serottasyclist said:
How would Armstrong convert this into a criminal trial? He is trying to shut it down all together. If he wins before Judge Sparks, then the USADA arbitration is shut down. USADA will have no other venue to pursue the doping charges, and no other agency would have a right to pruse doping charges against him.
Put another way, Armstrong is not requesting Judge Sparks to require USADA to provide him with due process, he is saying USADA can't proceed because they don't provide due process.
You do make a point regarding would the USADA have any course should a judge rule that the USADA is actually an agent of the US government. This seems to be the legal argument, while Armstrong's concern about "due process" are more public facing and part of his disinformation campaign.
I posted the USADA procedure and it does not lack due process. In fact, it very much parallels a typical criminal process and I will use Texas law in the following discussion:
1) The Anti-Doping Review Board is a group of experts independent of USADA with medical, technical and legal knowledge of doping matters. These experts meet to recommend whether there is sufficient evidence of doping or other rule violations to proceed to a hearing.
This is very similar to a Grand Jury.
"A Grand Jury is a panel that decides whether a felony should be indicted or not. The DA’s office can file misdemeanors on their own, however, to file felony charges a grand jury must agree there is probable cause.
Grand jury meetings are secretive and confidential. The public has no access to their deliberations...
A criminal defendant does not have the right to testify at the grand jury nor does a defense attorney have the right to be present. Because the proceedings are secretive the transcript, if any, is not available."
2) After the Anti-Doping Review Board presents its recommendation to USADA, USADA will notify the athlete or other person in writing whether USADA considers the matter closed or alternately what specific charges or alleged violations will be adjudicated and what sanction USADA is seeking to have imposed.
"Grand juries can do several things with cases they hear. They can issue a true bill which equals a felony indictment or they can issue a no-bill turning the case down. Occasionally they will charge a person with a misdemeanor instead of a felony through indictment. After a true bill is issued, the case gets assigned to a court and proceeds normally."
3) The athlete may elect to proceed to a hearing before the American Arbitration Association (AAA) using a single arbitrator (or a three-arbitrator panel, if requested by either of the parties) selected from a pool of the North American Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) arbitrators, who shall also be AAA arbitrators.
Just as a criminal defendant can choose between a judge or jury trial.
4) The American Arbitration Association Supplementary Procedures for Adjudication of Doping Disputes (the "AAA Supplementary Procedures") and the USADA Protocol apply to the hearing before AAA/CAS. The regular CAS Appellate rules apply to hearings held before CAS.
Herein, the defendant is entitled to examine all evidence, cross-examine witnesses and provide defense evidence and testimony.
5) If the American Arbitration Association upholds the Anti-Doping Review Board's findings, the athlete may appeal to the Court of Arbitration for Sport for a final opinion.
An appeal option if found guilty by the American Arbitration Association.
Somebody please show me lack of due process.