Velogal's Blog

Thursday, May 31, 2007

Another excellent article on the Floyd Landis hearings by Michael Hiltzik in the Los Angeles Times. Thanks to the LA Times for this posting. Particularly note the last sentence in the article...

Landis Case Succeeds in Exposing Faults

Cyclist's appeal hearing reveals rules that make it possible to conceal lab errors and standards that fall short of 'beyond a reasonable doubt.'

By Michael A. Hiltzik, Times Staff Writer
May 31, 2007

It could be weeks before an arbitration panel reveals whether American cyclist Floyd Landis has a chance to retain his Tour de France title in the face of doping allegations, but one thing was clear even before marathon public hearings ended last week: Landis succeeded in putting the international anti-doping enforcement system on trial.

The open proceedings raised very public questions about the competency and test procedures of the Paris lab that ruled Landis' urine samples positive for illicit levels of testosterone. But they also exposed a rigid anti-doping enforcement system that could conceal lab errors and mistakes.

One of the arbitrators bluntly questioned World Anti-Doping Agency rules, suggesting that WADA's labs shared a code of omerta rather than a code of ethics.

Earlier, a copy of the agency's bylaws had been beamed to a large screen in the Pepperdine University hearing room. One clause notably forbade officials at all 34 WADA labs around the world from giving testimony to assist accused athletes or dispute the work of any other WADA lab.

"You've got a code of ethics that essentially states [the labs] can't point out mistakes," said Christopher L. Campbell, the arbitrator who had been selected for the panel by Landis.

"I think it's a real problem."

The restrictive clause was previously disclosed in "Presumed Guilty," a series of reports by The Times in December that found the doping enforcement system favored accusers over athletes. It also found the WADA program to be based on flawed science, afflicted by faulty and inconsistent lab procedures and resistant to outside scrutiny.

The cyclist's defense focused on many of the same issues. His attorneys painted, brushstroke by brushstroke, the picture of a forensic system with procedural and documentation standards far short of "beyond a reasonable doubt."

Landis forced the hearings to be held in public, providing a uniquely open forum that also has raised the political stakes in the case.

The reputation of the Paris lab, one of WADA's busiest, was pummeled by critical testimony from eminent scientists and admissions of mistakes by its own staff.

The potential effect of even minor mistakes in lab practice came into focus when hearing evidence showed that the case against Landis ultimately hinges on a single number — minus 6.

As explained by experts in the case, testosterone breaks down in the body into four compounds, known as metabolites, which can be identified and measured in a urine sample. An anti-doping lab subjects these molecules to various analytical procedures to generate a so-called "delta-delta" value for each.

Under WADA rules, an athlete can be judged guilty if this value drops below minus 3 for any metabolite. Landis' delta-delta value for the metabolite 5-alpha-androstanediol (5A for short) was minus 6.

Landis' task at the hearing was to cast doubt on that figure. Lawyers for the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency, prosecuting the doping case against him, sought to protect its credibility.

USADA's basic argument was that Landis' number was so unnatural — one of the lowest ever encountered — that no concatenation of laboratory errors could have produced it from an innocent urine sample.

No matter how many retests the lab performed before expert witnesses, that figure always held up, observed USADA attorney Richard Young, adding that it was sufficient evidence all by itself.

"My opinion is that doping was going on," testified Don H. Catlin, the recently retired head of the WADA anti-doping lab at UCLA. "It's just inescapable."

Raising doubts about the 5A result, the defense argued that in the context of Landis' entire urinalysis profile, the figure looked more like a laboratory error than a credible analytical finding.

Defense witness John Amory, an expert in testosterone medicine at the University of Washington, pointed out that the 5A value always tracks closely the value of another metabolite, known by the shorthand 5B. No published study — either of those not testing positive for doping or known dopers, including two published by expert witnesses who appeared for USADA at the hearing — have ever found them to be more than two units apart, he observed. In Landis' results, the gap was four.

"That doesn't look like anything we've seen in studies of men who've been given testosterone," Amory said.
That led to the issue of whether the Paris lab was capable of analyzing Landis' urine with any accuracy whatsoever. Defense exhibits and testimony established that an enormous amount of the lab's analysis involved subjective judgments by technicians — so much so that when asked to rerun their tests, the technicians were unable to duplicate their original results.

Despite the disparities, USADA argued, the subsequent analyses still established that Landis was guilty.

Among the flaws Landis identified in the lab's procedures was that it failed to calibrate its instruments properly, reducing its results to mere guesswork — possibly skewed by a desire to find the results it was looking for. Christiane Ayotte, the director of WADA's Montreal lab, who had characterized the lab's errors as mere "boo-boos" that shouldn't invalidate its findings, acknowledged under cross-examination that in one analysis of a Landis sample, the lab actually had identified a compound that wasn't there.

"What is it?" Landis attorney Howard Jacobs asked as the witness frowned at an errant analysis page.

"No clue," she replied.

Wolfram Meier-Augenstein, an expert on the analytical process used by the Paris lab, LNDD, testified for the defense that such sloppy work placed in doubt any number the lab produced, especially one as extreme as the 5A result.

"How do you know you don't have spurious results?" he asked. "If I was running this lab, before I was on the phone to say this guy's positive, I would rerun the tests to make sure the results stand up."

Under cross-examination by Landis' attorneys, Catlin and Ayotte acknowledged, if begrudgingly, significant flaws in the work of WADA's Paris lab.

Landis' own witnesses, predictably, were even harsher, pinpointing myriad disparities between the Paris lab's procedures and those of forensic labs whose results have to stand up to the scrutiny of a civil or criminal court.

If Landis prevails with the arbitration panel, the outcome would almost certainly be seen as a blow to the reputation and credibility of the French lab. It could also raise doubts about other LNDD cases.

But Landis still faces an uphill battle for exoneration. WADA rules require arbitrators to treat the lab results as accurate unless they find proof of significant departures from international standards. The WADA code defines the standard of proof necessary for a finding of guilt to be simply the "comfortable satisfaction" of the arbitrators.

With few exceptions, arbitrators in previous cases have dismissed allegations of poor lab procedures as immaterial to the final results.

Unlike any previous cases, however, this panel of arbitrators is conducting its deliberations under a spotlight of public attention.

They also will be drafting their ruling amid a highly charged atmosphere over fresh public disclosures of doping in cycling. In the last week, three leading European cyclists confessed to doping with EPO, a blood hormone, during the 1990s. Although that period predates Landis' rise to prominence, the confessions underscore cycling's reputation as a drug-ridden sport — a point USADA attorneys made repeatedly during the hearing.

USADA also departed from scientific argument in the Landis case to take advantage of another development during the nine-day hearing — the appearance of former Tour de France champion Greg LeMond, testifying for the prosecution. LeMond's appearance was widely judged to be a debacle for Landis, largely because his then-business manager was revealed to have made a salacious, anonymous call to LeMond, supposedly to deter him from testifying.

But the incident also could be viewed as a problem for USADA. On one level, it showed the willingness of the agency, which maintained throughout the hearing that its accusation was based strictly on scientific evidence, to impugn an athlete's character with testimony that was unsubstantiated and scientifically irrelevant.

LeMond testified that Landis had implicitly confessed to him, in a phone conversation shortly after the doping charge was made public. He drew this conclusion when Landis, after hearing LeMond urge him to "come clean," replied simply, "What good would that do?" But Landis testified that he had explicitly denied the doping charge to LeMond.

When Landis attorney Jacobs attempted to cross-examine LeMond, the cyclist's lawyer intervened. He instructed LeMond not to answer, while acknowledging he had no legal grounds to do so.

Jacobs erupted. "This is completely unfair."

The arbitrators unanimously rejected Jacobs' motion to strike LeMond's testimony, although they offered no indication of how much weight they ultimately would give it. Arbitrator Richard McLaren, who was appointed to the panel by USADA, did speak up for the process, however. "Mr. Jacobs," he said in one of his rare comments during the hearing, "we don't accept your proposition that the proceeding is unfair."


michael.hiltzik@latimes.com

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Monday, May 28, 2007

On this Memorial Day, 2007, I want to talk something other than cycling. I want to tell you about a program through the Fisher House Foundation, that helps members of the U.S. Armed Forces who have been injured or wounded in Iraq or Afghanistan. It’s called Hero Miles, and you can help by donating your frequent flyer or award air miles. Today, specifically, several of the major airlines have agreed to match your donated miles. The list of participating airlines is on the Fisher House website. Until 11:59 pm, tonight, these airlines will match your mileage donation. But you can donate your miles anytime and your award miles will go to Hero Miles...

Your donations will assist Operation Hero Miles in providing travel for families of American military men and women who are being treated for injury at military hospitals around the globe. Through its partnership with Fisher House, air travel is provided to family members and close friends visiting U.S. servicemen and women hospitalized due to their service in Iraq or Afghanistan. For more information, visit http://www.fisherhouse.org^.

I have just donated 31,000 American Airlines Award miles, and I hope that you will go to the Fisher House website and donate to Hero Miles. It doesn’t matter what political party you belong to, or whether you support the Iraqi war or not. What matters is that there are badly wounded and maimed fellow Americans, and their families, who cannot afford the flights to receive treatment or to visit injured loved ones. You may think like I did, that the military provides the flights for families to visit an injured loved one who is hospitalized in Germany, or at Walter Reed, etc. Not so, the families have to pay their own costs for transportation, food and lodging. And this is where Fisher House helps, and so can we.

More about Fisher House, from their website:

The Fisher House™ program is a unique private-public partnership that supports America's military in their time of need. The program recognizes the special sacrifices of our men and women in uniform and the hardships of military service by meeting a humanitarian need beyond that normally provided by the Departments of Defense and Veterans Affairs.

Because members of the military and their families are stationed worldwide and must often travel great distances for specialized medical care, Fisher House™ Foundation donates "comfort homes," built on the grounds of major military and VA medical centers. These homes enable family members to be close to a loved one at the most stressful times - during the hospitalization for an unexpected illness, disease, or injury.

There is at least one Fisher House™ at every major military medical center to assist families in need and to ensure that they are provided with the comforts of home in a supportive environment. Annually, the Fisher House™ program serves more than 8,500 families, and have made available more than two million days of lodging to family members since the program originated in 1990. Based on a comparison of fees at a Fisher House™ (the average charge is less than $10 per family per day, with many locations offering rooms at no cost) with commercial lodging facilities in the same area, it is estimated that families have saved more than $60 million by staying at a Fisher House™ since the program began.

In addition to constructing new houses, Fisher House™ Foundation continues to support existing Fisher Houses™ and help individual military families in need. Families and friends of patients at any of the military's hospitals can now receive up-to-the-minute reports on a loved one by going to the patient's own customized web page, thanks to new services provided through CaringBridge. We are also proud to administer and sponsor Scholarships for Military Children, the Hero Miles program, and co-sponsor the Newman's Own Award.

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Thursday, May 24, 2007

The Floyd Landis hearings are over, and it’s time for a Standing Ovation for Rant, TBV, Bill Hue, and the crew for their hard work and dedication to the public truth. We were hanging onto every word..Thanks a zillion, guys - next best thing to being there.

Thumbs up for the Landis team for a brilliant job of presenting the facts, and exposing a shameful cover-up all the way from the techs at the Cesspool to the top honchos at WADA and USADA.

Thumbs down and shame to USADA and their hired attorneys, who cared nothing for truth, ethics and integrity. Their win-at-any-cost strategy was disgraceful and appalling. Their desperate focus on that unfortunate incident, by a stupid member of the Landis team, and their attempt to turn it into further character assassination of Floyd was pathetic. Trying to turn what Floyd wore to the hearings into more character assassination gave us a window into even more cheap, two-bit tactics - distract from the facts when they're not in your favor...

And more thumbs down to USADA for the small fortune that they spent on hiring outside attorneys while their highly-paid, in-house attorney sat it out. And a huge thumbs-down for their very revealing, farcical perversion of their own Mission Statement in this hearing.

Excerpts from the USADA Mission statement on their website:

Testing: A major goal in testing is to achieve quality and consistency in the collection process and prompt, efficient handling of results.

Results Management: USADA's adjudication process was designed to eliminate the conflicts of interest inherent with the involvement of National Governing Bodies (NGBs) in prosecuting and sanctioning their own athletes, and to simplify procedures and reduce the time and financial burdens associated with appeals.”

Shame on you, USADA...

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Tuesday, May 22, 2007


Favorite Quote from yesterday’s Floyd Landis hearing, during the examination of expert witness Dr. Meier-Augenstein by USADA-hired attorney Richard Young”

“Q: Where is it in the spec it matters if it’s outside the spec?
A: They must have some criteria. How do they choose? Divine intervention? I’m amazed. You’re left with the GCMS, which has mass spectra, then you get to retention time, and it doesn’t match in the IRMS. How do you identify one unknown peak among 5 unknown peaks? I don’t know how they do it.”

No, my dear Doctor Meier-Augenstein, not Divine Intervention.... Dick Pound /WADA Intervention.... That Cesspool LNDD lab knows what the answers must be...They know who pays the rent and the salaries, and renews the contract.

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Thursday, May 17, 2007


Is anybody surprised about the selective memory of Cynthia Mongongu in the Floyd Landis hearing? The lab technician for the Cesspool at Chatenay-Malabry seems to clearly remember the facts from a well-rehearsed script, but suffers from very poor memory at convenient times, about the same topic, when questions are directed toward finding what really happened. This recent intern-turned-expert knows damn well that she is going to get her fanny fired if she says the wrong thing - - anything that might get the Landis team toward the truth. And there is no reason to think that the testimony of the other lab tech will be any different.

You can bet that that these two women know their jobs are on the line. You’d be pretty naive to think that they won’t say whatever is necessary to CYA and keep their jobs in France. This is the real world, where sworn testimony from the LNDD is a farce. There is no reprisal for lying on the “witness stand” in the USA when you live in France. You think they are gonna sit there and rat out on the LNDD and expect to go home and have a job waiting for them? I betcha those women’s bosses are monitoring every word of their “testimony” and are gonna nail their fannies to the wall when they get back home if they say the wrong thing...

The hope is that the Landis legal team will trip up the lab techs so badly in their “testimony” that even the USADA panel, yeah, I said USADA panel, will not have the cojones to ignore or gloss over the serious screw-ups that happened.

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Tuesday, May 15, 2007


So Greg Lemond and Joe Papp are appearing at the Floyd Landis hearing? What in the Hell are they doing there? Smoke and Mirrors BS: that’s what it is. These two men have nothing whatsoever on earth to do with this hearing. They had nothing to do with Floyd and the 2006 Tour de France. . They bring no relevant knowledge to this hearing. Their experiences have nothing to do with Floyd and this case. Nothing! A ludicrous, pathetic farce with the goal of nailing Floyd at any cost...

What a bunch of crap that this stacked panel is letting their “bosses” get away with. This is just ludicrous that Greg Lemond again gets publicity about crusading against doping. Hmmm... Methinks the man doth protest too much and too quickly...

Their appearance is just a farcical attempt to legitimize what pathetic crap that USADA is bringing to the hearing, with the obviously scripted testimony from the USADA followers. Talk about Kangaroo Court... In fact, I’ll put the damn image up again today...

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Wednesday, May 09, 2007



It seems that the stench and scum from the French Chataney-Malabry Cesspool has made its way to the USADA American soil. Good luck, Floyd - We're with you, but we all can see that this is looking like an unbelievable, disgraceful, unethical Kangaroo Court hearing next week...

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Monday, May 07, 2007



The SugarCRM Cat's Hill Classic was on Saturday in Los Gatos - it was the 34th running of this Grande Dame of California Crits. There are always crashes at the bottom of Cat's Hill - it's such a sharp left turn onto the 23% grade hill that somebody is gonna miss a shift and stop or fall. The usual chain reaction of enders inevitably happens. If you're gonna be right on somebody's wheel, you better be sure that they are an old Pro on riding the Cat's.

So speaking of crashes, Ivan Basso just took a big fall, too. Seems that he has owned up to being involved in Operation Open Mouth. Not like everyone didn't suspect it with his sudden departure from Discovery Cycling Team. Bummer, I really liked Ivan and the thing that bothers me most is the lying... And it looks like he's gonna have some company, too... Like quite a few riders won't be at the Tour this year, yes? Maybe I should start training...

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