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Bonds testifies before grand jury
Associated Press ^ | Dec 5th 2003 | ROB GLOSTER

Posted on 12/05/2003 12:27:33 AM PST by DeuceTraveler

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Barry Bonds became the highest-profile athlete to appear before a grand jury focusing on possible tax and drug violations by a California lab that supplied nutritional supplements to Bonds and other sports stars.

The six-time National League MVP entered the grand jury room late Thursday morning accompanied by attorney Mike Rains and left the room nearly 5½ hours later, though it was unclear how long he testified. "It went fine," Bonds said as he was led by two bodyguards and two federal marshals to a freight elevator that was held for him. He was taken directly to the garage of the federal courthouse, then driven away as a marshal stopped traffic.

Bonds' wife and mother sat in a nearby hallway during most of his appearance. At one point, Bonds stuck his head into the hallway and asked, "Is my mother here?"

Benito Santiago, a free agent who spent the past three seasons as Bonds' teammate with the San Francisco Giants, appeared before the grand jury later in the afternoon.

Bonds has attributed his muscular development over the years to intense weight training, proper diet and a regimen of nutritional supplements from companies such as the Bay Area Laboratory Co-Operative, or BALCO, that is at the heart of the grand jury probe.

Bonds repeatedly has denied using steroids.

Thursday's appearance gave grand jurors the chance to ask the Giants slugger under oath whether his growth has been entirely natural.

Other athletes that already have appeared before the grand jury include track star Marion Jones and her boyfriend, 100-meter world record-holder Tim Montgomery, four Oakland Raiders and Olympic champion swimmer Amy Van Dyken.

An appearance before the grand jury, or being subpoenaed to testify, does not mean an athlete is a target of the probe.

Two people have been named so far as targets of the grand jury - BALCO founder Victor Conte, and Greg Anderson, Bonds' personal trainer.

Bonds, 39, became a BALCO client just before his record-setting 2001 season, in which he hit 73 homers, and has praised Conte for giving him a personalized nutritional program.

Anderson's home was raided by the Internal Revenue Service and a drug task force Sept. 5, two days after a similar raid at BALCO.

Bonds posed with Conte and Anderson for this past June's issue of Muscle & Fitness magazine and heaped praise on both.

"I visit BALCO every three to six months. They check my blood to make sure my levels are where they should be. Maybe I need to eat more broccoli than I normally do. Maybe my zinc and magnesium intakes need to increase," Bonds told the magazine.

"Victor will call me to make sure I'm taking my supplements, and my trainer Greg will sit near my locker and stare at me if I don't begin working out right away. I have these guys pushing me."

Bonds brought Anderson, a childhood friend, on a major league tour of Japan after the 2002 season, when the trainer met players such as Jason Giambi -- who also has been subpoenaed to testify before the grand jury.


TOPICS: Health/Medicine; Music/Entertainment; Sports; TV/Movies
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1 posted on 12/05/2003 12:27:33 AM PST by DeuceTraveler
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To: DeuceTraveler
Bonds, 39, became a BALCO client just before his record-setting 2001 season, in which he hit 73 homers, and has praised Conte for giving him a personalized nutritional program.

What a joke on head in the sand Major League Baseball all of this is. The game lives and dies on statistics and it has all been ruined by the cheating and distortion. All because people like Selig dont have the balls to do what is right.
2 posted on 12/05/2003 3:48:36 AM PST by doosee
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To: doosee
Well, 3 MVPs BEFORE hetting involved with BALCO should be enough for most people to not doubt the man's skills.
3 posted on 12/05/2003 7:53:50 AM PST by byteback
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To: byteback
Well, 3 MVPs BEFORE hetting involved with BALCO should be enough for most people to not doubt the man's skills.

He always had a lot of skill but you dont go from guy who for ten years had trouble hitting 20 homers a year to what he became. Plain and simple, he used chemicals to alter his body.

4 posted on 12/06/2003 3:46:09 AM PST by doosee
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To: doosee
Other than the 73 homer year he's been consistant. I don't know how you came up with 20 HRs but other than the one year he hasn't been over 50. Consistancy.
5 posted on 12/06/2003 9:31:57 PM PST by byteback
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To: byteback
Correct, if you pull out the 73 year, he averages 33 homers per year. So a guy who never in his life hit 50 in a year, now goes over his career average by 40 homers. He was really juiced up that year on his growth hormones. He got the record and is cutting it back now. Absolutely no question in my mind this is cheating.
6 posted on 12/07/2003 3:48:02 AM PST by doosee
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