A lifetime ban and the vacation of seven consecutive Tour de France titles is the apparent sad conclusion to the Lance Armstrong story, after today's announcement that he would not contest the US Anti-Doping Authority's case against him. It is an odd decision for a man previously defined by his refusal to quit. Despite his protestations that he is innocent and simply refusing to engage with biased proceedings, this decision has largely been greeted as either a tacit admission of guilt, or a final desperation play to ensure that the evidence will never be heard publicly, allowing him to continue professing his innocence.
This is an
unsatisfactory outcome. Despite the USADA case, it remains hard to
take a clear position on Armstrong. The circumstantial case against
him is strong, but has not been subjected to
independent scrutiny, and as he points out, there is little physical evidence. The basis of the verdict was an aborted Federal Drug Administration prosecution that came from an investigator with a
controversial track record. The suggestion that the testimony against
him was gathered through offers of immunity to other implicated
riders, the way that details of the case seem to have been
selectively leaked, and the fact that none of the evidence faced
any third-party examination before judgement was passed, means that
the USADA has arguably harmed its case in the court of public opinion
with the way that it has conducted itself.
Armstrong's supporters
will continue to defend him, and the rest will condemn him, but it
remains impossible to make a conclusive judgement, which is why
today's decision, which robs us of the chance to have the case examined during the arbitration process, means that we are no closer to the truth than before.
UPDATE: The debate is raging on, but the USADA are exptected to publish their decision in the next couple of weeks, that will apparently contain evidence, and more should come out once the cases against other individuals are resolved.
UPDATE: The debate is raging on, but the USADA are exptected to publish their decision in the next couple of weeks, that will apparently contain evidence, and more should come out once the cases against other individuals are resolved.
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