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Barry Bonds' Trainer Jailed: Bonds Says He 'Didn't Know They Were Steroids'

Barry Bonds Trainer Greg Anderson

RONALD BLUM   03/22/11 09:25 PM ET   AP

SAN FRANCISCO — With prosecutors saying Barry Bonds lied about using steroids, the home run king's lead attorney started picking at the government's case Tuesday, attacking witnesses expected to accuse Bonds of willfully taking drugs to make him hit the ball harder and farther.

Defense lawyer Allen Ruby, his rich voice sometimes inflected with sarcasm, said in his opening statement that a former Bonds girlfriend, a former business partner and a former personal shopper only came forward against his client after the baseball star broke off relationships with them.

He also insisted Bonds testified truthfully before a grand jury in December 2003 when he said he did not know he was using a pair of designer steroids. Bonds claims his trainer told him that he was taking "flaxseed oil" and "arthritic cream."

"I know it doesn't make a great story. Barry Bonds went to the grand jury and told the truth and did his best," Ruby said. "That's not a made-for-TV story."

On a day when federal agent Jeff Novitzky became the first witness to testify, saying Bonds' grand jury account differed with other facts in the case, the contrast in stories and legal teams could not have been greater.

While Ruby, a high-priced, high-profile defense lawyer, spoke in a booming baritone and painted Bonds as a victim over the course of an hour, Assistant U.S. Attorney Matthew A. Parrella gave his 46-minute statement in a workmanlike monotone that had some jurors struggling to keep their heads up.

His two best lines drew objections from Ruby that were sustained by U.S. District Judge Susan Illston.

First, Parrella called BALCO founder Victor Conte, Bonds trainer Greg Anderson and Bonds "the three Musketeers of BALCO."

Then, Parrella said Bonds' grand jury testimony was an "utterly ridiculous and unbelievable story."

After the opening statements, and with the jury out of the court room, Anderson walked in and passed Bonds, who turned his head away.

Anderson repeated his long-standing refusal to testify against his childhood friend, was held in civil contempt by Illston, taken into custody by U.S. Marshals and escorted out a back door. This will be his fourth time in prison, his third for refusing to testify against Bonds, and he likely will be held until the end of the trial. The case is expected to last about a month.

Anderson also served three months in prison and three months in home confinement for money laundering and steroids distribution from the original Bay Area Laboratory Co-Operative (BALCO) case. Anderson's plea in that instance happened in 2005. Bonds' trial is the last to stem from the BALCO investigation.

Mark J. Geragos, Anderson's lawyer, argued that additional sanctions would be "punitive rather than coercive," which was ignored by Illston. Later, she instructed the jury that Anderson was unavailable and that jurors may not draw "any inference from his failure to testify."

Anderson was the go-between for Bonds in his contact with BALCO, and without his testimony to authenticate them, Illston excluded what the government said were three positive drug tests performed for the lab. Because he isn't testifying, the government will have a harder time proving the charges in Bonds' indictment, which includes four counts of making false statements to the grand jury and one count of obstruction.

Each count carries a penalty of up to 10 years, but federal guidelines recommend a sentence of 15-to-21 months.

Bonds, wearing a dark suit as he did Monday, this time with a light blue shirt and a silver-blue tie, sat with hands clasped for much of the time during opening statements. He occasionally wrote out notes for his lawyers, and he sat slouched in his chair, his long legs crossed at the ankles and poking out the other side of the defense table.

While much or all of the government's evidence has been made public since Bonds' indictment in December 2007, Ruby gave the clearest indication of the defense strategy: stick to the story Bonds told the grand jury and assail those implicating against him.

Ruby said the government witnesses and leaks "created a caricature of Barry Bonds, terrible guy, bad, mean."

"Barry is not a caricature. He's a man," Ruby said. "Whether the evidence in this case persuades you that he is an admirable man or not an admirable man or something in between has not a thing to do, we can all agree, with the charges that the United States government brought against him." He also criticized the government witnesses for cooperating with the media, saying they created "poisonous things that have been out there about Barry."

Ruby alleged Kimberly Bell, an ex-girlfriend who ended a nine-year relationship with Bonds, and Steve Hoskins, who had a fallout with Bonds in his signed memorabilia business, were "facing the loss of the financial benefit that Barry provided to them over the years."

Ruby also criticized Kathy Hoskins, Steve's sister and Bonds' former personal shopper, saying "the bitterness of these people toward Barry ... was very, very pervasive."

Jurors, who brought pads of paper to the court room, took notes as Novitzky spoke, and there were several empty seats in the five spectator rows during his often-tedious testimony.

Under questioning from Assistant U.S. Attorney Jeffrey D. Nedrow, the tall, bald investigator, then with the IRS and now with the Food and Drug Administration, recounted going through BALCO's trash and finding copies of magazine articles containing photos of Bonds with BALCO executives. He then identified what he called a "treasure trove" of drugs taken from Conte's storage locker, and syringes, steroids and HGH seized from Anderson's home in September 2003. He said Bonds' claims that he was given steroids unknowingly caused prosecutors to consider whether they should file assault charges against BALCO executives.

When Novitzky, in response to a question from Ruby, talked about a recording of Anderson and Hoskins discussing how Anderson injected Bonds, several jurors took notes. Ruby objected to the testimony, and Illston ordered it stricken from the record.

Bonds rubbed his eyes and rested his chin on a hand during part of Novitzky's long testimony. A member of his legal team read the Huffington Post on a laptop.

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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Dosadi
Political agnostic
07:33 PM on 03/23/2011
If Bonds was a "South Park" fan he would have had access to the best defense in the world, the Chewbacca defense. That is the only defense that could save him.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
steph81
05:32 PM on 03/23/2011
If you tell the truth, your career dies, you get an asterisk in the record books, and you don't get elected to the hall of fame. If you lie, your career dies, you probably get an asterisk in the record books, you probably won't get elected to the hall of fame, and you will spend time for perjury.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pjlowry
03:24 PM on 03/23/2011
This is not about race, becase Roger is next...
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Dosadi
Political agnostic
07:33 PM on 03/23/2011
Then why wasn't he first.
01:16 PM on 03/23/2011
No positive drug test, yet they are attempting to convict him. Its 2011, where is CSI
12:31 PM on 03/23/2011
honestly Officer! I didn't know I had been drinking alcohol.
12:00 PM on 03/23/2011
OH!!! P-U-LE-E-E-E=Z=E!!!!!!! WHATTA MAROON!!!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Winston Grant
"specialization is for insects."
12:00 PM on 03/23/2011
Victor Conte should have been doing 'roids when he was with Tower of Power--he'd probably still be in the band!
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WILLIEMOJORISIN
You were expecting Mensa members ?
10:49 AM on 03/23/2011
The guy didn't go to prison , he went to the county jail, don't you "reporters" know the difference
06:19 PM on 03/23/2011
Reporters always mess up the difference between prison and jail...Should be one of the first things they teach in Journalism school. Most reporters and news anchors act like game show hosts with a better gig.
TROP10
Na mas te
10:26 AM on 03/23/2011
CLEARLY this is about more than steroids useage... It's about lying to a Grand Jury. If people are allowed to perjure themselcves to avoid prosecution or culpability for an illegal act then there is absolutely no need for a system of jurisprudence. "I didn't do it"..... Oh, ok then you can go home now... We thought that maybe you did but obviously since you say you didn't we'll just forget about it..... Then you have people like Rocket Roger who not only LIED to the Congressional panel of inquiry but then came back to assail them for having the affrontery to accuse him.... Quit whining about "wasting the taxpayers money".... It's what the system was put in place for.... It's there to catch liars, cheats and thieves. Do you think this is the ONLY case the system is processing? It is THERE... It is WORKING and this is just ONE of the many purposes it was intended to provide. Whether he's found guilty or innocent, whether you like him or not or don't even care one way or the other... society as a whole DOES...
04:30 PM on 03/23/2011
The system was not put in place so a vindictive IRS agent can go on a personal crusade against one guy. With all the war profiteers, banksters, oil spillers, and mass murderers out there, do you really think society benefits from this? Really?
TROP10
Na mas te
04:49 PM on 03/23/2011
Hey... No argument that you're correct that too many of the sorts that you just listed get off with no penalty.... I agree with you 100%. Still that doesn't mean that you stop ALL prosecution... it doesn't mean that because others are committing crimes that they haven't been brought to justice for that one can condone what you consider to be lesser ones and give those perpetrating them a free pass... The point is NOT that they are bringing this action against Bonds... the outrage should be that OTHERS aren't also held accountable... See the documentary "Inside Job" and you will have proof enough to make YOUR point which I readily concede. You ask the question if this prosecution of Bonds benefits society in any way... I have to answer simply... MORE SO than if he was allowed to get away with it....
09:50 AM on 03/23/2011
Let me see if I got this straight...Bonds says he didn't know he was taking roids? So he spreads on " arthritis cream" and gains 40lb of muscle the next year? Really! We should not even be wasting time on this joke. Even if he is found guilty, that will not change anything. He will still hold his baseball records.
11:35 AM on 03/23/2011
what about alcohol and coke back in the old days? greeneis and speed in the 80's? spit ballers in the 20's and 30's? vaseline? sandpaper? baseball is the sport that invented the saying "if you aint cheating you aint trying" . its like they are turning their back on their own history. more than half the league was using something, negating the premise that bonds superiority was due to him being the only one on roids. BTW the drugs bonds is accused of taking were not banned by baseball until 2003.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
silverball
12:02 PM on 03/23/2011
the case is about LYING.......
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Winthorpe
Need a fourth for squash
12:42 PM on 03/23/2011
Alcohol and coke made guys better players? That's news to me.
09:26 AM on 03/23/2011
Only number I'll acknowledge:

Aaron: 755
Maris: 61
TROP10
Na mas te
10:32 AM on 03/23/2011
Amen.
05:04 PM on 03/23/2011
The game changes, the gear changes, the ball parks change, the ball changes, and the cheating changes. You can still acknowledge records from different eras. People called Maris a fraud too, remember? Barry's numbers are as legit as Hank's (Hank did speed), or the Babe's (corked his bat), or Maris' (had more games than the Babe and was hitting in front of Mantle).
History has a way of sorting this all out without asterisks or banning "cheaters" for life.
11:37 AM on 03/23/2011
but maris had more games to play than ruth! and we all know ruth was an alcoholic which was illegal at the time. seems like you are being a bit selective
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Dosadi
Political agnostic
07:36 PM on 03/23/2011
Maris batted in front of Mickey Mantle who hit the ball as hard as anyone in history.  I could have led the league in home runs with Mickey Mantle batting behind me.
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
wakawaka09
capitalism is a cult
08:59 AM on 03/23/2011
Really, is this a federal offense? We are completely out of compass.
MtnGeek
Partisan thinking is an oxymoron
10:44 AM on 03/23/2011
Yes, lying when you are under oath is a federal offense, even for Barry Bonds.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
wakawaka09
capitalism is a cult
07:57 PM on 03/24/2011
You miss the big picture. Neither congress or the justice department should have had anything to do with investigating or prosecuting millionaires who artificially enhance their ability to entertain us in a manner they don't approve.They could snort steoids while injecting HGH. Who cares? Sport isn't pure and it hasn't been since the first athlete cashed his paycheck. Let em hit 800 foot homeruns. They're awesome.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
djnc
08:41 AM on 03/23/2011
Taxpayer dollars at work...jesus christ
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KDMac
It's called sarcasm, Genius.
08:38 AM on 03/23/2011
Wonder how much Bonds is paying Anderson to not testify.