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Tejada pleads guilty to lying about steroid use

Former AL MVP admits buying HGH but says he threw it out before using it

Miguel Tejada Press ConferenceGetty Images
Houston shortstop Miguel Tejada fights back tears as he makes a statement during a press conference Wednesday. Earlier in the day Tejada plead guilty to making misleading statements during a transcribed interview with congressional staffers in 2005 over the use of banned performance-enhancing substances in Major League Baseball.

WASHINGTON - Dressed in a defendant’s dark suit instead of an All-Star’s crisp uniform, Miguel Tejada became the first high-profile player convicted of a crime stemming from baseball’s steroids era, pleading guilty Wednesday in federal court to misleading Congress about the use of performance-enhancing drugs.

Under a plea agreement with the same prosecutors pursuing a perjury indictment against Roger Clemens, Tejada admitted he withheld information about an ex-teammate’s use of steroids and human growth hormone when questioned by a House committee’s investigators in August 2005.

Tejada — the 2002 American League MVP with the Oakland Athletics and a five-time All-Star shortstop now with the Houston Astros — also acknowledged he bought HGH while playing for the A’s, but said he threw the drugs away without using them. Prosecutors said they have no evidence to contradict that.

“I just want to apologize,” Tejada said as he fought back tears hours later at a Houston news conference, where he did not take questions. “I made a mistake, and now I know how serious of a mistake that I made for not answering a question about another teammate.”

The misdemeanor can lead to as much as a year in jail. Federal guidelines call for a lighter sentence, and one of his lawyers, Mark Tuohey, said he thinks Tejada will receive probation.

Astros general manager Ed Wade expects Tejada to be present when players report for spring training Tuesday in Florida. Wade also said Tejada still plans to play in the March 5-23 World Baseball Classic.

“Hopefully, we’re one more step for putting a lot of stuff behind us,” Wade said. “It’s been a tough week for baseball and sports in general. We’re finding out that it takes a lot of time for lies to dissipate and for sins to disappear.”

Federal Magistrate Judge Alan Kay set Tejada’s sentencing for March 26; the Astros are not scheduled to play an exhibition game that day.

Kay asked more than once whether the Dominican Republic-born Tejada understood this could affect his immigration status in the United States. “Yes, your honor,” Tejada replied.

A letter sent by prosecutors to his attorneys on Feb. 5 outlining the terms of their plea deal said: “His guilty plea in this case may subject him to detention, deportation and other sanctions at the direction of the United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement.”

But Tuohey said Tejada’s status has been discussed with immigration officials. The lawyer does not believe Tejada will be deported because of this case.

“Because of the nature of the offense, considered a petty offense, not a crime of moral turpitude, we believe it will have no impact on his immigration status at all,” Tuohey said. “And he plans — and he will soon in the next few years — be welcomed to citizenship in the United States.”

At one point, Tejada apologized “to the whole United States, because this country gave me the opportunity to be who I am and the last thing that I want to do is let this country down.”

As with the pending cases against seven-time Cy Young Award winner Clemens and seven-time MVP and home-run king Barry Bonds — whose trial begins March 2 in San Francisco — Tejada got in trouble not so much for what he did, but what he said.

Tejada’s appearance came two days after his AL MVP successor, Alex Rodriguez, said he took banned substances while playing for the Texas Rangers in 2001-03. That admission came in the aftermath of a Sports Illustrated report that Rodriguez failed a drug test in 2003; he does not face criminal charges.

Even after being chastised by Kay for merely nodding in response to questions, Tejada did not say much in Washington on Wednesday other than “Yes, your honor” or “No, your honor” during the 45-minute hearing.

When he entered the courtroom for what would be announced as “The United States of America vs. Miguel O. Tejada,” the player sat at the defendant’s wooden table with his lawyers, swiveling in his black chair, fiddling with the knot of his black-and-gray striped tie, and wiping sweat from his forehead and nose with his left hand.

Eventually — wearing headphones so he could hear a simultaneous translation into Spanish — Tejada rose and stepped forward to a podium, facing Kay, and was sworn in. He stated his full name, “Miguel Odalis Tejada Martinez.” Later, Tejada was asked how far he went in school and answered, “Eighth grade, sir.”


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