Court: Investigators wrong to seize MLB drug list

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SAN FRANCISCO (AP)—The infamous list that tarnished America’s pastime and some of its biggest stars soon will be back in the hands of the Major League Baseball Players’ Union.

A federal appeals court ruled Wednesday that agents had no right to seize baseball’s anonymous drug-testing results from 2003. The decision by the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals is a victory for the players’ union, which has argued for years to have the results of the 104 players who allegedly tested positive for performance-enhancing drugs in 2003 returned.

“This was an obvious case of deliberate overreaching by the government in an effort to seize data as to which it lacked probable cause,” Chief Judge Alex Kozinski wrote in the 9-2 decision.

Barring a last-ditch appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court, the test results and samples will be destroyed, and prosecutors cannot use the information. Union lawyers said the government returned the evidence shortly after earlier trial court rulings.

The panel said federal agents trampled on players’ protections against unreasonable searches and seizures, though the ruling came too late to spare players linked to the list, including Yankees star Alex Rodriguez and Red Sox slugger David Ortiz, who admitted they were on it.

Ortiz said he didn’t care about the ruling, adding it won’t help him almost a month after his name was leaked.

Atlanta Braves star Chipper Jones agreed.

“It doesn’t matter now,” Jones said. “The names are already out there in the general public. We’ve already got a number out there. It’s not going to be over until it’s all out there.”

Kozinski said the players’ union had good reason to want to keep the list under wraps.

“The risk to the players associated with disclosure, and with that the ability of the Players Association to obtain voluntary compliance with drug testing from its members in the future, is very high,” the judge wrote. “Indeed, some players appear to have already suffered this very harm as a result of the government’s seizure.”

The government seized the samples and records in April 2004 from baseball’s drug-testing companies as part of the BALCO investigation into Barry Bonds and others. The list of 104 players said to have tested positive, attached to a grand jury subpoena, has been part of a five-year legal fight, with the players’ union trying to force the government to return what federal agents took during raids.

Kozinski said the case was a significant test of the government’s search and seizure powers in the digital age, and issued guidelines for investigators to follow in future raids that included submitting computers to independent computer experts for sorting of data.

The ruling vastly curtailed the federal government’s performance-enhancing drug investigation. Federal prosecutors had maintained they wanted the names to investigate the players’ drug sources, which could have kept alive a massive investigation started by a Dumpster-diving agent.

Instead, Wednesday’s ruling means investigators are barred from accessing any names except for the 10 players listed on a 2004 search warrant. The names of those 10 have never been released, but the government said they had ties to the Bay Area Laboratory Co-Operative.

BALCO founder Victor Conte has long been critical of the actions of the government, especially then-lead investigator Jeff Novitzky.

“I have said that Novitzky has been using illegal tactics and not following the law since the day of the BALCO raid,” Conte said. “He seems to just make up his own rules as he goes along.”

U.S. attorney spokesman Jack Gillund in San Francisco said the government was reviewing its options, which could include an appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court.

Players’ association lawyer Elliot Peters said the union was happy with the ruling but still angry that names of several players allegedly on the list have been leaked to journalists.

“Anyone who leaks information purporting to contain those 2003 test results is committing a crime,” union leader Don Fehr and union general counsel Michael Weiner said in a statement. “We are very gratified by this decision, and hope that this will finally bring this long litigation to a close.”

Peters declined to say whether he asked a federal judge to look into leaks from the list.

“If the government hadn’t unconstitutionally seized this in the first place, there wouldn’t have been any leaks,” Peters said.

The list’s genesis goes back six years, to the time when an agreement between MLB and the players’ association on drug policing was just being implemented.

In 2003, baseball conducted survey drug testing—without penalties. Each player provided a urine sample and an additional follow-up five-to-seven days later. Up to 240 players could be selected randomly for additional testing.

Two companies were involved, Comprehensive Drug Testing Inc. of Long Beach, Calif., and Quest Diagnostics Inc. of Teterboro, N.J., and samples were marked with codes to keep track as they were processed.

The union has said it had begun steps to destroy the results, but learned a federal grand jury subpoena had been issued for some of the test results and records as part of the BALCO investigation. That halted the destruction.

After months of wrangling, federal agents got a search warrant and seized samples from a Quest lab in Las Vegas and records from CDT in Long Beach on April 8, 2004—records the appeals court now says never should have been taken.

“There’s nothing we can do about it,” said Braves first baseman Adam LaRoche. “They’re out there. It’s over with. I don’t know if they can try to make it right or not.”

Updated Aug 27, 4:12 am EDT
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112 Comments

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  1. Jazzinefx
    112. Posted by Jazzinefx Thu Aug 27 6:41pm EDT

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    #104. Not at all. I love baseball, grew up watching some of the best that ever played. What I don't like is the nonsense about Steriods and all this shyt when it was THE OWNERS who ALLOWED IT TO GROW and FLOURISH!!

    As I said Baseball was in a deep state of unpopularity, when the Steroids began. Mark McGuire was the first one to start using the stuff. I remember when they were calling him the new Ruth, because of the numbers he was putting up. They could've stopped it then. I've seen more shyt concerning baseball, for example, the juiced ball, the corked bat, I remember them taking a homerun away from George Brett because of the bat he used!! Then there was the pine-tar issues, I remember the old pitchers Gaylord Perry comes to mind, being tormented for scuffing the balls, cutting the balls, that's the reason you have a new ball, damn near for every pitch!! Going back further, the spike issue, you couldn't go into the bag, with your spikes raised.

    The OWNERS straightened out all of the issues, and they can straighten out this steroid issue also!! But, doing it means that they will LOSE AN AWFUL LOT OF MONEY, so, who will suffer??

    THE PLAYERS, and THE FANS!!! We fans will always have this foolish discussions, and the players will be drug through the media mud!!! The OWNERS will walk away UNSCATHED!!!
  2. Jazzinefx
    111. Posted by Jazzinefx Thu Aug 27 6:27pm EDT

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    @ 106,107, That's a good question. Why do we need interleague play, especially if there are different rules depending on whose park your playing in: If the home team is a National League team, no DH. If its an American League team, we'll play the DH!!

    Baseball needs to have uniform rules. And the Interleague has destroyed the value of the World Series!! The only reason for interleague play is more money, made by the OWNERS!!! I say get rid of the DH, and let pitchers be a part of the game again, let them hit, and run the basepaths, and get pinch-hit for, even if they are pitching a good game, because the team is behind, and they have a chance to get back into the game; with a hitter, batting for the pitcher!! It's really not fair that the National League pitchers, when they face the American League teams, are facing a lineup of 9 everyday hitters, and the American League pitchers are facing 8 everyday hitters, when they face the National League teams!!!

    This is what have destroyed baseball. The game is the same game, its been altered to make more MONEY!! The players of this era are no better than the players of yesterday, its just that the players of today are more spoiled than the players of yesterday, and have less overall skill than the players of yesterday!! For instance, a pitcher who could hit was an asset, if you play in the American League, it doesn't matter if the pitcher can hit, because he's not going to bat anyway!!
    The OWNERS want it ALL, the MONEY, the PRESTIGE, the ACCOLADES, EVERYTHING!! IF THEY HAD ANY BALLS AT ALL, THEY WOULD TAKE RESPONSIBILITY FOR THESE ISSUES, AND STOP BLAMING THE PLAYERS!! THE OWNERS NEED TO CLEAN UP THEIR FUNKY GAME, then we fans, could make educated opinions on who is the "best"!!
    There are lots of players who have bent-over backwards for the "integrity" of the game, what does it get them? They are caught up in the stink, along with the so-called dirty players!!!
    THE OWNERS COULD CHANGE THIS MESS OVERNIGHT, IF THEY WANTED TO, THAT IS!!
  3. <i>ronjba</i>
    110. Posted by ronjba Thu Aug 27 4:57pm EDT

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    Isn't it illegal to use illegal drugs? Doesn't the government have the right to go after illegal things? What if it wasn't steroids, but cocaine? (both are illegal). Why do we treat it so vastly different? It's illegal to use steroids without a prescription.
  4. CLINTON C
    109. Posted by CLINTON C Thu Aug 27 3:01pm EDT

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    Well, once again the privledged get privledges. Release all the names, investigate it, and ban them all from Baseball and the Hall of Fame. If your not going to do that then drop it, let Pete Rose in the Hall, remove the asterick on Barry Bonds and let the rest of them play on, stay retired and elgible for the Hall, enough B.S. Put up or Shut the (F) up about this once and for all.
  5. M1staM1ke
    108. Posted by M1staM1ke Thu Aug 27 2:54pm EDT

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    Legally it may be wrong, but for the health of the game it's the right thing to do. These names are going to continue to leak for years to come if the list isn't released. We should just see who's names are on it and get it over with. Otherwise there will always be people wondering who the next star to be exposed will be. It's horrible.

    If you guys want to check out a great sports message board take a look at HallofForum.com. It's a bunch of sports fans that just enjoy talking sports without some of the nonsense that goes on at other message boards like this one. It's just knowledgeable and sensible posters and really a great place to talk sports. I'm certain that if you check it out you won't be disappointed. Again that's HallofForum.com.
  6. <i>amella3</i>
    107. Posted by amella3 Thu Aug 27 2:19pm EDT

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    #100-you forgot one. Why are we even still having interleague play? There is no reason for it!!!!!!
  7. <i>amella3</i>
    106. Posted by amella3 Thu Aug 27 2:18pm EDT

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    #100-you forgot one. Why are we even still having interleague play? There is no reason for it!!!!!!
  8. Jane
    105. Posted by Jane Thu Aug 27 2:13pm EDT

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    To #95, so you're saying they shouldn't even be allowed to take, say, ibuprofen for a sprained ankle, when the average person wouldn't think twice and doctors recommend it as part of the normal course of treatment? Where's the sense in that? If they have to get surgery, are they not allowed to take painkillers afterward if they want a chance to play again that season? The anesthetic is a drug. Should they skip that, too? Should a player be discriminated against because he needs, say, an anti-anxiety medication to handle being around other people or an anti-depressant? Because that IS discrimination, removing them from the sport because of something over which they have no control, unless you're saying that they could control that, in which case I recommend you find someone depressed and ask them if they can just get over it.

    I'm not saying that there shouldn't be a line, because there has to be to keep the game fair and interesting, but you can't draw it at nothing whatsoever, because honestly, we have to let them find a middle ground, where things available and logical that they would use as members of the general public are acceptable, and things they would have no reason to use outside of sports are not.
  9. Beau H
    104. Posted by Beau H Thu Aug 27 1:47pm EDT

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    #100...i can tell that you are not a fan of baseball so why don't you shut up and point your negativity in a different direction!
  10. John
    103. Posted by John Thu Aug 27 1:26pm EDT

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    gee, Pitino is so devout. That is so wonderful. What a role model.
    Do you think he ate with his hands, or did he just go in there and get it?
  11. <i>mwforteii</i>
    102. Posted by mwforteii Thu Aug 27 1:24pm EDT

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    Because of this, any blind testing in the future will be truly blind (ie. no way to tie results to the player), if the union does it job right!
  12. John
    101. Posted by John Thu Aug 27 1:20pm EDT

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    when Pitino goes out to a restaurant, does he ask for "bonking table", or a "non-bonking table"???
  13. Jazzinefx
    100. Posted by Jazzinefx Thu Aug 27 1:20pm EDT

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    Steroids pulled baseball back into the public fantasy. Baseball was DEAD in the WATER. Baseball itself is the PROBLEM, not the players!!

    1. Why does the American League have a designated hitter and the National League doesn't have a designated hitter?
    2. Why is the price of admission, unfordable for average people?
    3. Why does it take a CPA to make a sports budget? (Baseball, Football, Basketball, Hockey)
    4. Why has the amount of games seen on Network Television, been DRASTICALLY REDUCED!!
    5. Why does it take an exorbatent amount of money to build SMALLER BALLPARKS!!
    6. Why has the MLB ALL-STAR GAME, been reduced to a DOG AND PONY SHOW, where NAME RECOGNITION, and BALLOT STUFFING get a player invited, whether they derserve it or NOT! WHETHER THEIR PERFORMANCE IN THE FIRST HALF PERMITS THEM INTO THE ALL-STAR GAME OR NOT!!!
    7. Why does the ALL-STAR GAME permit the winning league to have home feild advantage in the World Series, whether their record DESERVES IT OR NOT!!!
    8. Why does every umpire have a different strike zone?
    9. Why do some umpires have a delayed called strike? If it is a strike, why do you have to think about it? Don't wait a few seconds AFTER the PITCH HAS BEEN THROWN!!!
    10. Why do the umpires feel the need to toss out managers and players, because the umpire doesn't like what a manager or player says to them? Why will umpires BAIT a player or manager into getting thrown out?
    11. Why does a game take so long to end?
    12. Why is baseball talking about adding MORE GAMES TO THE REGULAR SEASON?
    13. Why is baseball talking about increasing the post season, by adding another wild-card team?
    14. Why don't fans feel safe in thier ballparks, anymore??

    This is what has destroyed the game of baseball!!
    The OWNERS ALLOWED PLAYERS TO USE STEROIDS, IN ORDER TO DRUM UP FAN INTEREST IN THEIR FAILING GAME!!!

    Before Steriods, ballparks in the Major Markets were EMPTY!!!, now, that the OWNERS are making money again, and ballparks are full again, they want to RAIL ON THESE PLAYERS??? Get REAL!!!!

    And Pete Rose is STILL NOT DESERVING OF THE HALL OF FAME!!! Pete KNEW the RULES, HE CHOSE TO IGNORE THEM!!!
    WITH STERIODS, the OWNERS CHOSE TO IGNORE IT, BECAUSE IT WAS MAKING MONEY FOR THEM!!!!
    Baseball has its OWN GOVERNMENT, WHY DO THEY NEED THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT INVOLVED???
    The BIGGER question is: WHY THE HADES DOES THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT CARE, WITH ALL THAT THEY ALREADY HAVE TO WORRY ABOUT!!!!?????
  14. Securetron Alarm
    99. Posted by Securetron Alarm Thu Aug 27 1:13pm EDT

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    #96....the Cubs haven't gotten a new stadium, so the Red Sox aren't the only ones still playing in their old stadiums...
  15. John
    98. Posted by John Thu Aug 27 1:10pm EDT

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    after Pitino bonked the @#$%, do you think he ordered desert? Or was he full?
  16. <i>kevindw13</i>
    97. Posted by kevindw13 Thu Aug 27 1:06pm EDT

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    either way you think.....it is wrong..........
  17. T-bird
    96. Posted by T-bird Thu Aug 27 12:38pm EDT

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    I do not have a problem with steroids or enhancement drugs. I enjoyed going to the games in the late 1990's. I love baseball. I have been going to games since 62. I am a die hard cards fan and I have seen Brock,Cepeda,Clemente, Arron,McGwire,etc. Steroids is only the problem of the sportswriter. I played little league, I stunk big time. I could not hit the curve or the 95 mph fastball, No enhancement in the world will let me do that. These writers could never do it either. The press in America lives to build up and tear down its heroes. They ignore the real problems in baseball.
    Why has every Major league city except for Boston built a new ball park and why is it that the price of going to a game is getting out of hand. Before the new Park and new owners in St. Louis, there were 3000 bleachers and 5000 general admission tickets available daily. You could get a seat for 6 dollars. Now the old $20. seats costs $50.00, the old $50 seats costs over 100, and there at least 5000 private club seats or corporate boxes. We went from a 53,000 seat stadium to one that barely seats 40,000 and they are more profittable than ever, and they are paying a lot less in taxes because every city was threatened with franchise movement.. No free TV and greed is what is really wrong with baseball.
  18. no display name
    95. Posted by no display name Thu Aug 27 12:32pm EDT

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    The list did not tarnish America's ex-pastime. The league itself is responsible for that.

    There is NO WAY steroid would have gotten as far as it did without the tacit consent of the league. Regardless of which individuals were responsible, the result is that a rigged sport is not much fun to watch, and lifelong baseball fans like myself have abandoned it.

    If there were a "drug-free" baseball league, I'd come back to watch. Make it strict - they're not even allowed to take asprin during the season, no painkillers, no psych drugs, and of course, no physical enhancement drugs, no surgical body modification, no nothing, just human beings as we are in nature. If a player needs drugs for some reason then that player sits out the rest of the season.
  19. Teresita
    94. Posted by Teresita Thu Aug 27 12:23pm EDT

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    Pete Rose is no matter what a hall of fame and the millions of fans knows that. Pete you are the best.
  20. <i>nyjimo</i>
    93. Posted by nyjimo Thu Aug 27 12:09pm EDT

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    Maybe this close the door on this - it is in the past LET IT GO. keep the government out of baseball and lets play the game
  21. Iren
    92. Posted by Iren Thu Aug 27 12:08pm EDT

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    were any of the 104 players supended in 2004?
  22. <i>baty_jon</i>
    91. Posted by baty_jon Thu Aug 27 11:39am EDT

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    Football sux
  23. <i>jvrulz35</i>
    90. Posted by jvrulz35 Thu Aug 27 11:39am EDT

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    The only problem is what about the guys who truely did take supplements that were banned ATF! Such as andro, ghb(which u could get at GNC then) there were hundreds of supplements back then that woulda caused a false positive test! It sux but all you can do is test heavy now and hope those who cheated have a hard time looking at themselves in the mirror! The thing about steroids is what they gained then costs them now! Dried up tendons/ ligaments/muscles that are brittle n tear and the weight gain for the older guys, from stocky to fat, the younger guys from shreaded to nothing! Look at some of the players who's appearances have totally changed(jug heads) they have to live with that!(Let alone all the sexual side affects) Ha! They will pay somehow! All of them!
  24. <i>baty_jon</i>
    89. Posted by baty_jon Thu Aug 27 11:38am EDT

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    Shooting up steroids is not the only way of using it, there are pills. Needles just work faster.
  25. Ed M
    88. Posted by Ed M Thu Aug 27 11:10am EDT

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    Good question: I don't think that Cal is on that list, I meant in hind sight that opening up that list opens up a padora's box of sorts. I highly doubt that Cal would be on any list. My theory is that the list should be public so that we as fans can determine how to spend our money based on concise information. Cal is probably one of the good guys in any sport. Now using Cal as an example chronologically was a bad example.

    Now for more ranting: I want to know who is on that list. So that I can start a web site removing some world championship teams and adding the teams that had the least/no cheaters. I knew that the Boston world championship was tainted coming back from 3-0. I just knew it. Don't get me wrong the Yankees are just as guilty. Shame on A-Rod, money can't buy you love brother, maybe a great @#$%, but not love. Big Sloppy you are as guilty as they come, and Manny I don't even want to give you any more publicity.
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