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steroids News Archive30-Dec-2006
Feds can use names in MLB steroids probe (The Arizona Republic) SAN FRANCISCO - With Barry Bonds still in their sights, federal investigators probing steroids in sports can now use the names and urine samples of about 100 Major League Baseball players who tested positive for performance-enhancing drugs, following a ruling Wednesday from a federal appeals court.
Appellate court overturns ruling in steroids probe (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette) SAN FRANCISCO -- With Barry Bonds still in their sights, federal investigators can now use the names and urine samples of about 100 Major League Baseball players in their steroids probe, after a ruling yesterday from a federal appeals court.
'Chronicle' Reporters Face Jail Over Steroids Leak (NPR) Two San Francisco Chronicle reporters are facing up to 18 months in jail for refusing to testify about who leaked to them secret grand jury testimony from a steroids investigation.
'Chronicle' Reporters Face Jail Over Steroids Leak (NPR) Morning Edition , December 29, 2006 · Two San Francisco Chronicle reporters are facing up to 18 months in jail for refusing to testify about who leaked to them secret grand jury testimony from a steroids investigation.
Appeals court: Players' names can be used in steroids case (Houston Chronicle) With Barry Bonds still in their sights, federal investigators can now use the names and urine samples of about 100 Major League Baseball players in their steroids probe, following a ruling from a federal appeals court.
Man may have taken steroids (Rocky Mountain News) A man shot during a gunbattle with Jefferson County SWAT officers Tuesday is an anesthesiologist who had been taking heavy doses of steroids to treat a bout of pneumonia, co-workers said.
Court: Investigators can use steroids data (Sun-Sentinel) SAN FRANCISCO · With Barry Bonds still in their sights, federal investigators can now use the names and urine samples of about 100 Major League Baseball players in their steroids probe, following a ruling Wednesday from a federal appeals court.
Union to Appeal Steroids Ruling (New York Times) The Major League Baseball Players Association will fight a federal appeals court decision to give prosecutors access to the names and urine samples of about 100 players who tested positive for steroids in 2003. If Wednesday?s decision ?is allowed to stand, it will effectively repeal the Fourth Amendment for confidential electronic records,? Donald Fehr, the executive director of the union, wrote ...
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