If they were showing an interest in cracking down in the smuggling of steroids and other supplements I would totally disagree with you as that's a law and order issue. However, they rather obviously aren't, so I agree 100%.
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To me, I think everyone in this thread will agree that they believe Bonds did perjure himself. He lied while under oath which did obstruct a criminal investigation. I do have serious issue with allowing people to merely get off with lying while under oath. It jeopardizes our entire legal system.
However, trampling on others constitutional rights should in no way be permitted either. I personally haven't seen in this case where the govt. has done that. I did see people attacking the govt. for getting a warrent to raid andersons mother in laws house, or someone related to him because of tax evasion concerns which arose during the perjury investigation. I have yet to see where in fact the govt. violated her constitutional rights. heck, they legally obtained a warrent for the raid, meaning they must have had viable information. should they not pursue the information which was uncovered because it may be viewed as unpopular?
I am very open to examples of where the govt. has gone too far. I think people are more steroid weary, kind of like war weary, and are attacking the govt. because of it.
Also, the perjury investigation is not seven years old. Greg Anderson is in fact breaking the law himself. The "strongarm tactics" discussed I believe to be more sentimetal argument than factual. again, the govt. DID obtain a warrent for the raid of the mother in law, meaning they had justifyable evidence to support a warrent legally. The 4000 names taken...I can't say if thats a violation or not, its not uncommon that all records are obtained. If a lawyer believes it is, please take the govt. to court. I'd be all for justice. The fact nobody has taken the govt. to court has me leaning towards the premise that there was no constitutional infringenment.
What investigation did Bonds obstruct by claiming he didn't knowingly take steroids?
Read the article, but I'll pull out one more clip from it:Quote:
I am very open to examples of where the govt. has gone too far. I think people are more steroid weary, kind of like war weary, and are attacking the govt. because of it.
Quote:
Novitzky was given the green light by President Bush and Ashcroft to go for the jugular. In 2004, accompanied by eleven agents, he marched into Comprehensive Drug Testing, the nation's largest sports-drug testing company. Armed with a warrant to see the confidential drug tests of ten baseball players, he walked out with 4,000 supposedly sealed medical files, including every baseball player in the major leagues. As Jon Pessah wrote in ESPN magazine, "Three federal judges reviewed the raid. One asked, incredulously, if the Fourth Amendment had been repealed. Another, Susan Illston, who has presided over the BALCO trials, called Novitzky's actions a 'callous disregard' for constitutional rights. All three instructed him to return the records. Instead, Novitzky kept the evidence...."
Six years, whatever. 2003 is when the testimony during which he allegedly perjured himself was.Quote:
Also, the perjury investigation is not seven years old.
Do you not believe he lied under oath? To me, thats all that matters.Quote:
What investigation did Bonds obstruct by claiming he didn't knowingly take steroids?
I read it and edited my initial post with this;Quote:
Read the article, but I'll pull out one more clip from it:
Quote:
Greg Anderson is in fact breaking the law himself. The "strongarm tactics" discussed I believe to be more sentimetal argument than factual. again, the govt. DID obtain a warrent for the raid of the mother in law, meaning they had justifyable evidence to support a warrent legally. The 4000 names taken...I can't say if thats a violation or not, its not uncommon that all records are obtained. If a lawyer believes it is, please take the govt. to court. I'd be all for justice. The fact nobody has taken the govt. to court has me leaning towards the premise that there was no constitutional infringenment.
why let facts get in the way of a good slanted article? ;)Quote:
Six years, whatever. 2003 is when the testimony during which he allegedly perjured himself was.
That's not for me to decide...but, you didn't answer the question. You claim that he obstructed an investigation. Which investigation is that?
So, what about the facts that multiple judges have claimed it was unconstitutional, and that the evidence has been ruled inadmissible? That no lawyer has sued the government makes you overlook court rulings?Quote:
Originally Posted by dickay
Question, you say it's "not uncommon that all records are obtained." What do you mean by this? It is my understanding that when you have a warrant for something, you're legally allowed to only obtain that which you have a warrant for. If you get a warrant to search a person's car, you're not then allowed to search their house as well (without obtaining a separate warrant). The government had a warrant for the records of 10 players. Legally, they were only allowed to confiscate those 10 records. They confiscated the entire collection of records. That doesn't strike you as wrong and/or illegal?
Just to name another person whose rights have been violated due to this investigation...Alex Rodriguez. His name being leaked is directly related to the Bonds investigation.
You may be right that his comments may not have obstructed the investigation. Thats why I yeilded on my initial statements. Regardless, most all believe he lied under oath. They have evidence which substantiates that although it has been ruled inadmissible. Anderson breaking the law and not testifying may or may not ruin their case. It doesn't mean the govt. shouldn't pursue or did anything wrong by pursing a purjury charge.Quote:
That's not for me to decide...but, you didn't answer the question. You claim that he obstructed an investigation. Which investigation is that?
The way I understood it, alot of the evidence was ruled inadmissable because they can't get Anderson to talk, thus it is subjective information based on heresay. If judges have ruled the gathering of some of the evidence unconstitutional, then he should be prosecuted if it caused irrepriable harm. The evidence involving all the other players has nothing to do with this case. The evidence that does pertain to this case, to my knowledge has not been ruled inadmissable because of a constitutional conflict with how it was obtained. It had to do with the evidence being heresay and subjective without Andersons testimony.Quote:
So, what about the facts that multiple judges have claimed it was unconstitutional, and that the evidence has been ruled inadmissible? That no lawyer has sued the government makes you overlook court rulings?
Is this fact, or speculation? If it is fact, than yes it does strike me as wrong.Quote:
Legally, they were only allowed to confiscate those 10 records. They confiscated the entire collection of records. That doesn't strike you as wrong and/or illegal?
not relative at all to this investigation. I agree, however bonds name was leaked is concerning and has caused AROd irrepriable harm. We can only speculate on the particulars...and I'd have no problem if AROD got an attorney to investigate wrongdoing. In fact, i'd advise him to.Quote:
Just to name another person whose rights have been violated due to this investigation...Alex Rodriguez. His name being leaked is directly related to the Bonds investigation.
I haven't mentioned Anderson at all. Are you even reading what I'm saying and quoting? I quoted this before, but read it again:
Bonds' drug tests from that raid were ruled inadmissible. (Illston, by the way, is the judge presiding over the perjury case.)Quote:
Novitzky was given the green light by President Bush and Ashcroft to go for the jugular. In 2004, accompanied by eleven agents, he marched into Comprehensive Drug Testing, the nation's largest sports-drug testing company. Armed with a warrant to see the confidential drug tests of ten baseball players, he walked out with 4,000 supposedly sealed medical files, including every baseball player in the major leagues. As Jon Pessah wrote in ESPN magazine, "Three federal judges reviewed the raid. One asked, incredulously, if the Fourth Amendment had been repealed. Another, Susan Illston, who has presided over the BALCO trials, called Novitzky's actions a 'callous disregard' for constitutional rights. All three instructed him to return the records. Instead, Novitzky kept the evidence...."
It is relative to this investigation...not the perjury investigation alone but the entire BALCO/Bonds investigation. Had the government not confiscated the 2003 "anonymous" test results as part of this investigation, A-Rod's name would not have been leaked.Quote:
Originally Posted by dickay
I think Dickay has a point here, and I'm finding it difficult to follow where you are coming from, HGM. If someone lies under oath in a criminal investigation - which I believe Bonds did - how does this not obstruct an investigation? I think it all comes back to that one question.
As for the government: yes, clearly they violated the civil rights of those involved, and this case should be summarily dismissed. I don't necessarily agree that this means that no one of legal authority outside of MLB itself should ever again oversee baseball - which is what I feel many people commenting over the past few weeks on this board seem to be implying - even though the govvies themselves have caused a great deal of harm to the whole idea with their heavy-handedness. (I also don't feel there is no cause to investigate MLB players any more, so long as Bud Selig and Don Fehr are in charge of the institutions they run...but that is a sermon for another Sunday.)
I know exactly what you said, but from what I've seen prior your info is wrong.Quote:
I haven't mentioned Anderson at all. Are you even reading what I'm saying and quoting? I quoted this before, but read it again:
The reason the info is wrong is because there are two different things at play. One, the govt. possibly unconstitutional acquisition of 4000 drug tests, and two the inadmissible drug tests of Bonds, or which you agree the warrent permitted. Those were obtained legally. They are inadmissible because they are subjective heresay and speculation unless they can get Anderson to talk. If Anderson would talk, which he's required to do since he's been granted immunity, the evidence could possibly be made admissible again.Quote:
Bonds' drug tests from that raid were ruled inadmissible. (Illston, by the way, is the judge presiding over the perjury case.)
lol, the title of this thread is US vs. Bonds. I agreed AROD may have a case.Quote:
It is relative to this investigation...not the perjury investigation alone but the entire BALCO/Bonds investigation. Had the government not confiscated the 2003 "anonymous" test results as part of this investigation, A-Rod's name would not have been leaked.
But what investigation did it obstruct?
I've been misunderstanding this test evidence. The evidence that was ruled inadmissible were private tests allegedly conducted by Anderson in 2000 and 2001, not the 2003 test results. Sorry
But, either way, Novitzky's actions were called unconstitutional by multiple judges. I don't see how you can even continue to insist that it was "maybe" unconstitutional. Would it be "maybe unconstitutional" if a police armed with a warrant to search a person's car also searched that person's house and workplace?
I was just pointing out another person whose rights have been violated in connection with this investigation.Quote:
lol, the title of this thread is US vs. Bonds. I agreed AROD may have a case.
The unconstitutional offenses were for items unrelated to this investigation. They are in regards to the taking of test results other than those the warrent allowed to be taken. Look..i don't believe everything I read, especially when reading something that appears slanted from the get go. If three judges have given rulings and not opinions (which may or may not be well thought through or educated) that it was unconstitutional, then yes...i'd be willing to say it probably was. If there has been no 'ruling', and this article found three judges out of however many he interviewed to go along with him...then i'd stick to my maybe. I honestly haven't heard there's been rulings on the constitutionality of the acquired evidence. And as I've already stated, if there has been then AROD should then most certainly seek compensation for damages and i'd advise him to. So i'm really not disgreeing with you on that subject.Quote:
But, either way, Novitzky's actions were called unconstitutional by multiple judges. I don't see how you can even continue to insist that it was "maybe" unconstitutional. Would it be "maybe unconstitutional" if a police armed with a warrant to search a person's car also searched that person's house and workplace?
Again, in reference for what the thread is about, US vs. Bonds....what did the US Govt. do that was unconstitutional with specific regards to this case? They were allowed to obtain the Bonds test results by warrent. They were allowed to raid the mother in laws house by warrent. You keep chiming about 4000 other drug tests that were obtained unconstituionally, and i'm not disputing that but they have nothing to do with this particular case. I'd really just like to know what specifically was done unconstituionally in the US vs. Bonds investigaton.
this just dawned on me...
if the govt. is trying to use the 4000 test results IN THE BONDS PERJURY CASE because they believe the results show a patern of a coverup, then they would be relative to the case. The judge would have to review how they were acquired and determine if they are admissable. If that is how this played out, and the judge 'ruled' them unconstitutionally acquired then they should not be admitted as evidence. Its not uncommon for evidence to be deemed inadmissable for how they were obtained, and I don't see how a mistrial could be awarded or how someone could scream that the govt. has been egregious because of just that.
i'm merely speculating...i don't know what if anything the govt. has tried to do with those 4000 test results. i'm not following the intense drama all that closely.
It is related to this investigation. They were taken AS PART of the investigation. It shows that the government has acted unconstitutionally while investigating this case.Quote:
Originally Posted by dickay
Three judges, INCLUDING THE JUDGE PRESIDING OVER THE PERJURY CASE, said that Novitzky acted unconstitutionally and ordered him to return the extra results. Officially, it's still being dealt with in court.Quote:
Originally Posted by dickay
There HAVE been rulings on it.
http://sports.yahoo.com/mlb/news?slu...yhoo&type=lgns
Then:Quote:
On Aug. 19, 2004, a Nevada district judge granted the union’s motion, ruling that “the government callously disregarded the affected players’ constitutional rights” and ordered the return of all specimens, notes and memos “other than those pertaining to the 10 BALCO players named in the original search warrant.”
So, as I said, it's still being dealt with.Quote:
Two three-judge panels of the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals reversed the lower court judges. But that wasn’t the end of it. The entire 9th Circuit set the reversal aside and had 11 judges hear the case this past December. In Pasadena, Calif., assistant U.S. Attorney Douglas Wilson argued that BALCO investigators could probe all 104 players who tested positive in 2003 because the lab’s computer spreadsheet containing the results of the 10 players also contained those of nearly a hundred more.
Here's more.
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/04/sp...tml?ref=sports
http://sports.yahoo.com/mlb/news;_yl...yhoo&type=lgnsQuote:
The federal agents who raided Quest Diagnostics in Las Vegas, armed with the code numbers obtained at Comprehensive Drug Testing, seized the matching urine samples for the 10 players. A month later, agents went back and took the urine samples for all the players who tested positive in 2003.
Quote:
It wasn’t Novitzky’s last brush with Illston. During court proceedings in 2004 over whether the government could keep 104 Major League Baseball testing records and urine samples seized by Novitzky in a search of Quest Diagnostic Labs, Illston condemned the tactics and questioned the candor of the agent. In December 2004, Illston quashed the subpoenas served on the labs, ruling that the government’s conduct was unreasonable and constituted harassment.
“I think the government has displayed … a callous disregard for constitutional rights,” Illston said in open court. “I think it’s a seizure beyond what was authorized by the search warrant, therefore it violates the Fourth Amendment.”
This was PART of the investigation! I don't know what you're not getting. They were taken during this investigation. If your question is what did the government do that violated the constitutional rights of Barry Bonds..I'm not sure, if anything at all...but the government has acted unconstitutional during the investigation.Quote:
Originally Posted by dickay
I corrected myself. The 2003 drug test was not ruled inadmissible. They're not trying to use anything other than Bonds test from that collection of tests. The point is simply that the government greatly overstepped its boundaries by confiscating all the tests, rather than just the ones they had a warrant for. The 2003 Bonds test was not obtained unconstitutionally. They had a warrant for his results. What was unconstitutional was that they took ALL the results instead of just the 10 they had a warrant for.Quote:
Originally Posted by dickay
It should be noted that Bonds originally passed that test. He is not part of the 104 players that tested positive (which A-Rod was). His sample was retested for a substance that wasn't being tested for in 2003. I have major problems with this in the first place because that "anonymous" drug test was completely botched, but that's not the government's fault.
Well, the prosecution has said that it's appealing the judge's ruling that some of its evidence is inadmissible, thereby delaying the trial.
Is there still any doubt that without Anderson the government has no case?
it appears that way...but i don't see why it matters. andersons refusal to testify is breaking the law as it is and alot of the evidence being admitted apparently is dependant upon him testifying.
if bonds is guilty, and they have evidence which would prove it if not for anderson breaking the law....why are you so against the govt. trying to prosecute someone they know to be guilty?