sartain said:
A few points, IMO:
1. LA will never let AC make a run at his title; this of course is based on the premise that he is a.) Not serving time and b.) Still has money left to bribe the UCI at the time;
2. The longer this drags on, the more likely event 1(b) will happen.
If LA goes to trial, together with his partners in the alleged crimes, there will be revelations about UCI/LA connected conduct forcing a new broom through the UCI structure.
Lance was
cross-examinedat the SCA tribunal on November 30, 2005.
He could not recall the precise amount of his donation to the UCI, precisely how, when and to who it was paid but said “it was many years ago”.
However,
McQuaid in July 2010 informed that LA made two donations to the UCI - a personal cheque/check of $25,000 in 2002 (TdS bribe?) and his management company cheque/check of $100,000 in 2005.
If LA on 30 November 2005 providing sworn oral testimony at the SCA tribunal is truthful then the 2005 donation must have been provided in December 2005 to the UCI.
Is there any event that was in train in late 2005 that would make this $100,000 donation to the UCI appear as odious as the $25,000 in 2002?
The UCI did not want to investigate LA on the 1999 "B" sample scientific testing results. WADA weighed in to initiate an investigation then the UCI responded by initiating their own investigation. This occurred commencing in October 2005 before the terms of reference were resolved on 15 December 2005.
The investigator appointed by the UCI was Emile Vrijman, a Dutch lawyer and friend of the Dutch UCI President Hein Verbruggen.
The Vrijman Report was a total farce and completely flawed as
criticised by WADA and any person with any grasp of the English language.
Allegedly to avoid the Report going before a meeting of the UCI, Vrijman released it to the media before delivering it to the UCI. It was then a
fait accompli and would not have been rejected by the UCI holding a properly constituted meeting for fear of embarrassment.
It is highly suspect that the second donation payment of $100,000 by LA to the UCI funded the attempted whitewash Vrijman Report.