Fabiani Quotes, Or what you get for 30K a Month - A well paid Tool:
“The samples were clean when originally provided and tested,” said Mark Fabiani, Armstrong’s attorney, in a statement released Tuesday. “So we have nothing to be concerned about. Period.”
Armstrong spokesman Mark Fabiani told USA TODAY in an e-mail Thursday morning, "This 11-year-old story is more old news, in an inquiry that is already chock full of stale news. This matter was fully investigated by an independent expert starting in 2005, who delivered a 130-page report in 2006, accompanied by hundreds of pages of exhibits, that completely vindicated Armstrong."
"We have no concerns at all about it," said Armstrong's spokesperson Mark Fabiani.
Armstrong insists there is, indeed, nothing wrong. He has always denied doping allegations that have dogged him for years. Spokesman Mark Fabiani said there's no reason for him to back off now.
Armstrong spokesman Mark Fabiani said the cyclist has not been informed he is a target of the investigation and has not been asked to testify.
“With salmonella causing the recall of 380 million eggs, I’m probably not the only one wondering right now why the FDA is spending its resources looking into international bicycle races that occurred years ago,” Fabiani said in an e-mail.
“This news that Floyd Landis is in this for the money reconfirms everything we all knew about Landis,” said Mark Fabiani, Armstrong’s spokesman, in an e-mailed statement. Fabiani called Landis “a serial liar, an epic cheater and a swindler.”
“What remains a complete mystery is why the government would devote a penny of the taxpayers’ money to help Floyd Landis further his vile, cheating ambitions,” he said.
Mark Fabiani, who recently joined Armstrong's legal team, said Andreus' account was "preposterous." "The other six to seven people in that hospital room either say it didn't happen or have no recollection of any such conversation," he added. "The Andreus are the only persons who say it happened."
A sign that Armstrong and his legal team are taking the prospect of collateral damage seriously comes with the hiring of Fabiani, who has represented clients such as investment bank Goldman Sachs and President Clinton during scandals and crises.
Fabiani says he's helping because Armstrong "is being unjustly pursued by people who ought to have better things to do with taxpayer dollars than chasing the discredited allegations of the disgraced Landis about international cycling events that occurred years ago."