Oldman said:
			
		
	
	
		
		
			Obama's team would be dam*ed if they did and dam*ed if they don't on this issue.  If they did the Republicans could embrace the "waste of money" principle and condemn the current administration for the cost and pursuing a savior, never mind they don't believe either point.  Livestrong support for the entire birth control issue gives  the White House a little relief but not if they "stopped" a legitimate investigation.  If they delay assistance to USADA publicly until after November they could slip under the radar.  Oh wait, there's CBS....
		
		
	 
The USA has secretly investigated Armstrong and his associates for a couple years.  Armstrong has had no ability to even see, much less challenge, the evidence that has been gathered.  A public revelation of the evidence would be extremely unfair and illegal.  It is never going to happen.  
Any leak that might happen will never be more than a rumor.  Reporters sit in jail when they refuse to disclose the source of GJ testimony (compare the experience of Mark Fainaru-Wada and Lance Williams in the BALCO case).  No source inside the federal investigation is ever going to out himself.  The best you're ever going to get from leaks is more unsubstantiated Armstrong rumors telling us what we already know:  Armstrong doped and he doped big.  
The Planned Parenthood thing is tinfoil hat stuff.  
The feds are not in any kind of dilemma at all.  They declined to prosecute a case, simple as that.  It happens every day.  A few sports fetishists are not going to prompt the USA to restart an investigation that was obviously terminated with high-level advance knowledge, if not explicit approval.  Restarting an investigation without new evidence would be a massive nightmare, for obvious reasons--it would plainly demonstrate that the investigation is driven by the political need to placate the extreme hater special interest group (as utterly implausible as that is).  
If the feds do try to stiff WADA/USADA for the doping info, then maybe there will be some cause to suspect special treatment for Armstrong.  But we're not there yet.  Howman thinks the US will comply with its obligations.  Why not wait and see?
The Extreme Hater Referendum has garnered six more signatures!  It's up to 126: