My only concern would be establishing what the legal threshold was for a crime to have been committed. Length and scale of the doping? Amount of money accepted in prizes and endorsements? (If so, how to deal with high-profile amateur athletes on the track to the Olympics?)LaCroix wrote:That's one of the reasons why I'm in favor of a jail sentence for doping. It is fraud, plain and simple. Once it becomes clear that you not only face disqualification, but jail and lawsuits for refund of all sponsor money and prices won, sports will clean up quickly.
One thing this case has done is completely reverse my opinion of the USADA. After he was banned from cycling Armstrong tried to switch to triathlons, and was only stopped because his USADA ban meant he couldn't compete in any competition sanctioned by that body. Not every athlete will be able to just switch sports (Michael Jordan and baseball, anyone?), but as far as I can tell before the USADA you could be caught doping in one sport, switch, and basically get a clean sheet. There needs to be some mechanism to make sure that doesn't happen.