Bonds' MLB doping prosecution ends

Federal prosecutors have dropped what was left of their doping case against Major League Baseball home-run leader Barry Bonds.

Former baseball player Barry Bonds

Prosecutors have dropped what was left of their doping case against MLB home-run leader Barry Bonds. (AAP)

After a nearly decade-long doping prosecution, Barry Bonds emerged victorious on Tuesday when federal prosecutors dropped what was left of their criminal case against the Major League Baseball (MLB) home-run leader.

The government's pursuit of Bonds ended quietly with a one-paragraph motion by the US Department of Justice, announcing Solicitor General Donald B Verrilli will not ask the Supreme Court to review the appellate decision that overturned Bonds' obstruction of justice conviction.

A jury found the former San Francisco Giants' star guilty in 2011 for giving a meandering answer to a federal grand jury in 2003, when asked whether his personal trainer gave him anything that required a syringe for self-injection. An 11-judge panel of the 9th US Circuit Court of Appeals overturned that conviction in April, and the government had until Wednesday to file for a Supreme Court review.

The jury deadlocked on three counts accusing Bonds of making false statements when he denied receiving steroids or human growth hormone or any substance that required a syringe for self-injection from trainer Greg Anderson. The government dismissed those counts in August 2011, and the 9th Circuit barred a retrial on the obstruction charge, citing double jeopardy.

"The finality of today's decision gives me great peace," Bonds, who turns 51 on Friday, said in a statement. "I am relieved, humbled and thankful for what this means for me and my family."

The MLB had no immediate comment. The US Attorney's office in San Francisco didn't immediately respond to a phone call seeking comment.

Bonds' legal victory is unlikely to win over critics who concluded he cheated by using performance-enhancing drugs, or help him with Hall of Fame voters.

In his third year on the Hall ballot in 2015, Bonds received 202 votes for 36.8 per cent from the Baseball Writers' Association of America. A player must garner at least 75 per cent to be elected.

But it brings to a close one of the most high-profile prosecutions to emerge from an investigation of the Bay Area Laboratory Co-Operative that began in 2002 and led to the convictions of Olympic track gold medallist Marion Jones, elite sprint cyclist Tammy Thomas and former NFL defensive lineman Dana Stubblefield along with coaches, distributors, a trainer, a chemist and a lawyer.


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Source: AAP


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Bonds' MLB doping prosecution ends | SBS News