peterst6906 said:From the public's perspective at least, there are still a lot of questions to be answered. I hope they will be.
But it doesn't seem to have been "just because" on the inside. From the Wall Street Journal article:
Before issuing his statement Friday, Mr. Birotte called and laid out his decision to the federal investigators who had produced the evidence that formed the basis for the indictment recommendation, said people familiar with the matter. Those investigators worked on behalf of the Food and Drug Administration, the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the U.S. Postal Service Office of the Inspector General.
"In this office in essentially every significant investigation, a prosecution memo is prepared prior to a charging decision to outline the legal theories, the evidence, and the strengths and weaknesses of a particular case. That in fact was done in this case," said Thom Mrozek, a spokesman for the U.S. attorney in Los Angeles. He added that "the prosecution memo was provided to the U.S. attorney and his management team well in advance of the final decision and…was thoroughly reviewed and discussed prior to the decision."
I totally agree with the rest of your statement. Everything suggested charges were recommended and everything was just about ready.
The prosecution memo was provided to the US Attorney and his team well in advance of the final decision.
Well in advance is not days. Not even weeks. I would speculate it is months.
By procedure the US Attorney must make a decision if the investigation is to go forward to a Grand Jury. These recommendations from the prosecutors would form the substance of the prosecution memo to call a Grand Jury.
That initial memo would be updated from time to time as more evidence came to light and changes were made to the indictment count.
BALCO had 42 indictment counts. I would have expected Tailwind to have materially more counts.
