- May 14, 2010
 
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ChewbaccaD said:His strongest argument is that the USADA has acted as a "state actor" and because of that must conform to the due process provided any defendant. And this hinges to me on whether the judge will see their actions in relation to the Federal probe as somehow a continuance following the decision not to proceed, or their participation prior to that decision as being so intertwined in some way that in this instance, they have become a state actor. That would effectively end doping enforcement in the US unless the ruling (which would obviously be appealed) were extremely narrow. Here is the problem there, once it isn't a private process conducted by private statutes, it becomes an issue for courts to decide, and there are many reasons a judge would not want to set that precedent. Judges are well aware that bodies geared to specific issues (specialization) are much more adept than a federal court in determining issues within their scope. It will lead to MORE cases in federal court, the prospect of which most no judge wants to create, and several other reasons.
For that reason, I think LA is going to suffer another defeat. But again, I wouldn't actually bet real money on either position right now...but then again, I am well aware of my penchant for misreading gambling situations...so I don't bet on much of anything.
If the judge ruled that, as you say, in this instance they were behaving as state actors, how would his decision have any bearing at all on their status generally, or in other cases? In this one particular case, they have comported themselves as state actors; therefore, in this case and only this case, their role as sporting arbitrators is abrogated, and Mr. Armstrong is entitled to due process.
By getting it into open court Armstrong merely succeeds in giving himself a fighting chance, where right now he has none.
				
		
			
	
	