Saturday, July 17, 2010
© Copyright 2013
Albany Herald
CHAMBERY, France -- Lance Armstrong said this week he will cooperate with a "fair investigation" but not a "witch hunt" into allegations that he and his former cycling team were involved in doping.
Armstrong was responding to reports of a federal investigation of possible fraud and doping charges against him and former associates. He spoke before the 10th stage of the Tour de France, where he is 31st overall.
The New York Times reported that authorities have issued grand jury subpoenas to witnesses as part of the probe into allegations made by American cyclist Floyd Landis.
Landis, who was stripped of his 2006 Tour title for doping, said the use of banned substances was common on the US Postal team when he rode with Armstrong.
"Like I said, as long as we have a legitimate and credible and fair investigation, we'll be happy to cooperate, but I'm not going to participate in any kind of witch hunt," the seven-time Tour de France winner and cancer survivor said. "I've done too many good things for too many people."
Armstrong said he had not been subpoenaed or contacted by lead investigator Jeff Novitzky. He said he wasn't aware of any riders who have been subpoenaed.
Armstrong said stories are being leaked to the media as part of an "agenda" against him and questioned the need for a federal probe.
"Would the American people feel like this is a good use of their tax dollars?" he said. "That's for them to decide."
Armstrong has said that Landis, who recently admitted to doping after years of denials, cannot be believed. He also said he didn't believe that other riders had come forward with similar allegations.
"I don't think the government will build a case on Floyd Landis," said Armstrong, who has never tested positive for use of banned substances. "His credibility left a long time ago."
Armstrong said the allegations should be investigated by the international cycling body, UCI, or the World Anti-Doping Agency.
"If you think that you have an athlete that's broken the rules -- this is not baseball, this is not football ... we have a governing body to deal with that," he said. "I have had 500 (doping) controls in my day. USADA deals with that, the UCI deals with that. WADA deals with that. We have an agency to deal with that. I have no problem playing by those rules."
Armstrong repeatedly has denied any involvement in doping and says he cannot be any clearer about his stance.
More like this story
- TOUR DE FRANCE: LeMond camp on Armstrong's doping: 'We hope truth comes out' ( July 17, 2010 )
- Shamed cyclist Landis drops a bombshell --- on Lance Armstrong ( May 20, 2010 )
- Lance Armstrong loses Tour de France titles, banned from cycling (UPDATED) ( August 25, 2012 )
- UCI responds to Landis accusations: You, sir, are a liar ( May 25, 2010 )
- Doping scandal may hurt Lance Armstrong foundation ( August 3, 2010 )


Comments
Use the comment form below to begin a discussion about this content.
Sign in to comment
Or login with:
OpenID