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marion jones
Posted: 13 October 2007 03:38 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 91 ]  
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Another Marion Story. This one from Austin News:

Marion Jones in more legal trouble

Olympic champ Marion Jones is in more legal trouble.

The Austin resident has been ordered to pay a former University of Texas coach thousands, but Jones says she's nearly broke.

It's been more than a year since a judge ordered the Olympian to pay former UT coach Dan Pfaff a quarter of a million dollars.

On Wednesday, the attorney for Pfaff told CBS 42, Jones was served a writ of execution.

What that means is she has to pay up or her stuff will be seized.

They wanted her Olympic medals, but she already gave them back to the international Olympic Committee.

"Those could have been used to satisfy Coach Pfaff's judgment if Miss Jones weren't so selfish," says Skip Davis, attorney for Dan Pfaff. "And saw fit, too, to satisfy her legal obligations rather than just give them over to a different organization."

Earlier in the day we watched someone move Jones' Audi sedan out of the garage and back in again, this happened shortly after the writ was served.

This started back in 2006 when the five-time Olympic medalist hired Pfaff as a coach. He reportedly was paid $100,000. Jones later sued to get that money back.

She lost and that's when a judge told her to cough up another $250,000.

"He'd like to be paid," Davis said. "He did his job. He had nothing to do with any of the things Ms. Jones got herself involved with Balco he has no knowledge of it."

Last week Jones made a public admission that she lied to federal investigators looking into steroid use.

"I want you to know I have been dishonest," she said. "And you have the right to be angry with me."

Jones has said she's nearly broke, and had to sell two homes just to make ends meet. The constable was told Jones had nothing of value. That's why no property was seized.

Jones retired from competing and is getting ready to face prison time, for lying to investigators.

She'll find out how much time in January. 

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Posted: 13 October 2007 09:30 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 92 ]  
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Marion sued for breach of contract right?

Did Pfaff bow out from coaching her once he realized she was a doper?

Funny how her other coach, Riddick, noticed it is odd to see someone broke drive their Porsche to the track everyday.

Does anyone REALLY believe FloJo was clean??? 

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Posted: 13 October 2007 09:56 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 93 ]  
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I am pretty sure I will get a raft of sh*t about this,,,,,,,but I believe that the 1988 were so dirty that both IOC and IAAF were at a loss what to do.  They could have nailed a huge number of famous performers who were the face of the sport.  I think that offialdom felt that if all dirty athletes had been exposed/disqualified both the sport and the Olympic movement would have suffered enormous, possibly irreparable, damage.  What to do?  Well, they had to demonstrate some sort of toughness.  Who to disqualify?  For political reasons, not an American and not a Communist Bloc athlete.  Hey, here's an idea --- dump the Canadian, nobody cares about them.  And Canadians are too polite to bitch about it.  There you have it.  BTW, I am not Canadian.  :biggrin:  Just my opinion, no proof.

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Posted: 13 October 2007 10:08 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 94 ]  
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ex400, that wouldn't be the first time where an athlete that is the face of a sport could have been busted and I am sure it will happen again.

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Posted: 14 October 2007 10:54 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 95 ]  
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ex400 - 13 October 2007 09:56 PM

I am pretty sure I will get a raft of sh*t about this,,,,,,,but I believe that the 1988 were so dirty that both IOC and IAAF were at a loss what to do.  They could have nailed a huge number of famous performers who were the face of the sport.  I think that offialdom felt that if all dirty athletes had been exposed/disqualified both the sport and the Olympic movement would have suffered enormous, possibly irreparable, damage.  What to do?  Well, they had to demonstrate some sort of toughness.  Who to disqualify?  For political reasons, not an American and not a Communist Bloc athlete.  Hey, here's an idea --- dump the Canadian, nobody cares about them.   And Canadians are too polite to beezneeatches about it.  There you have it.   BTW, I am not Canadian.  :biggrin:  Just my opinion, no proof.

I don't know about the conspiracy theory but I do think that doping was both much more prevalent in the 70s and 80s than it is now...the performances, especially on the women's side and in the field events largely back this up. I'd imagine that the IOC and all other governing bodies probably had their hands full (tied?) because it was so pervasive at the time and doping control was SOOOOO far behind. Also, it was an era in track when doping was only beginning to be strictly tested.

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Posted: 14 October 2007 10:59 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 96 ]  
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Until now, Jones had been steadfast in doping denials

http://www.usatoday.com/sports/olympics/2007-10-05-jones-analysis_N.htm

By Dick Patrick, USA TODAY
She said it loudly and for a long time. Marion Jones was as aggressive as any athlete in denying the use of performance-enhancing drugs. The greater the controversy, the more emphatic her denials.
She dared the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency to charge her in 2004, after the BALCO steroid scandal, and suggested they back off if they did not. She boasted she had never failed a test.

She took the offensive again in her 2004 autobiography, Marion Jones: Life in the Fast Lane. Taking up all of page 173 in large red letters, she wrote: I HAVE ALWAYS BEEN UNEQUIVOCAL IN MY OPINION: I AM AGAINST PERFORMANCE ENHANCING DRUGS. I HAVE NEVER TAKEN THEM AND I NEVER WILL TAKE THEM.

Now, though, Jones has said those denials are not true. Friday afternoon, she pleaded guilty to lying to federal investigators about her use of banned drugs from 1999 to 2001.

FIND MORE STORIES IN: Marion Jones | Olympic medals | THG
Her involvement with performance-enhancing drugs has turned out to be as described by Victor Conte, the founder of the Bay Area Laboratory Co-Operative, in late 2003.

Jones later sued him for $25 million for defamation before settling in 2005 without being paid.

"Marion Jones used performance-enhancing drugs before, during and after the 2000 Olympics and through the 2001 season," Conte, who spent four months in prison on BALCO-related charges, told USA TODAY on Thursday. "I don't feel any sense of vindication. I feel sad for Marion as well as all the other athletes associated with BALCO who were banned or had legal consequences. Marion's not a bad person.

"She's someone who made a mistake, much like myself, and now has to suffer the consequences for her poor decisions."

In court Friday, Jones said she thought she was taking flaxseed oil, as San Francisco Giants slugger Barry Bonds, another former BALCO client, was reported by the San Francisco Chronicle to have testified to a federal grand jury.

"Flaxseed oil is something often used to camouflage these drugs because they have a nasty taste," said Dr. Don Catlin, who was in charge of the UCLA Olympic Analytical Lab from 1982 to 2007. But Catlin added that now, some steroids, such as THG and norbolethone, can be detected during a urine test despite an attempt to disguise it with flaxseed oil. "She was taking designer steroids," Catlin said. "We don't know what she took. We've got to have the coordinates. If we don't know where to look, we're blind."

Jones, who this year married sprinter Obadele Thompson of Barbados, could have to forfeit more than her five Olympic medals and four medals from the world championships she earned in 1999-2001. It's possible the international track federation could seek reimbursement of prize money. Nike paid her hundreds of thousands in medal bonuses through the years.

"People ask me â?¦ if her achievements are tainted," Conte said. "In my opinion, the overwhelming majority of athletes Marion competed against in 2000 were also using performance-enhancing substances. So I believe she deserves the medals.

"We need to change the focus and put the spotlight upon Olympic governing body officials, owners of pro sports teams and players' union representatives â?? those that control the money in elite sport."

Catlin had mixed feelings about Jones' reported confession.

"I'm not exactly happy to know that I tested her many times and she passed," Catlin said. "We're never happy to know that we missed people because we miss people all the time. It's bittersweet because she always passed, but it's sweet because she finally confessed. The message is simple: Crime doesn't pay."

Jones, who turns 32 on Oct. 12, was a sprint prodigy. In 1991, after her sophomore year of high school, she took fourth in the USA Championships in the 200. She was fourth in the 200 at the '92 Olympic trials, declining a berth on the Olympic team as a relay alternate.

In college at North Carolina, she emphasized basketball more than track, starting as a freshman point guard on the 1994 team that won the NCAA title. Jones never won an NCAA track title. In 1997, after twice breaking her foot, she quit basketball and within four months won U.S. and world titles in the 100.

She had a brush with drugs while in high school in 1992. She missed an out-of-competition drug test â?? an overnight package informing her of the test was misplaced in her coach's office â?? but was exonerated in a hearing at which her representative was famed lawyer Johnnie Cochran.

Jones was linked to drugs in 2000, the year she won five medals at the Sydney Olympics â?? golds in the 100, 200 and 4x400 relay and bronzes in the long jump and 4x100.

Catlin doubts that urine samples from the Sydney Olympics are still available for re-testing.

During the Sydney Games, the news broke of Jones' then-husband, shot putter C.J. Hunter, testing positive for steroids.

The drug suspicions increased in 2003 after BALCO was raided and Jones was linked to Conte's operation. Jones hired high-priced attorneys and a public-relations team in the buildup to the 2004 Games, where she failed to medal.

She called USADA "a kangaroo court" and suggested a Senate hearing would be a good forum to prove her innocence.

When USADA banned athletes based on drug-use records obtained in the BALCO raid, Jones claimed the BALCO charts with her name weren't about drug schedules.

"I'm not going to sit down and let â?¦ an organization take away my livelihood because of a hunch," she said.

With the information in the federal case, USADA won't be relying on a hunch. Her own words could be evidence enough for a ban. The international track federation and the International Olympic Committee have precedent to remove her medals.

Jones could testify against Trevor Graham, her coach from 1997 to 2001 and the instigator of the BALCO case who gave drug testers a sample of the undetectable steroid THG. He's scheduled for trial in November for lying to federal investigators.

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Posted: 16 October 2007 05:25 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 97 ]  
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Mike Young - 08 October 2007 01:50 PM

Epelle-
Welcome to the board. Was that directed to anyone in particular? There weren't too many people around here who thought Marion was clean.

Hi Mike, not at all… just a general statement to whomever it was that said that was the stupidest thing they had ever read or heard.  Keep up the great work on this board.

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