Steroids in Baseball

Mar
31

“Poster Boy” of Steroids in Baseball May Not Testify Against Barry Bonds

The government may not call former baseball player Bobby Estalella to testify against homerun king Barry Bonds in his perjury trial. Estalella is the only baseball player on the government’s witness list with direct knowledge of Barry Bonds’ steroid use. Estalella was once identified as the “poster boy of the chemicals” in the “Mitchell Report” (officially known as the “Report to the Commissioner of Baseball of an Independent Investigation into the Illegal Use of Steroids and Other Performance Enhancing Substances by Players in Major League Baseball”).

The government’s apparent decision to scrap Estalella from the witness list is somewhat surprising as many observers felt that he could provide the “most damaging testimony” regarding Barry Bonds awareness of knowingly using anabolic steroids. Bonds has stated under oath that he never knowingly used anabolic steroids.

According to court documents, Estalella, unlike other baseball players testifying, was expected to testify that Bonds “admitted using performance-enhancing drugs and that had several discussions regarding that topic” with him. [Read more…]

Mar
30

Four Baseball Players Testify Received Steroids from Barry Bonds Personal Trainer

Four current and former Major League Baseball players have testified that they received performance-enhancing drugs from Barry Bonds personal trainer. The government hopes that the baseball players’ testimony will help convince a jury that Barry Bonds lied to a 2003 grand jury when he told them he did not knowingly use anabolic steroids or human growth hormone (hGH).

Colorado Rockies Jason Giambi,  former San Francisco Giants Marvin Benard, former Oakland A’s players Jeremy Giambi and Randy Velarde testified that they received steroids and hGH from Greg Anderson, Bonds’ personal trainer. None of the four players testifying had direct knowledge of Bonds use of performance-enhancing drugs. The government hopes they can plant the idea of guilt by association in the mind of the jury. [Read more…]

Mar
29

Barry Bonds Former Girlfriend May Have Lied Under Oath About His Testicular Size

Barry Bonds former girlfriend provide lurid testimony about the size and shape of Barry Bonds testicles in federal court this week as one of the government’s star witnesses. Kimberly Bell testified that Bond’s testicles shrunk at one point during their nine-year relationship.

Testicular atrophy is a well-known side effect of anabolic steroids. However, observation of changes in testicular size by a third-party may be less-than-accurate.

Cristina Arguedas, one of Barry Bonds’ attorneys, pointed out to Judge Susan Illston that Bell provided contradictory testimony this week concerning Barry Bonds’ ball size. Bell apparently told the grand jury investigating the BALCO steroid scandal that Bonds testicles shrunk “by half”. Bell acknowledged during the current Bonds perjury trial that, while his testicles became smaller, they did not shrink as much as she claimed during her grand jury testimony. [Read more…]

Mar
26

Barry Bonds Enlarged Head Size and Expert Testimony

Federal prosecutors called Larry Bowers as their expert witness to testify on the side effects of anabolic steroids and human growth hormone during the first week of the Barry Bonds perjury trial. Barry Bonds is on trial for lying under oath about knowingly using performance enhancing drugs (PEDs) such as anabolic steroids and human growth hormone.

Larry Bowers is the Chief Science Officer of the United States Anti-Doping Agency (USADA); he is an expert in analytical chemistry and drug testing. Although Bowers is not a medical doctor and has never seen a patient nor treated a single patient with steroid-related side effects, he was chosen as the prosecution’s authority on medical side effects related to PEDs. [Read more…]

Mar
25

Sally Jenkins of Washington Post Critical of Overcriminalization of Steroids

As the first week of the Barry Bonds perjury trial comes to an end, increasing number of newspaper columnists have started criticizing the government for its witch-hunt of Bonds. The pursuit of Barry Bonds is not only a colossal waste of taxpayer funds but also fundamentally misguided in its pursuit of so-called justice.

Sally Jenkins, of the Washington Post, is one of the few journalists who has consistently been critical of the steroid hysteria that has permeated American culture over the past decade. She has been an outspoken critique of the government’s witch-hunt and its pursuit of celebrity athletes. Jenkins recently penned an article that not only condemned the prosecution of Barry Bonds but also the “overcriminalization” of steroid laws. [Read more…]

Mar
24

New York Daily News Stops Government from Making Big Mistake in Barry Bonds Trial

Teri Thompson of the New York Daily News reported late yesterday that a government witness scheduled to testify in the Barry Bonds perjury trial had previously called the government’s star witness a liar.  Former BALCO vice president Jim Valente called government agent Jeff Novitzky a liar in a sworn affidavit made in November 2004. If Valente testified, it would open the door for Bonds’ lawyers to undermine the credibility of Novitzky. The government, in a last minute move this morning, removed Valente from the witness list suggesting that government prosecutors had failed to account for this possibility. Thompson apparently saved the government from making a major blunder in their court case. [Read more…]

Mar
18

Barry Bonds: Guilty By Association According to Government

The federal government is doing everything is can to convince a California jury that former baseball superstar Barry Bonds knowingly used anabolic steroids and lied about it under oath during his grand jury testimony. The long-awaited Bonds perjury trial, officially named the United States of America v. Barry Bonds, begins next week. The prosecution’s case against Bonds isn’t particularly strong for a federal case but after spending over $60 million pursuing Bonds in their witch-hunt, they can’t very well give up now.

The government had counted on the testimony of Greg Anderson, Bonds’ long-time friend and personal trainer, as being the crucial nail in the coffin for a conviction of Bonds. They didn’t count on Anderson’s refusal to give into the government’s shameful intimidation tactics and his willingness to go to jail rather than testify in the witch-hunt against Bonds.

Prosecutors are hoping they can convince the jury of guilt by association since Anderson provided steroids to other players. [Read more…]

Mar
17

Judge Rules Rejects Voice Messages As Evidence of Steroid Use in Barry Bonds Trial

United States District Judge Susan Illston rejected the government argument that profanity-filled voice messages proved Barry Bonds suffered from “roid rage” caused by his use of steroids. Government prosecutors had wanted to use a series of eleven voice messages left by baseball home run champion Barry Bonds for his mistress as supporting evidence of steroid use. The messages made no references to anabolic steroids or performance-enhancing drugs nor did they mention BALCO or anyone else implicated in the BALCO/baseball steroid scandal.  [Read more…]

Mar
11

Leaving Angry Voice Mails for Girlfriend is a Sign of Steroid Use

Government prosecutors want to use a series of eleven voice messages left by baseball home run champion Barry Bonds for his mistress as supporting evidence of steroid use. Former Playboy model Kimberley Bell collected the eleven voice mails over the course of a decade between 1994 and 2003. Bonds does not admit to using steroids nor are steroids ever discussed. Instead, Bonds allegedly sounds irritated in the voice mails that he could not reach Bell. Since Bonds was irritated, he must have used steroids, right? The government wants to introduce the voice messages to bolster their argument that Bonds knowingly used steroids and lied about it under oath. [Read more…]

Mar
08

Nike and Government to Create New Shoe That Detects Steroid Use

The United States government has called upon the shoe experts at Nike to prove to a jury that baseball superstar Barry Bonds used anabolic steroids. Has Nike created a new anti-doping shoe that detects steroid use when a doped athlete wears them? Well, not exactly. The federal government has subpoenaed a Nike employee to talk about Bonds’ feet. The employee has inside knowledge about the shoes that Bonds wore and is expected to testify that Bonds went from a smaller to a larger shoe size.

Why are Barry Bonds’ feet relevant? Is the government trying to win over a jury by hoping they have certain fetishes? Foot size? Testicle size? Head size? What else? Why not speculate about Bonds’ nipples too? Certainly, they could throw in that body part justifying it with the link between steroids and gynecomastia! Seriously, this type of testimony is about the best the government has to offer in the Barry Bonds steroids-perjury trial. [Read more…]