acceptable, its UPI's duty to act on it anyway whether it make it look like they were answering to Tygert or not.

For the good of the sport, at least toss it to the CAS; then a somewhat less tainted and third party is validating the process. Unwelcome findings might still be challenged in court, but a well-run arbitration should stand up in court anyway. Due process is met, short of litigation, by fair arbitration.

The way it played out, the UPI appears to have caved in, grudgingly accepting a lack of third-party oversight, while posturing it acted 'independently'. Tygert kind of backed off and praised them, although with the warning that more work needs to be done. Armstrong's backers appear to have ended it for him by offering to spare his Livestrong Foundation if he steps down and shuts up.

Now, its not that UPI might not have needed some leaning on. However, a root problem hasn't been resolved.

One of the problems is that there isn't that third party. Where were the USADA and UPI during Armstrong's 7-year streak? And before that? Would a sound arbitration system have allowed honest athletes and officials to police the sport better themselves, instead of waiting for a key stakeholder like the USADA to decide to do it? What if the USADA was inclined to break the rules the other way, insisting there was no doping problem and presenting a convincing narrative?
Tygert and the USADA appear to have compromised the independence of the AAA, and is challenging that of the UPI, with an agency power grab. All to get Armstrong, for the good of clean sport... and to expand a bureacratic kingdom? This is a problem.
Maybe its just that over here we didn't get that type of reporting. We just got, Armstrong refuses to contest, here is the evidence. So maybe my view isn't coloured by how the USADA officials appears to have behaved. But even if they were dicks in real life, the evidence stands by itself. Plus they were prepared to go to a neutral arbiter so I don't know where this they behave like judge, jury comes from.
Armstrong made it pretty clear he felt an unfair non-neutral arbitration wasn't worth fighting.
Separation of powers is considered vital to accountability, and the USADA is already an investigative/enforcement and prosecuting body. Giving them influence over sport judicial and governance functions really screws the system as it had been developing for amateur athletes.
Since Armstrong was a professional athlete I am not sure why bringing up how amateurs do it matters.
The pros are using amateur sport bodies because the amateurs had the expertise. The CAS/AAA organizations were originally intended to catch out cheats in Olympic sports.
Everyone 'knows" Armstrong must have cheated and pro cycling carries the reputation of being that kind of sport. There isn't going to be a critical mass of hatred towards Armstrong blinding people and backing Tygerts play at being some sort of clean sport crusader czar. Armstrong didn't besmirch the Olympics, and his life outside sport has been more or less exemplary. He's that charitable guy who happens to be from a shady sport that's come back to bite him.
1. What has the Olympics got to do with the Tour de Farce?
2. What has Armstrong's behaviour outside of his sport got to do with the fact that he cheated? In fact, accusations of witness intimidation cast doubt on his life outside of sport being "exemplary" but thats neither here nor there in terms of whether he cheated or not.
1. Nothing except the juxtaposition. A higher standard of conduct is placed on an Olympic sport compared to a pro sport in the public consciousness. Although pros now compete in the Olympics, that wasn't always the case. Olympians are "really, really not supposed to cheat" as opposed to "not supposed to cheat". So, acting against Armstrong isn't on the same plane as acting against Marion Jones. Trying to clean up pro cycling is kind of a waste of public sport funding resources needed for amateur sport.

2. When I mean outside the sport, I mean, Armstrong is not known for acting badly outside the old 'hood. Vick held dogfights; Armstrong founded a charitable foundation. However Armstrong gained his success, he did not misspend it nearly as badly as he is said to have earned it.

Its more noticeable that the USADA does not know its place; judge, jury, and executioner is not its mandate and its acting like an unaccountable government regulatory body trying to make people hear it roar by making an example of Armstrong. Most law-abiding persons instinctively fear and reject that kind of rogue mentality from officialdom, the way officialdom squirms at vigilantism.
As mentioned, they were prepared to go to a neutral arbitrator, and it was Armstrong who refused. Not only is your claim untrue, its a blatant appeal to motive fallacy. Sheesh.
That Armstrong felt USADA arbitration was one-sided. I'm not aware that he was even offered the CAS, input into the process, input into the people, all of which are important to the arbitration process. The CAS is at least physically located away from the USADA's home turf. Sure, Armstrong is and American, but he clearly felt he wasn't going to get a fair hearing at home.
I was a bit dubious myself, but then I actually bothered to look at the evidence the USADA presented, rather than go, USADA IS TEH EVEL. If this is the level of defense Armstrong's supporters can muster, no wonder he folded.
My "defense" of Armstrong is more focused on his getting fair due process, the right of even the apparently guilty for benefit of all. The USADA report emphasized, for example, how much of a sacrifice it was for witnesses to come forward; well, that cuts both ways. Was it a greater sacrifice to ignore the USADA or go along with a six-month suspension deal? Was USADA attention making it difficult for them too?

The problem with accepting the prosecutions version only, unchallenged, is that is it just the prosecution's version of events. If Armstrong rejected USADA arbitration as biased, why not determine what standard of arbitration he would accept instead of rushing to ratify the report? Sure, he said he gave up. Most people in the real world might also even if innocent; the titles always carried a taint and his brand was pretty much expired anyway as he was retired and no longer making the podium.
Its too bad Armstrong is 'doable', since if he loses to the USADA, a precedent may be set against athletes' rights to fair due process.
If you mean fair process which means an athlete should be able to argue all but a conspiracy theory / incompetence of the drug laboratories where scientific findings are rejected? In case you wonder where I got that from, its from your own linked article where he rejects the validity of drug testing, on the grounds that a positive test makes an athlete guilty until proven innocent. :D
"Scientific" isn't a magic word that conjures foolproof competence from the practitioner. False positives are rare but can escape lab procedures. It can't always be excluded from consideration.

A fair process where an athlete can have reliably neutral third party oversight for dispute resolution. Suppose its not drug testing but unfair treatment, say in a selection process or other more common dispute resolution? Neither prosecution or defense should be able to force the hand of a verdict except by the merits of their arguments and evidence. Athletes agree to be bound by USADA protocol which includes its arbitration process, but that's a step removed from the spirit of the arbitration when they might never have to use it and only find out its a kangaroo court the hard way.

The 'Reasoned Report' was not subjected to any competent cross-examination or review. Its just assumed to be a slam-dunk from a trusted source so why bother? Sure, everyone and his dog can read it and judge for themselves, but none of us have standing as Armstrong's formal jurists with a jurists resources. The process is incomplete and UPI did as poor a job looking out for the individual rights of a cyclist as it did policing doping.

Hardly a renewal of the sport for the better if the structural flaws are still there.
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Re: Lance Armstrong To Lose All Tour de France Medals...

Post by Irbis »

News from UCI: Armstrong loses 7 Tours titles, has to hand back $3.85 million prize money, lifetime sport ban, faces loss of 2000 Olympic bronze medal. Case of $7.5 million dollars he won from company that didn't wanted to pay after doping allegations will be probably revisited, other sponsors may well follow well follow with their own lawsuits. After verdict, another longtime Armstrong sponsor, Oakley sunglasses, officially cut ties with the rider.

Michele Ferrari and Luis Garcia del Moral also received lifetime bans, other bans - of Johan Bruyneel, Pedro Celaya and Jose Marti might follow, as these accused actually went to arbitration, which, amusingly, might call Armstrong to testify if he knew his team manager J. Bruyneel and team doctors led doping campaign.
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Re: Lance Armstrong To Lose All Tour de France Medals...

Post by mr friendly guy »

Lets just quickly go through Brocks objections.

1. The USADA process will be unfair and a kangaroo court. Who said this? Armstrong? What evidence does he provide? Well his say so. If this is a valid argument anyone who is as guilty as sin can just cry kangaroo court with zero evidence.

In fact your own link boils down to - Armstrong says any arbiter will automatically suck the USADA's cock. In fact, I don't remember any indication that the neutral arbiter had been decided before Armstrong pulled the plug. So its a bit hard for him to justify this claim.

2. There is no neutral third party assessment of the prosecution's presentation.

Well whose fault is that? Armstrong refused the neutral third party arbitration. He admitted it himself. Its perverse that this is somehow the USADA's fault. This type of argument only works if you automatically assume that any third party chosen will be non neutral, which is an unsupported claim. This is like saying there is no neutral third party arbiter because Lance refused to deal with the charges, and Lance was right to refuse to deal with the charges because there is no neutral third party. This is just a giant circle jerk.

3. "So, why no effort to validate the process with Armstrong in-absentia or determine what would be an acceptable arbitration process? Armstrong didn't plead no-contest. Armstrong rejected the process as unfair and invalid, and that needed to be addressed more thoroughly than it was. Isn't there a problem with the process in the first place if the USADA can almost be undone by the respondent simply ignoring them?"

Well the USADA process wasn't undone as we can see. :D
Are you suggesting the USADA should just hold a process with the defendant not even there? Wouldn't that be more vulnerable to a propaganda attack of a kangaroo court?

4.
The USADA can investigate, but it can't demand of the UPI that its findings be ratified without third-party oversight while implying the UPI was covering for Armstrong. That's just bureaucratic point scoring, because had the report been acceptable, its UPI's duty to act on it anyway whether it make it look like they were answering to Tygert or not.
Since you have read the report, you will know they address this point. Hint - you can read in in the table of contents showing you the relevant page. In any event since the USADA got what it wanted, apparently for all intents and purposes it can.

5. "Where were the USADA and UPI during Armstrong's 7-year streak? And before that?"

i) Since you obviously read the report you would know that the USADA only got information on Armstrong in 2010, well after his 7 year streak. Sure there have been accusations against him before, and I believe the USADA were not unaware of them, but his name was only dropped in a USADA's investigation unrelated to Armstrong (ie "investigation into drug use and distribution within the Southern California cycling scene"). This is on page 9-10 btw. Are you sure you actually read the report? Because I stopped reading about 3/4 of the way through, but you apparently read it from start to finish.

ii) Must resist urge to make further sarcastic comments. Must resist urge. Oh what the hell. Assuming a time machine is invented, it maybe possible for the USADA to have existed and be up and running when Armstrong won his first two titles. Otherwise back in the real world, the USADA was up and running in october 2000, which like 1 minute of google fu could tell you. Also with my limited knowledge of cycling I had to resort to google to tell me that Armstrong had already won 2 titles by then. But whatever.

6. "The problem with accepting the prosecutions version only, unchallenged, is that is it just the prosecution's version of events. If Armstrong rejected USADA arbitration as biased, why not determine what standard of arbitration he would accept instead of rushing to ratify the report? Sure, he said he gave up. Most people in the real world might also even if innocent; the titles always carried a taint and his brand was pretty much expired anyway as he was retired and no longer making the podium."

This is giving Armstrong a ridiculous amount of leeway. Imagine if any defendant decided a court was bias, and instead of proceeding to trial him we had to "find out what level of arbitration the defendant would accept". This is ridiculous. But it is quite clear we have an idea of what level of arbitration he would accept. He tried to get it stopped in a real court, and when that didn't work, he picked up his metaphorical bat and went home. So even a real court decision which is supposedly more fair (according to your own articles) wasn't good enough for him to enter the process.

7. Scientific" isn't a magic word that conjures foolproof competence from the practitioner. False positives are rare but can escape lab procedures. It can't always be excluded from consideration.

Sure one false positive is possible. But six in the same race. Seriously? To top it all off, the testing was blinded.

This is an appeal to ignorance and can be ignored.
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Re: Lance Armstrong To Lose All Tour de France Medals...

Post by Flagg »

NBCNEWS.COM
Lance Armstrong's former friend speaks out about athlete's alleged use of performance enhancing drugs


Thu Oct 25, 2012 4:23 PM EDT

By Tom Bettag, Mary Murphy, and Ronnie Polidoro
Rock Center

For some of those who knew Lance Armstrong the best, his fall from grace amid doping allegations is no surprise at all. Betsy Andreu, a former family friend to Armstrong told NBC’s Harry Smith that Lance Armstrong is the “Bernie Madoff” of the sporting world. Andreu says Armstrong played the world and the media for years while knowingly taking performance enhancing drugs.

In an interview airing tonight at 10pm/9c on NBC’s Rock Center, Smith asked Andreu why she compares Armstrong to disgraced financier Bernie Madoff. Andreu said, “Because Bernie Madoff was one of the biggest frauds in the history of the world, in the history of finance maybe? Lance is the biggest fraud in the history of sport.”

Andreu was once part of Armstrong’s inner circle. Her husband Frankie was one of Armstrong’s teammates and one of his best friends.

However, Andreu says she and Armstrong had a falling out when she refused to lie about something she heard while visiting Armstrong in the hospital at the time he was diagnosed with testicular cancer.

“The doctors come in and I suggested we leave and to give Lance his privacy. And Lance said, ‘That's okay. You can stay.’ And I turned to Frankie, because Lance was in front of us, and I said, 'I think we should leave to give him his privacy.’ And he said we could stay, ‘Everybody's friends here,’” Andreu told Smith.

Andreu says doctors asked a few banal questions and then asked if Armstrong had used any performance enhancing drugs.

“Lance, holding his I.V., nonchalantly rattled off, ‘Yes, steroids, testosterone, growth hormone, E.P.O., cortisone,’” Andreu said. “My eyes popped out of my head. Frankie saw that I was upset and he excused ourselves and we left.”

Despite her disdain towards Armstrong, Andreu still maintains some sympathy for the fallen cyclist.

“On one hand, there is some compassion, because I don't think he ever healed the child within. And it made him this diabolical person that he is today,” Andreu said.

Armstrong has repeatedly denied the use of performance enhancing drugs or what has become more commonly known as doping. NBC News has reached out to Armstrong and is waiting for a comment.

Editor’s Note: Harry Smith’s full report, ‘Strong-Armed’ airs tonight Oct. 25 at 10pm/9c on NBC’s Rock Center with Brian Williams
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