Witness Testifies Thomas May Have Been Shaving
POSTED: 7:55 am PDT March 27,
2008
UPDATED: 8:04 am PDT March 27,
2008
SAN FRANCISCO -- A key witness in Tammy Thomas's doping trial has testified that the elite cyclist appeared to be shaving her face when he paid her an unannounced drug testing visit at the Chula Vista Olympic Training Center in 2002.Tom McVay, a tester for the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency, told a jury that he was assigned to locate Thomas to collect a urine sample for a steroid test. When he knocked on her apartment door, he was stunned to see what appeared to be shaving cream on her face when she answered."It appeared to be like shaving cream on the left side of her face around her ear," he told the court.McVay's claim came on the second day of testimony at the trial -- a session that also included another witness testifying about the black market business in illegal steroids between an illicit steroid lab in Illinois and several unnamed athletes. "Here's the thing: the stuff was so strong, man," said Kelcey Dalton, who helped market the substances developed and manufactured by Patrick Arnold, her then-boyfriend. Arnold, a chemist, invented some of the steroids at the heart of a drugs and sports scandal in which Thomas is the first person being tried. Dalton said Arnold told her that athletes and trainers were reporting in the early 2000s they would use "really minute doses" of the steroids because doing so would minimize side effects, and "because they were so strong." Holding her thumb and forefinger three inches apart to represent a small vial, Dalton said such a container would fetch $10-$20. "Marion Jones split it with C.J. Hunter and it lasted six months," Dalton said, referring to the track and field stars later disgraced for doping. The sums of money Arnold was making were "very low," she said. "I think we should have charged more." During her testimony, Dalton also said she heard Bay Area Laboratory Co-Operative founder Victor Conte say he had provided steroids to Jones, imprisoned earlier this month for lying to investigators about doping and her role in a check-fraud scheme; and to home run king Barry Bonds. In an e-mail to news media organizations, Conte firmly denied he had supplied Bonds, who faces perjury charges stemming from the doping scandal. "Kelcey Dalton is most certainly mistaken by saying that I ever told her that I gave any type of performance enhancing drugs to Barry Bonds," Conte wrote. "I may possibly have told her that I was working with Barry and had him on a comprehensive nutrition program, but never did I say to her that Barry Bonds used drugs." Arnold didn't mention Bonds a day earlier when he listed athletes he believed were being supplied his steroid products. Thomas' case is being closely watched by Bonds observers looking for hints at how a potential trial for the former Giants slugger might play out. Bonds attorney Allen Ruby declined to comment Wednesday. Prosecutors say Thomas lied to a grand jury about what performance-enhancing substances she bought from Arnold, and whether she had ever taken anabolic steroids. She is charged with making false statements to a grand jury and obstructing justice. Dalton testified Wednesday she believed Thomas knowingly sought what she thought were undetectable steroids from Arnold. But under cross-examination by Thomas attorney Ethan Balogh, Dalton also said she did not believe Thomas thought she was breaking the law, because the substances were not then banned under federal law. Balogh has argued that Thomas was technically telling the truth to the grand jury when she denied using steroids.
Copyright 2008 by FOXReno.com. The Associated Press contributed to this report. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.










