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  • Balco Issue Updated

    By Amy Shipley
    Washington Post Staff Writer
    Thursday, July 29, 2004; Page D01


    COLORADO SPRINGS, July 28 -- Just one scientist or scientific group
    likely masterminded the creation of the two barely known steroids at the
    center of the Bay Area Laboratory Co-Operative (BALCO) scandal, the lab
    director who identified the two drugs said Wednesday.

    "The more I think about this and put it all together, I become more and
    more convinced that whoever was behind this knew quite well what they
    were doing," said Don Catlin of the UCLA Olympic Analytical Laboratory
    in Los Angeles. "This was sophisticated work. . . . I don't know whether
    it was one person alone or a consortium . . . [but] I see no reason to
    suspect there are two independent groups" who made the steroids.

    Catlin's remarks came via telephone during a session with reporters at
    U.S. Anti-Doping Agency headquarters after bans were handed out to
    several athletes -- Regina Jacobs, Kevin Toth, John McEwen and Melissa
    Price -- who last summer tested positive for THG, one of the two
    steroids Catlin identified.

    In its February indictment of four men connected to BALCO on federal
    steroid distribution charges, the government alleged that the two
    steroids, norbolethone and THG, were provided to athletes under the code
    name "clear." The government did not speculate on the source of the
    drugs, which had previously been undetectable in standard urine screens.

    In May, the San Jose Mercury News reported that Victor Conte, the owner
    of BALCO, told federal investigators that famed supplement-maker Patrick
    Arnold supplied THG, whose chemical name is tetrahydragestrinone and
    which Catlin identified last summer. Two years ago in an interview with
    The Post, Arnold, who created the recently banned over-the-counter
    steroid andro, denied a connection to any athletes but said he might at
    one time have made norbolethone, discovered by Catlin in 2002.

    After Catlin unearthed the drugs, one cyclist tested positive for
    norbolethone and five track and field athletes tested positive for THG.
    All received bans of varying lengths from their sports' governing
    bodies. It is unclear, however, how widespread the use of the drugs was
    before officials had the means to detect them. Catlin speculated that
    norbolethone was used as far back as 2000.

    Federal officials have not charged anyone in connection with the
    production of the drugs, which are not technically illegal since they
    are not among the anabolic steroids specifically banned by Congress in
    1990.

    Catlin speculated that a knowledgeable scientist manufactured
    norbolethone after reading about its properties in old steroid
    literature. Wyeth Laboratories in Philadelphia studied norbolethone
    during the 1960s but it eventually abandoned the research and never
    marketed the drug. Catlin said he believed the producer obtained
    gestrinone -- a banned anabolic steroid that can be purchased online
    from overseas sources -- and bubbled hydrogen gas through it to create
    norbolethone and then, by shortening the process, THG.

    "People out there somewhere were bound and determined to make steroids
    we wouldn't know about," said Catlin, who spoke to reporters by
    telephone. " . . . The story is not over."

    In other news, USADA officials revealed that they received three
    telephone calls from the anonymous coach who on June 5, 2003, mailed
    them a syringe that contained THG and led to its discovery. USADA
    spokesman Rich Wanninger said the coach provided several pieces of
    information:

    . The coach claimed that four U.S. athletes and one international
    athlete were receiving an undetectable steroid similar to Genabol --
    another name for norbolethone -- from Conte and had no fear of testing
    positive. The coach also said track coach Remi Korchemny was involved.
    Korchemny was among the four men, including Conte, indicted in February.
    All have pled not guilty.

    . The coach claimed the drug was sometimes mixed with flaxseed oil and
    ingested by placing a few drops on the tongue.

    . The coach also claimed that Conte showed up to the U.S. track and
    field championships in June 2003 and distributed substances to athletes
    from a black bag.

    The Mercury News reported in July that Trevor Graham, the former coach
    of Marion Jones, provided the syringe to USADA. Graham has repeatedly
    declined to comment. His name, meantime, has surfaced in connection with
    other drug charges. Sprinter Tim Montgomery told the BALCO grand jury
    that Graham himself was involved in the distribution of banned drugs,
    according to the San Francisco Chronicle.

    Graham's attorney has stated that his client has no connection to such
    activities. Graham has coached three of the four athletes -- Montgomery,
    Michelle Collins and Alvin Harrison -- facing lifetime bans from USADA
    for alleged drug violations connected to BALCO.

    USADA CEO Terry Madden said Wednesday the agency might pursue action
    against coaches or others believed to have assisted in giving banned
    drugs to athletes, but offered no timetable.

    "We may be proceeding in more directions after all the BALCO information
    comes out," he said. "It might not just be athletes. We have a duty, in
    fact, to pursue coaches that may have been involved."

    USADA officials also on Wednesday described a previously unknown level
    of cooperation between anti-doping officials and federal investigators,
    as well as between USADA officials and international sport officials,
    citing a number of secret meetings throughout last summer as THG was
    being identified.

    Catlin said Jeff Novitsky, the lead investigator in the BALCO case,
    contacted him in the fall of 2002 for assistance in identifying drugs
    discovered in connection with a lab in Northern California.

    In August of last year, USADA officials alerted the Department of
    Justice about THG and their suspicions about Conte and BALCO. Days
    later, on Aug. 11, 2003, Madden said, government officials informed
    USADA that its investigation and the government's in Northern California
    centered on the same lab: BALCO.

    On Aug. 19, Novitsky and a San Mateo narcotics official flew to Colorado
    Springs to interview USADA officials, Madden said. After that, the
    agency developed a relationship with Jeff Nedrow, the assistant U.S.
    attorney in the Northern District of California assigned to the case,
    Madden said.

    USADA officials also alerted the world governing body of track and field
    (IAAF) to the existence of THG in July of last summer, requesting
    increased out-of-competition testing before the world championships and
    targeted testing on nine international athletes it suspected of possible
    involvement.

    "I've never seen such a good, coordinated effort among so many people,"
    Bowers said.

  • #2
    So..

    What does this shit that the players were taking do? Anyone have a profile on this drug? Worth looking at, or just something good for tested athletes?

    Puma

    Comment


    • #3
      it's good it you're an athlete subject to a test

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: So..

        Originally posted by Puma
        What does this shit that the players were taking do? Anyone have a profile on this drug? Worth looking at, or just something good for tested athletes?

        Puma
        http://www.superiormuscle.com/vbulle...&highlight=thg

        Comment

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