Jones pleads guilty, admits lying about steroids
Olympic track star says she took banned drugs from 2000 to 2001
MSNBC video |
Jones: 'I have betrayed your trust' Oct. 5: An emotional Marion Jones says, "I have let my country down," after pleading guilty to lying to federal investigators when she denied using performance-enhancing drugs. MSNBC |
WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. - Marion Jones’ voice never wavered, her reserve never faltered as the words rang out in the silent, stately federal courtroom.
She was a liar and a cheat, she told the judge, her eyes never straying from his face.
And so ended years of angry denials by one of the world’s most celebrated athletes.
The owner of three Olympic golds and two bronze medals, Jones came clean Friday and admitted she used steroids. She pleaded guilty to lying to federal investigators when she denied using performance-enhancing drugs, then announced her retirement in a tearful apology outside the U.S. District Court.
“It’s with a great amount of shame that I stand before you and tell you that I have betrayed your trust,” Jones said, her voice cracking as her mother stood behind her, a strong and supportive hand on her shoulder.
“I have been dishonest and you have the right to be angry with me. I have let (my family) down. I have let my country down, and I have let myself down,” she said, pausing frequently to regain her composure. “I recognize that by saying I’m deeply sorry, it might not be enough and sufficient to address the pain and hurt that I’ve caused you.
“Therefore, I want to ask for your forgiveness for my actions, and I hope you can find it in your heart to forgive me.”
The calm strength she’d displayed in the courtroom was gone, washed away by a flood of tears. She embraced her mother, who told her daughter, “Good job.” The two then climbed into a black limousine with one of Jones’ attorneys and drove away, not taking any questions.
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“It’s bittersweet,” said Travis Tygart, chief executive officer of the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency. “Any time a potential American hero admits to cheating us sports fans, people who watch Olympic games, it’s bittersweet.”
Indeed, Friday marked a stunning fall from grace for the 31-year-old Jones, once the symbol for everything that was right about women in sports. She was powerful, captivating the country with the audacious goal of winning an unprecedented five gold medals at the Sydney Olympics. But she was beautiful and feminine, too, gracing the cover of Vogue with the poise of a supermodel.
Jones also pleaded guilty to a second count of lying to investigators about her association with a check-fraud scheme.
“You’re vindicated, but it doesn’t make you feel any happier this is going on,” said Dick Pound, chairman of the World Anti-Doping Agency. “The fact that she was using the performance-enhancing drugs is not a surprise. People suspected strongly or knew, but couldn’t prove the use.
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Jones is the biggest name to be brought down so far in the Bay Area Laboratory Co-Operative scandal. But home run king Barry Bonds also has been linked to BALCO, and a grand jury is still investigating whether he lied to federal investigators.
Bonds denied ever knowingly taking performance-enhancing drugs. In testimony before a grand jury in 2003, Bonds said he believed a clear substance and a cream given to him by his trainer were flaxseed oil and an arthritis balm.
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Suspicions and doping allegations had dogged Jones for years. Her ex-husband, C.J. Hunter, was busted for doping, and Tim Montgomery, the father of her son Monty, was stripped of his world record in the 100 meters in connection with the BALCO case.
Jones herself was one of the athletes who testified before a grand jury in 2003 in the BALCO investigation. In August 2006, one of her urine samples tested positive for EPO, but she was cleared when a backup sample tested negative.
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