QuickStepper said:
Let's just assume though for the sake of simplicity that Bruyneel and Marti are sufficiently aligned with Armstrong that they will take their lead based on whatever it is he decides to do. Del Moral is the wild card, IMHO. If he elects "public" and the rest elect "private" I have no idea how this gets reconciled, and someone is going to be claiming a violation of their rights.
Why USADA didn't simply choose to go after each of these guys in five separate proceedings is something I think it will later regret. But that's just my take on it.
This is an interesting point, but if Del Moral alone would opt for public, I don’t see how this affects the rights of others. If what Del Moral did or is charged with doing involves any of the others, as it presumably does, they have no right to complain if Del Moral airs this dirty laundry in public. Their right to keep evidence against themselves private surely does not trump his right to do whatever he feels gives him the best chance to defend himself against the charges. Even if, hypothetically, one of the remaining five were actually innocent of the charges, just by associating with someone who engaged in shady behavior he runs the risk of having affairs he would prefer to be private made public.
As far as charging all six consolidated, rather than separately, I think USADA felt the nature of the case demanded that. None of these guys acted in isolation, in the sense that some rider testing positive, for example, might have chosen on his own to take a drug, and if he was aided in doing so, solicited on his own the help of some doctor or trainer. The whole point of the conspiracy as I understand it is that the actions of each of the six aided, abetted and reinforced the actions of the others. I don’t think one can appreciate what any one of the defendants did in isolation of what the others did.
In fact, maybe all doping, at least in cycling, involves networks/conspiracies of this kind, and maybe there is no such as a single guilty rider. I’m sensitive to that view. But if that’s the case, what USADA is doing could be seen as the wave of the future, the right way to go after dopers.