steroids News Archive

13-Jul-2007

 

  • MLBPA wants those named in steroids warrant kept secret (The Pantagraph)
    SAN FRANCISCO ā?? Major League Baseballā??s union is fighting to keep secret up to 23 players named as customers by an admitted steroids dealer, according to recent court filings.


  • Baseball union tries to protect players from steroids probe (The Kansas City Star)
    Major League Baseball?s union is fighting to keep secret up to 23 players named as customers by an admitted steroids dealer, according to recent court filings.


  • Most states keep prep steroids a local issue (Albany Democrat-Herald)
    They were thinking big in New Mexico. Encouraged by the Drug Enforcement Administration, state officials staged a national summit to discuss solutions for the growing problem of steroids in high school sports.


  • Laws exist, but most states keep prep steroids a local issue (Argus Observer)
    New York ? They were thinking big in New Mexico. Encouraged by the Drug Enforcement Agency, state officials staged a national summit to discuss solutions for the growing problem of steroids in high school sports.


  • Drug company head to plead guilty in scheme to sell steroids (Boston Globe)
    A pharmaceutical company owner accused of illegally marketing and distributing steroids then paying doctors to write medically unnecessary prescriptions will plead guilty, his attorney said Thursday.


  • Attorney who leaked steroids testimony gets 2½ years in prison (The Toledo Blade)
    SAN FRANCISCO ? An attorney who admitted leaking the confidential grand jury testimony of Barry Bonds and other athletes was sentenced Thursday to two and a half years in prison, by far the harshest penalty to result from the government?s steroids investigation.


  • Lawyer jailed for leaking steroids testimony (Reuters via Yahoo! News)
    The defense attorney who leaked closed-door testimony on steroids from top sports stars including baseball's Barry Bonds will spend two and a half years behind bars, a U.S. federal judge ruled on Thursday.


  • AP given permission to intervene in steroids case (ESPN)
    A federal judge gave permission for The Associated Press to argue that names should be revealed from a search warrant in which former major league pitcher Jason Grimsley allegedly implicated players in steroids use.


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