Archive for the ‘Steroids News’ Category

Lance Cade DEAD. Due to steroids?

Lance McNaught, a wrestler for World Wrestling Entertainment, died at age 29 on Friday from what is believed to be heart failure.

McNaught, nicknamed Lance Cade and Garrison Cade during different tenures, signed with the WWE in 2000 and was released from his contract in 2008.

McNaught was a three-time World Tag Team Champion over five years with WWE and was scheduled to headline a pro wrestling show at Sumo Hall in Tokyo, Japan on Aug. 29.

He has two daughters and a stepson.

For anyone who has been following, it is noted that he was taking pain killers along with a variety of steroids, but have not seen them listed.  This is a just 1 of many wrestlers who have died because of this problem that has to do with wrestling.   It should also be noted that the stress these guys are under, they travel year round, and there bodys are beat up everynight.  Steroids may have been part of the problem but it can not be blamed for the bigger problems this company has.

Balco Steroid Investigation.

A federal appeals court upheld the perjury convictions Thursday of champion cyclist Tammy Thomas, the first athlete charged with lying to a federal grand jury in the BALCO steroids investigation – the same charges now pending against former San Francisco Giants superstar Barry Bonds.

Thomas, who won a silver medal at the world cycling championships in 2001, was convicted of four felony charges based on her November 2003 grand jury testimony that she had never taken steroids. A federal judge in San Francisco sentenced her to six months of house arrest in 2008.

Bonds, baseball’s all-time home run leader, is awaiting trial in San Francisco on charges of lying to the same grand jury.

The panel was investigating the Bay Area Laboratory Co-Operative’s distribution of performance-enhancing drugs to athletes. BALCO’s founder, Victor Conte, and four others later pleaded guilty to dealing steroids. Track coach Trevor Graham, track star Marion Jones and former 49ers and Raiders lineman Dana Stubblefield were convicted of lying to investigators looking into BALCO.

Thomas was banned from competitive cycling for life in 2002 after testing positive for steroids. Federal agents said her supplier was Patrick Arnold, an Illinois chemist who designed undetectable drugs that BALCO distributed to other athletes. Arnold pleaded guilty in 2006.

Thomas’ perjury convictions were based on her denials that she had ever gotten any products from Arnold except for one legal drug, that she had ever taken anything Arnold gave her, and that she had ever taken anabolic steroids.

In her appeal, her lawyer argued that her answers were all literally true. The products were actually supplied by Arnold’s girlfriend, Arnold never “gave” Thomas anything she didn’t pay for, and the drugs she took were not on the list of legally banned steroids when she took them, the defense said.

The Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco was unpersuaded. The court cited testimony that Thomas had contacted Arnold asking for steroids, and said the jury had been entitled to conclude that he “gave” – that is, supplied – her with substances that expert witnesses described as anabolic steroids.

Judge Jay Bybee wrote the 3-0 ruling. Thomas’ lawyer was unavailable for comment

Man gets 8 months Steroid Charges.

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) – A Lakeland man claiming involvement in the sale of steroids to professional athletes has been sentenced to eight months in federal prison.

A U.S. district judge sentenced 36-year-old Richard Andrew Thomas on Wednesday. He pleaded guilty in November to possession of steroids with intent to distribute. He could have faced up to five years in prison, but Thomas received leniency after helping build a case against 50-year-old Douglas Owen Nagel. Thomas told authorities that the Virginia chiropractor sold steroids to professional athletes, including players for the Washington Capitals hockey team and the Washington Nationals baseball team.

Thomas also told authorities about a Polk County corrections officer selling steroids. The female officer was prosecuted in state court.

Pharmacy case Judge chides prosecutor.

A federal judge in Florida has chastised prosecutors for overstepping their bounds in seizing the property of an Orlando pharmacy that the government claimed provided steroids to professional athletes.

U.S. District Judge Gregory Presnell on Thursday ordered prosecutors to return everything in their possession to Signature Compounding Pharmacy.

In February 2007, law-enforcement officers raided the company’s central Florida offices and seized hundreds of thousands of patient prescriptions, all of the company’s electronic data and many drugs and financial records.

Prosecutors in Albany, N.Y., had accused the pharmacy of being in the center of a steroid network. A judge in 2008 dismissed the New York charges and prohibited prosecutors from pursuing additional charges.

WWE CEO linda Mcmahon. “We do not no the long term side effects of steroids”

Former WWE CEO Linda McMahon, the presumptive Republican candidate for Senate in Connecticut, once ran a business that was plagued by steroid scandals. But she tells Business Week that she’s doesn’t believe the drugs are necessarily bad.

According to Business Week, the WWE, which McMahon ran along with her husband (an admitted former steroids user), has been subject to congressional investigations over steroids for years.

When I asked Linda McMahon about the issue, however, she said she shared her husband’s doubts. “There’s some evidence sometimes of muscle disease, or cardiac disease, but it’s really hard to know because you didn’t know the condition of the performer’s heart, or whatever, prior to,” she told me. “So I still don’t think we know the long-term effects of steroids. They are continuing to study it more and more, but I don’t believe there are a lot of studies out there today that are conclusive.”

Dems run from Ill. gov’s running mate, an unknown with steroid use, abuse allegations in past

CHICAGO (AP) — Just when Illinois was starting to move on from the scandals of ousted Gov. Rod Blagojevich, along comes Scott Lee Cohen.

After the political unknown managed to win the Democratic nomination for lieutenant governor Tuesday, it became widely known that he was accused of abusing his ex-wife and holding a knife to the throat of an ex-girlfriend — a woman who was herself charged with prostitution. He also admits using steroids in the past.

Democratic leaders hadn’t considered Cohen a threat to win and didn’t highlight his past during the campaign. Now they’re alarmed that Cohen could drag down the ticket he shares with Gov. Pat Quinn.

He is refusing demands that he step out of the race; if he doesn’t, Quinn might have to change parties to sever Cohen’s political aspirations from his own.

Quinn already was facing a tough Republican challenge, and with a similarly tight U.S. Senate race expected, the stakes could extend beyond the state offices for Illinois Democrats.

“It really puts all of us in jeopardy,” said U.S. Rep. Danny Davis, D-Ill.

Cohen, a pawnbroker and owner of a cleaning supplies company, ran against several veteran politicians but spent $2 million — mostly his own money — on his campaign, more than twice as much as all his opponents combined.

He gained strong name recognition with a flurry of advertising featuring people who said they got jobs at employment fairs he held. He organized three in Chicago during the past eight months to a year, he said.

“Only one candidate for lieutenant governor is holding job fairs in Illinois,” intoned a moderator in his ads.

Despite the money Cohen pumped into his ads, Democrats and political watchers didn’t pay attention to his past because he was considered a longshot. Quinn said he knew nothing about the allegations against Cohen until after Tuesday’s primary.

Cohen was arrested in 2005 on domestic battery charges for allegedly pushing his then-girlfriend’s head against a wall and holding a knife to her throat. The charges were dropped when she failed to show up for a court date.

The Chicago Tribune reported police records show the woman had been arrested for prostitution. Cohen told Chicago’s WTTW-TV that he met her at a “massage therapy place” and believed she was a masseuse.

Cohen has denied hitting the woman and called their relationship “tumultuous.”

“I never tried to cut her throat,” he said on WTTW.

Cohen also has denied ever abusing his ex-wife, Debbie York-Cohen. When she filed for divorce in 2005, she sought an order of protection against him and has said his violence was fueled by anabolic steroids. Cohen admits the steroid use.

“I never touched any woman,” he told Chicago’s WLS-TV on Thursday. “That’s not my style, that’s not me.”

Cohen’s campaign did not respond to requests for interviews from The Associated Press.

Cohen points out that he disclosed his arrest before he announced his candidacy and it was written about by the Chicago Sun-Times in March 2009.

His win leaves Democrats with little public recourse except pleading with Cohen to give up the campaign.

“If I was to say anything I would go back to the Bible: Let us reason together or else we might all be destroyed by the edge of the sword,” Davis said.

U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin said Cohen needs to step aside and the people he trusts politically need to make that clear to him.

“Mr. Cohen is not going to be the lieutenant governor,” said Durbin, who chastised the party and the media for not doing a better job vetting candidates.

But as it currently stands, as Cohen goes, so goes Quinn. Illinois voters pick party nominees for governor and lieutenant governor separately, but they run on a single ticket in the general election.

Quinn, who inherited the job after Blagojevich’s ouster following federal corruption charges, already is vulnerable after barely eking out a narrow primary victory and facing a tough challenge from Republicans in November.

Quinn had not talked to Cohen as of Friday and the campaign was “looking at every option,” said Quinn spokeswoman Elizabeth Austin.

“Mr. Cohen has said publicly that if he is persuaded that the people think he should leave the ballot that he would leave voluntarily and that would certainly be the best option for all concerned,” Austin said.

Durbin and Davis dismissed the idea of trying to get President Barack Obama’s help in defusing yet another embarrassing political problem in his home state, after the Blagojevich scandal and the dustup over Blagojevich’s nomination of Roland Burris for Obama’s old Senate said.

“First and foremost we should take care of our own problems. We don’t need to go to 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue to find a solution here,” Durbin said.

Cohen’s brother Randy said his brother is being unfairly attacked.

“Scott Cohen is very smart and very underestimated. He wants to help people. Scott is a very honest person,” he said.

If Cohen voluntarily resigns from the ticket, he would be replaced on the ballot by state party leaders. If he doesn’t, Durbin and others say Quinn can consider the possibility of running without him by leaving the Democratic Party.

It’s happened before. In 1986, Democrat Adlai Stevenson III created the Illinois Solidarity Party to avoid running with a lieutenant governor candidate who was a follower of frequent presidential candidate Lyndon LaRouche. Stevenson lost to Republican Gov. Jim Thompson.

Democratic state Rep. John Fritchey said the choices are bad ones for Quinn.

“Pat undeservedly finds himself in a situation where there’s two options which both likely lead to a loss — one being running with Cohen and two being running on a new party,” he said. “We’ve seen this movie before.”

___

Associated Press writers Sophia Tareen in Chicago and John O’Connor in Springfield contributed to this report.

(This version CORRECTS Cohen’s ex-wife’s name to York-Cohen.)

Source: latimes.com/news

Steroids involved in arrest

Police arrested a North Liberty man Thursday after drugs, including steroids, and related paraphernalia were found in his residence in November.

According to criminal complaints, a state of Iowa narcotics search warrant was executed on Nov. 28 at 1572 Vandello Circle, the residence of 37-year-old Troy T. Cooper.

Police said they found a small baggie containing a substance that later tested positive for methamphetamine in Cooper’s room, as well as 15 50-mg steroid doses.

Police said they also recovered syringes, a marijuana grinder and a digital scale as well as pipes, or “tooters,” with burnt residue.

Cooper admitted the meth and steroids belonged to him, police said.

Cooper has been charged with two counts of possession of a controlled substance and possession of drug paraphernalia.

He remained in the Johnson County Jail on a $4,500 cash-only bond.

Source:press-citizen.com

Steroids’ shadow is AP Sports Story of the Year

Alex Rodriguez joined the list of cheaters this year, and Manny Ramirez and David “Big Papi” Ortiz are forever tainted now, too.

Five years after Major League Baseball added punishments to its testing program, questions about performance-enhancing drugs still swirl around America’s favorite pastime. The sport’s ongoing drug problem was chosen as the 2009 Story of the Year by members of The Associated Press, outmuscling even the shocking downfall of Tiger Woods.

“The impact that that story had made it the story of the year,” said Lance Hanlin, sports editor of the Beaufort (S.C.) Gazette and The (Hilton Head) Island Packet. “It was a big, ongoing, overall story.”

In fact, the Woods scandal finished fifth in the top story voting. Jimmie Johnson’s unprecedented fourth straight NASCAR championship was second, followed by Roger Federer winning his 15th Grand Slam and Brett Favre ending his (second) retirement to lead the Minnesota Vikings to the division title.

This year’s balloting was unusual in that a major story — Woods’ accident on Nov. 27 and the salacious revelations that followed — happened after voting had started.

By then, 37 of 161 ballots had been submitted by editors at U.S. newspapers which are members of the AP. The voters were asked to rank the top 10 sports stories of the year, with the first-place story getting 10 points, the second-place story receiving nine points, and so on.

Given the extraordinary nature of the Woods story, the AP added it to the top stories ballot Nov. 30 and gave editors who had voted prior to that the chance to submit a new ballot, which about 10 did.

“I think it’s transcended sports in general. It’s become a national story,” said Phil Kaplan, the deputy sports editor at the Knoxville (Tenn.) News Sentinel, who changed his vote to place the Woods’ scandal ahead of baseball’s drug woes.

“He’s such a figure in sports that people are interested,” Kaplan added. “People who don’t follow sports are following this story.”

Nonetheless, the final tally had the steroids story with 800 points to 617 points for Woods’ travails. And even if only the votes cast after the Woods’ scandal broke were counted, editors still picked the steroid scourge as the year’s top story.

Voters who included the Woods saga on their list, however, were more likely to make it their top item: His downfall received 41 first-place votes compared with 27 for the steroids crisis.

Though only one major leaguer tested positive for a performance-enhancing drug in this, the first full year under toughened rules, baseball still finds itself trapped in the clutches of the Steroid Era.

Spring training began with A-Rod, the highest-paid player in the game and one of its biggest stars, admitting that he used banned substances from 2001-2003 while playing for the Texas Rangers. Initially greeted with boos and foam syringes by some fans, the taunts quieted as he and the New York Yankees steamrolled their way to a 27th World Series title.

But he will forever be linked to Barry Bonds, Mark McGwire and Sammy Sosa — and not only because of their place on baseball’s home run list.

In May, Ramirez was suspended for 50 games after baseball obtained records that showed the Los Angeles Dodgers slugger used the female fertility drug HCG, or human chorionic gonadotropin. HCG is popular among steroid users because it can mitigate the side effects of ending a cycle of the drugs.

The summer brought reports that Ortiz and Sosa were on the infamous “list,” 104 players who federal prosecutors allege tested positive in baseball’s anonymous 2003 survey.

Sosa’s inclusion was hardly a surprise. Neither he nor McGwire, the stars of baseball’s great home run race in 1998, have ever admitted using performance-enhancing drugs. But people have been suspicious of them for years, and their appearances at that Congressional hearing in 2005 did nothing to change that.

Ortiz, though, was considered one of baseball’s good guys, his size, smile and cute nickname making him seem more teddy bear than surly slugger.

Ortiz said he may have been careless in buying over-the-counter supplements and vitamins, but he insisted he’s never knowingly used performance-enhancing drugs. And because the results of that 2003 survey were supposed to be anonymous and are now under seal, there’s no way to know whether Ortiz actually tested positive or, if he did test positive, whether it was for steroids or a substance contained in a supplement.

Miguel Tejada finally ‘fessed up to buying HGH — he still says he threw the drugs away — and became the first high-profile player to be convicted of a crime stemming from the steroids mess. He was sentenced to a year of probation after pleading guilty in federal court to misleading Congress about the use of performance-enhancing drugs.

Bonds and Roger Clemens remain in limbo, their legal cases related to performance-enhancing drugs working their way through the system.

Baseball is in a sort of limbo, too, unable to shake the taint of drugs no matter how often it tests its players or how many suspensions it hands out.

“Too bad for him, too bad for baseball. Too bad for both,” New York Yankees star Derek Jeter said this summer when the news about Ortiz surfaced. “I’m sad for everyone. Once again, we’re sitting here talking about this again.”

source: google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5hJLF6w5fiugnRbhmc83vrZotjmkwD9CP94SG1

Pacquiao Peeved Over Mayweather’s Accusations Filipino Used Performance Enhancers

pacquiaoAHN Sports Staff

U.S (AHN) – After the highly-publicized squabble on the doping test, Manny Pacquiao fired back on the Floyd Mayweather’s steroid accusations, leading to a possible legal battle between two camps.

Pacquiao, widely recognized as the best fighter in the world, said he is all fed up by accusations he has been taking steroids as part of his regimen.

Everything was set for the highly-touted bout between two of the era’s best fighters, but hit a snag due to one costly fight detail.

Mayweather wanted to employ Olympic-style drug testing that will be facilitated by the U.S Anti-Doping Agency, but Pacquaio did not agree to the stipulation.

The Olympic-style drug testing requires the athletes to have a random drug testing through blood samples during the training camp, a week before the fight, and at fight night.

Pacquiao insisted that the drug testing being conducted by the Nevada commission is enough to determine boxers are free from using performance-enhancing drugs such as steroids.

Weeks before the Cotto fight, Floyd Mayweather Sr. spoke in an interview alleging Pacquiao of using steroids in every fight.

Pacquiao said he has heard enough and plans to file a libel suits against Mayweather Jr and Golden Boy Promotions CEO Richard Schaefer.

HBO endorsed Sen. John McCain to serve as the mediator on the drug testing issues but talks between the two camps are at an impasse.

Top-Rank head honcho Bob Arum said that he has been working out an alternative fight for Pacquiao on March 13.

Former Jr. Welterweight champion Paul Malignaggi, the newest challenger for Pacman’s WBO welterweight title, is a possible opponent.

The fight considered as the most lucrative bout in boxing history may never happen, at least in the ring.

Because in the next few the two fighters could attend another expensive battle, this time in court.

Via: allheadlinenews.com

1 in 4 Soldiers Abuse Prescription Drugs!

soldiers-drugsA health survey by the Pentagon released last week reportedly indicated that one in four soldiers admitted to abusing prescription drugs over a one year period.

The survey consisted of more than 28,500 respondents composed of U.S. troops and was conducted last year. The results of the study also showed that about 20% of Marines abused prescription drugs, mostly painkillers.

The results of the study may indeed be indicative of the toll that fighting in multiple wars may be taking on the United States military. It is not uncommon for someone in the service to be sent to multiple combat deployments.

Brig. Gen. Colleen McGuire, the Director of the Army Suicide Prevention Task Force, was quoted as saying: “We are aware that more prescription drugs are being used today for pain management and behavioral health issues. These areas of substance abuse along with increased use of alcohol concern us.”

The survey reportedly showed prescription drugs as the most abused substance in the military. Next in line are marijuana and amphetamines; prescription drugs, though, are said to be used at triple the rate of the other two.

Army Surgeon General Lt. Gen. Eric Schoomaker has created a task force that will be reviewing the pain management practices being followed by those in the service. The Army will also be expanding programs related to the treatment and education of soldiers regarding drug abuse.

source: http://hometestingblog.testcountry.com/

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