Lance Armstrong is due to provide a deposition under oath in a lawsuit originally brought by his former team mate Floyd Landis alleging misuse of sponsorship money at their US Postal Service team that could see the United States government awarded up to $96 million in damages.
Last year, after Armstrong confessed to doping his way to seven Tour de France titles between 1998 and 2005, the Department of Justice joined Landis’s action, which had been initiated in 2010 under the False Claims Act, which relates to misuse of federal funds.
In papers filed with a court in Washington DC, prosecutors note that the US Postal Service sponsored Armstrong’s team, managed by Tailwind Sports, to the tune of $40 million from 1998 to 2004.
Due to a statute of limitations, not all of that money can be recovered, with proportion of the government’s losses at issue in the case quantified at $32 million, reports the New York Daily News.
However, the whistleblower legislation under which the lawsuit was brought allows the court to award damages of up to three times that amount, meaning that Armstrong could have to repay $96 million.
Meanwhile as the initiator of the action, Landis – himself stripped of the 2006 Tour de France title for doping – would be entitled to up to 25 per cent of any money recovered.
In 2012, before the United States Anti-Doping Agency announced it was investigating Armstrong and others for doping at the US Postal team, federal investigators dropped a criminal investigation against him.
The USADA investigation resulted in 42-year-old being banned from sport for life and stripped of results including those seven Tour de France wins.
According to the New York Daily News, Armstrong, who is due to provide a deposition under oath next Thursday in the SCA Promotions case, is due to provide similar testimony in the federal case on 23 June.
In both cases, Armstrong’s lawyers have attempted to prevent him being required to provide such evidence, so far without success. Others due to give depositions include his former coach, Chris Carmichael.
Potential government witnesses whose names appear in court papers include former UCI presidents Hein Verbruggen and Pat McQuaid, past US Postal riders Landis, Frankie Andreu, Tyler Hamilton and George Hincapie, as well as Armstrong’s ex-wife Kristin and former girlfriend, the singer Sheryl Crow.
There was a Tony Robinson documentary about the Thames at night on Channel 5 iirc, where they go clean the Blackwall tunnel regularly at night. ...
The other thing about those bike stands is where are they? It looks like a residential street. So who is going to use them? No one would be daft...
It was "only" the security man's hand, not his life. And it was only a cyclist's property. Case closed....
By all means introduce the 'cycle tax' in the UK and EU. But then build a contiguous, comprehensive and high quality network of cycle lanes first....
Another Driverless car - oh. ...
Appears that the scheme installation has now been paused:...
Actually, having recently bought a cheaper, new helmet to replace a more expensive (but cracked) one, I would say that more expensive is better. ...
It's a lot of money for a simple-looking little tool, but I've been very happy with previous Dynaplugs - they are super effective.
A couple of call-outs from the Guardian piece:...
Well that'll be the famous BBC balance.