QuickStepper said:
Frankly, I've been surprised that USADA has been so reluctant to simply let it all out at this point, because the risk of "witness intimidation" would seem to be pretty small, given that every move Armstrong makes is going to be so closely scrutinized. He'd be an idiot to actually try to intimidate any of the 10+ former teammates at this point. Not saying he wouldn't try, but doing so would expose him to the same thing he complains USADA is guilty of, i.e., potential federal bribery and witness tampering charges. This isn't the mafia and he's not going to put out "hits" on the witnesses, and eventually USADA is going to have to release all of this stuff anway, so why not just do so at the earliest possible moment in order to avoid any claims that the proceedings are fundamentally tainted because of a failure to protect Armstrong's due process rights? It really is baffling, because if they'd just do so, it would take the wind out of much of what Armstrong's lawyers sails are currently filled with.
I appreciate your posts, and I agree, have felt this way from the beginning (see post #1191). Charging letters are supposed to present dates and other specific information. They usually involve positive tests (which is why the record is 58-2; actually it's more like 400-2, the 58 refers to cases that are actually challenged, that go to arbitration, most don't), and the substance detected, the amount, the nature of the test, and so on is all given to the rider. If USADA is to be consistent with its own precedent in these cases, they have to make a better effort to present detail in this case.
As I pointed out before, and as Python has also said, it's possible to present this information without naming witnesses, if USADA really believes intimidation is a potential problem. But like QS, I never understood how intimidation could be a major factor when 1) there are surely signed statements, and 2) LA's every move will be closely monitored. He might intimidate by trying to get the rider blackballed from the industry (like Frankie), but if a rider is vulnerable to that kind of threat, he will know that it can happen anyway after any hearing in which his name has to come out. Really, when the riders agreed to meet with USADA and give statements, they must have known they were burning a lot of bridges. I don't see how LA can make their problems much worse.
Not to mention the fact that the anonymity of these witnesses is a charade. Anyone with any interest in this case knows who most of them are. Why hasn't LA already begun pressuring some of them? Or do some people here think he has? And since there are supposed to be more than ten of them, I don't see that providing some specific details from 1-2 of them can possibly hurt USADA's case.
Originally Posted by Alpe d'Huez
That didn't stop him from trying to intimidate Hamilton during the Federal investigation where he was potentially facing prison time. He got away with that scot free. So why would he not try the same tactic during the USADA investigation?
I feel sorry for Tyler, I wish witnesses did not have to put up with this crap, but nothing LA could have done in that restaurant would have changed Tyler's testimony, either to the GJ or in public. At most, it could have intimidated him from speaking truthfully if there had been a subsequent trial, but the fact that he changed his testimony would have been obvious (and would have put TH at risk of perjury)--just as it would be obvious if witnesses in this case changed their testimony from USADA hearing to CAS, or from their signed statement to any hearing. Also, the very fact that we all know about this action by LA shows how hard it is for him to hide any attempts at intimidation. He isn't very subtle.