|
|
 |
|
 |
|
 |
MFA Swine Network 16157 KITTYHAWK AVE Marshall, MO 65340 660-886-5240
MFA Swine Operations 16157 KITTYHAWK AVE Marshall, MO 65340 660-886-9690 |
|
|
|
09/09/10 03:50:00
Printable Page
09/09 15:48 CDT Toronto police turn over Clemens documents
Toronto police turn over Clemens documents
By ROB GILLIES
Associated Press Writer
TORONTO (AP) -- Police searched the offices of the Toronto Blue Jays and turned
over documents in connection with the perjury case against seven-time Cy Young
winner Roger Clemens.
Two officers executed the search in June and assisted the U.S. Justice
Department by forwarding the two boxes they obtained, police spokesman Const.
Tony Vella said Thursday.
Vella called it a U.S. investigation and said the Blue Jays cooperated with the
court order. He declined to say if medical records were obtained.
Clemens pleaded not guilty last month to charges of lying to Congress about
whether he used steroids or human growth hormone. Federal prosecutors didn't
believe Clemens' testimony to Congress, and they subsequently charged him with
making false statements, perjury and obstruction of Congress.
Clemens won Cy Young Awards in Toronto in 1997 and 1998. Most of the
accusations against Clemens are based on the word of Brian McNamee, once the
Blue Jays' strength and conditioning coach.
At Clemens' arraignment last week, government attorney Steven Durham said there
was "voluminous" scientific evidence that needed to be reviewed before the
trial could start, tentatively in April. That presumably includes the syringes
McNamee alleges he used to inject the pitcher with drugs. It might also include
information from the documents received from the Blue Jays.
"We do not comment about matters pending before courts other than to confirm
that it is our policy to comply with all valid legal process," Blue Jays
spokesman Jay Stenhouse said.
Clemens is facing three counts of making false statements, two counts of
perjury and one count of obstruction of Congress. The 48-year-old pitcher has
promised all along to fight the charges.
If convicted, he could face up to 30 years in prison and a $1.5 million fine,
though under U.S. sentencing guidelines, he probably would get no more than 15
to 21 months in prison.
Any conviction, however, could damage his reputation, future earnings and
chances of election to baseball's Hall of Fame.
Clemens had come to Congress after being mentioned repeatedly in the Mitchell
Report - the damning breakdown of the sport's steroid problem released in 2007.
Two months later, in front of a House committee, Clemens said: "Let me be
clear. I have never taken steroids or HGH."
McNamee testified that the pitcher did, in fact, use steroids and HGH. McNamee
also worked with Clemens when he was with the New York Yankees.
Former teammate Andy Pettitte also told congressional investigators that
Clemens told him he had used HGH. Clemens said Pettitte "misremembers" the
conversation.
Clemens ranks ninth on the career list with 354 victories and was an 11-time
All-Star. During a 23-year career that ended in 2007, he played for the Boston
Red Sox, the Blue Jays, the Yankees and the Houston Astros.
He left Boston and joined Toronto in 1997 after Boston's general manager at the
time, Dan Duquette, said the pitcher was in the "twilight" of his career.
|