Bill Stapleton, Armstrong's longtime agent, and Barton Knaggs, Armstrong's longtime business partner, have agreed to pay $500,000 to the United States government and $100,000 to the law office of Floyd Landis's attorney as part of a conditional settlement in the whistleblower lawsuit brought by Landis. The US government has until January 30 to decide whether it will agree to the settlement.
Former Armstrong team-mate, Floyd Landis, filed his suit in 2010, with the US government joining the action last year. Landis is accusing Armstrong and others of defrauding the US government when Armstrong was riding for the US Postal Service (USPS) cycling team.
Under the False Claims Act, Landis, as the whistleblower who brought the case, would be eligible for a cut of any damages and those named in the lawsuit could potentially have to repay up to three times the $31 million the team received in sponsorship from the US Postal Service from 1999 to 2004.
However, USA Today reports that Stapleton, Knaggs and their agency, Capital Sports & Entertainment, could be released from the action in exchange for combined payments of $500,000 to the government and $100,000 to Landis’s attorney, Paul Scott.
If approved, the case would continue against Armstrong and Tailwind Sports – the company that managed the USPS cycling team, where both Stapleton and Knaggs served as executives.
While the federal government did not name Stapleton and Knaggs as defendants in its complaint, it will still have to approve the settlement after Landis named them in his. In court documents, the government said:
"The settlement agreement would require the dismissal of the action against the Settling Defendants, which, under the False Claims Act, requires the written consent of the Attorney General of the United States.
“The United States will require time to review the proposed settlement agreement, acquire necessary additional information from (Landis) and Settling Defendants, evaluate whether the settlement terms are in the interest of the United States, inform the officials within the Department of Justice who have authority to act in the circumstances, and obtain the necessary authorization to state the Government's position regarding the proposed settlement."
Landis, who went on to win the Tour de France with Phonak in 2006 – only to be stripped of the title after testing positive for elevated levels of testosterone – eventually confessed to doping in May 2010 after years of denial.
Cyclists shouldn't have to put up with this behaviour from motorists or the police. Appalling.
Well, I've watched the video and I didn't see anyone in it who would likely to be offended....
This is a pretty known value. In general any aero bike will be around 20W faster over round tubed bike in the wind tunnel at 40 km/h....
illegal numberplate too...
Councils aren't responsible for the roads in Northern Ireland. This remit falls in the hands of The Department for Infrastructure who answer to a...
What a disgusting comment. Perhaps he should have to meet with the families of some victims of poor driving.
Trump probably can't understand that the revenue from congestion pricing is going towards upgrading the transit system. Somebody could maybe draw a...
next up Colin (84) from Chapel Allerton complained that there were no machines to pay for parking and although he is perfectly competent to handle...
So who in cycling is going to make any money out of this particular deal? Will the money being generated by TNTs greed go to any cycling group or...
Are we really meant to believe the cyclist punched off one wing mirror, jumped off his bike, ran around the other side to punch off the other, and...