The Story Of Our Firm | En Español
 Home    Lawyers   Litigation   Choose Us   Settlements   Search

FAQ What is the first step?

Baseball & Steroids

in this section: Breaking News | Zimmer suspends sales of Durom Cup | Jackson Trial | Lost Deposit | CA Prop 64 | Johnnie Cochran | Baseball & Steroids | Gorilla in the Closet | Child Restraint Usage and Safety | Trash in Tributaries | Phosphorus Pollution in Alabama Lake | News Archive


Bookmark This Page Print This Page Email This Page

Baseball Steroids Scandal: Legal Issues Mount Nears Opening Day

As Baseball opening day approaches, we at Weitz & Luxenberg know many people have been curious about the ongoing legal investigation into steroids in baseball. Steroids are dangerous drugs that cause serious side effects and ruin lives. But unlike Vioxx or Tysabri, steroids were illegal when used and those professional baseball players using steroids probably usually knew the dangers. We provinde this press release from Senator Joe Biden of Delaware on the baseball & steroids matter for your convenience.

March 17, 2005
Press Release

OP-ED: Time To Knock Steroids Out Of The Park

This op-ed originally appeared in THE HARTFORD COURANT on March 17, 2005.

Hartford Courant

Time To Knock Steroids Out Of The Park

By Joseph R. Biden

Two important hearings regarding illegal steroids are scheduled this week. One will feature some of the biggest stars in Major League Baseball coming to Capitol Hill. The other will focus on kids from Daniel Hand High School in Madison who were caught with illegal performance-enhancing drugs.

Although the baseball hearings will generate more headlines, the student athlete scandal should set off more alarm bells.

The teenagers arrested in Connecticut, who ranged in age from 14 to 17, were members of the baseball, football and track teams. An observant teacher noticed one of the boys allegedly selling steroids during class. The students involved have been suspended or expelled. And three of them could be sentenced to up to seven years in prison on steroid possession and dealing charges.

None of the millionaire pro ballplayers called to testify are likely to face any jail time. In fact, some who have admitted using steroids have asked for immunity deals.

Many believe we should have more important things to investigate than Major League Baseball. To a certain extent, I agree: This is clearly not the No.1 issue facing Congress.

But congressional hearings on baseball's steroids scandal are hardly a trivial pursuit. Our national pastime faces questions more serious than the legitimacy of modern-day home run records. High school athletes, like those in Madison, watch their sports heroes bend and even break the rules, and they believe their own success may depend on emulating the pros.

To those who don't believe an athlete influences the habits of his or her fans, consider this: When Mark McGwire admitted he used androstenedione during his home run record-breaking season, sales of the product soared.

What happened at Daniel Hand High School happens all too often at other schools across the country. Recent studies show that nearly three-quarters of kids say they admire and want to be just like professional athletes, and more than half believe pros use steroids to win. The Centers for Disease Control says about 1 million school-age athletes have used anabolic steroids.

Steroid users of all ages believe it will make them stronger, but they ignore the serious health hazards. It puts people at greater risk for heart attacks and strokes, increases aggressiveness, stunts growth and can cause liver and kidney damage. Many of these side effects are irreversible.

Yet, many pro baseball players remain cavalier.

Baseball's new steroid-testing agreement is a good first step toward cleaning up the game, but it doesn't go far enough. Baseball needs a testing system as credible as the one run by the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency for the Olympics.

If baseball really wants to knock steroids out of the park, the players and owners should do four things:

  1. Close loopholes in the current agreement, which allow first-time offenders to pay a small fine of up to $10,000 instead of imposing a 10-day suspension.
  2. The players should go back to the negotiating table and accept a genuinely tough, credible testing program that includes all known masking agents.
  3. Players and owners should fund a program to teach kids that using performance-enhancing drugs is dangerous, and that cheating is intolerable.
  4. Stay a step ahead of the dopers by funding independent research to uncover the latest designer steroids.

These are things baseball could do in conjunction with other pro sports leagues. In fact, other professional sports leagues and their players associations should take a good, hard look at what is happening to baseball and learn from its mistakes.

The NFL has a decent testing system, but there is room for improvement. The NBA's drug-testing system is definitely lagging.

The BALCO steroid scandal proved that athletes who can make millions are willing to spend thousands to gain an edge and not get caught. It is time for all pro sports in America to get in line with the high standards of the Olympics.

Steroids and other illegal drugs are not just baseball's problem, and steroid use by high school athletes isn't just Daniel Hand High School's problem. This truly is a national problem, and the seriousness and urgency with which athletes, owners, educators, parents and community leaders confront it will speak volumes about the kind of society in which we want to live and the values we cherish.

U.S. Sen. Joseph R. Biden Jr., D-Del., wrote the 1990 law making steroid trafficking illegal and the 2004 law banning andro and THG.

###


If you have been injured and are interested in exploring your options for a potential claim, please fill this free questionnaire. We will respond in about 48 hours. If you would like to reach us by phone, or if you have additional questions, please call (toll free), (800) 476-6070 or email us at clientrelations@weitzlux.com.


see also:

Trash in Tributaries Interest Stories - Clean Water: Trash in the Tributaries, Illegal dumps
Illegal dumps in protected watershed while agency in charge ignored it

Johnnie Cochran Johnnie Cochran - Untimely Death of a Civil Rights Champion
Johnnie Cochran, Jr. (October 2, 1937 – March 29, 2005) advocate dies.

News Breaking News Items: Personal Injury Attorney in the news
Our personal injury attorney firm: major newsmaker on a national level

Free Legal Review:
Name:
Phone:
Email:
Case Description:



For legal help anywhere in the U.S.
Ask a Free Question:
Were you injured?

check for your response [login]
$53 million verdict — brake mechanic suffering from mesothelioma

$13.5 million verdict — one of the very first Vioxx trial cases

$15 million settlement — man wound up a paraplegic due to negligent hospital care

$37 million verdict — 2 asbestos lung cancer plaintiffs

$47 million verdict — boilermaker who died from mesothelioma

$2.6 million settlement — ill-fitting prosthesis caused decubitus ulcers

$75 million verdict — historic consolidated trial involving men who had worked at the Brooklyn Navy Yard in the 1940s and 1950s

$12.7 million verdict — iron worker who was injured due to unsafe working conditions

$8 million settlement — obstetrical malpractice resulted in neurological deficits

$64.65 million award — 4 asbestos plaintiffs

$17.5 million — consolidated trial of 5 mesothelioma victims