Jeff Novitzky, the US Food & Drug Administration (FDA) Special Agent currently leading an investigation into alleged doping within professional cycling centred around Lance Armstrong, is reported to be visiting France’s anti-doping agency, the AFLD, this week.
The news has intensified speculation that last week’s raid by Italian law enforcement officials of the home of RadioShack rider Yaroslav Popovych may be linked to the ongoing enquiry in the United States.
Earlier this month, Popovych testified on penalty of perjury that he had never seen evidence of doping while riding for RadioShack, or previously at the Astana or Discovery Channel teams. The Ukrainian rode alongside Armstrong at all three teams.
According to an Associated Press report quoted on the CBS News website, an unnamed source has confirmed that a US delegation, said to include Novitzky, U.S. federal prosecutor Doug Miller, and Travis Tygart, CEO of the US Anti-Doping Agency, have already arrived in France ahead of the meeting.
Pierre Brodry, until recently head of the AFLD, has previously said that the agency would be prepared to hand over samples of Armstrong’s urine collected during the 1999 edition of the Tour de France, which marked the first of the Texan’s seven overall victories in the race, if US investigators requested them.
In 2005, the French sports daily L’Equipe made allegations that traces of EPO had been found in urine samples taken from the then US Postal Service rider at the 1999 Tour, although world cycling’s governing body, the UCI, subsequently cleared Armstrong of any wrongdoing.
The seven times Tour de France champion has consistently denied allegations of using performance-enhancing substances.
However, he has come increasingly under the spotlight since Floyd Landis, stripped of the 2006 Tour de France title for doping, publicly made detailed allegations in May this year of what he described as widespread doping within the USPS team when he rode for it, including against Armstrong himself.
Commenting on the prospect of investigators obtaining the 1999 samples, Mark Fabiani, counsel for Lance Armstrong, stated in an email to road.cc: "The samples were clean when originally provided and tested. So we have nothing to be concerned about. Period."
I have said before that a driving ban needs to be treated like a suspended sentence, breaching that ban should automatically result in jail time...
It may have been a long time ago in a galaxy far, far away, but that doesn't change logic. Or are you saying the Dark Side is seriously...
I've had to put my wellies and gloves back on again ... but perhaps a thoughtful consideration of the following would be helpful for those - with a...
just get a usb rechargeable light grandad
If you'd read it a bit more carefully you'll see that it also requires each new home to have at least three parking spaces. So it shouldn't be a...
It took me ages to make sense of the story, because the bit about having bike parking is irrelevant to the issue about access. ...
But how on earth do you expect people to know that's not allowed?...
Man flees after crashing into grade II listed Dorset home https://www.bournemouthecho.co.uk/news/24263845.man-flees-crashing-grade...
If plod can't get through their in their cars, then criminals will use it to evade them because heaven forbid the police should patrol on foot or...
The questions would be "who / what do the rules serve? What are we willing to pay / accept to maintain or enforce them?"...