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Dr. Anthony Galea Pleads Guilty: Tiger Woods, A-Rod Doctor Admits To Smuggling Drugs Into US

Anthony Galea Guilty

BEN DOBBIN   07/ 6/11 08:24 PM ET   AP

BUFFALO, N.Y. — A Canadian sports doctor whose high-profile clients have included Tiger Woods and Alex Rodriguez pleaded guilty in federal court Wednesday to bringing into the United States unapproved drugs, including human growth hormone, that were used to treat professional athletes.

Dr. Anthony Galea, a healing specialist from Toronto who was sought out by the biggest names in sports, was indicted by a federal grand jury in October on charges that he smuggled human growth hormone and other substances into the United States and lied to border agents to avoid getting caught. He faces similar charges in Canada.

Most of the U.S. charges were dismissed with Galea's plea, and he agreed to cooperate with investigators and disclose the identities of his patients and their treatments.

Galea, who wasn't licensed to work in the United States, was accused of treating 20 professional athletes at their homes, hotels and friends' houses from October 2007 to September 2009.

The indictment did not identify any clients, but prosecutors said they included golfers, professional baseball and football players and others.

Galea, 51, pleaded guilty in front of U.S. District Judge Richard Arcara to introducing mislabeled drugs into the U.S., eliminating the need for a trial – along with the likelihood that evidence and witness statements could publicly reveal information about who he visited or billed.

Prosecutors said Galea billed around $800,000 for his work in the United States and the value of the drugs and other substances used was about $30,000 to $70,000.

Galea, who's married with seven children, agreed to forfeit $275,000 before sentencing Oct. 19. He was released until sentencing, at which he could get up to two years in prison.

The doctor, who has a vocal cord disorder, answered the judge politely in a croaking voice and said he wouldn't appeal.

Woods, who recently announced he would skip the British Open next week because of "minor injuries" that haven't fully healed, has said he's been treated by Galea but didn't receive performance-enhancing drugs. The New York Mets' Jose Reyes and Carlos Beltran also have acknowledged talking to federal authorities during the investigation.

Rodriguez, the New York Yankees' star slugger, told Major League Baseball officials that he didn't receive performance-enhancing drugs from Galea after the doctor told The Associated Press he had prescribed anti-inflammatories for him.

The judge asked about other athletes linked to Galea. Prosecutors said all their names would have come out at trial but they included NFL linebacker Takeo Spikes and retired running back Jamal Lewis, who were treated by Galea but weren't accused of any use of performance-enhancing drugs.

Representatives for Spikes and Lewis didn't immediately return messages seeking comment Wednesday.

Prosecutors alleged some athletes received injections of HGH, banned by major sports, and Actovegin, a derivative of calf's blood not approved for use in the United States. They also said some athletes were given intravenous Actovegin drips and platelet-rich plasma therapy, a treatment used to speed healing that involves extracting blood from patients and re-injecting just the plasma.

Galea was widely known for using platelet-rich plasma therapy. He became the focus of Canadian and U.S. authorities' attention in September 2009, when his assistant, Mary Anne Catalano, was stopped at the border in Buffalo with a small quantity of human growth hormone, Actovegin and vials of foreign homeopathic drugs.

Catalano is scheduled to be sentenced later this month after pleading guilty to a count of lying to border agents. As part of her plea, she's been cooperating in the investigation.

The U.S. criminal complaint charged Galea with conspiracy, smuggling, distributing human growth hormone and introducing an unapproved drug into interstate commerce.

U.S. charges of smuggling, conspiring to lie to federal agents and defraud the U.S. government and distributing HGH were dismissed with Galea's plea.

In October 2009, Canadian authorities charged Galea, the former team doctor of the Canadian Football League's Toronto Argonauts, with selling Actovegin, conspiracy to import an unapproved drug, conspiracy to export a drug and smuggling.

Galea was accused of making multiple trips to U.S. cities from 2007 to 2009 to meet with athletes from Major League Baseball, the National Football League and the Professional Golfers' Association and injecting at least seven with a drug mixture containing human growth hormone, which stimulates growth and is used to aid recovery from injuries.

He was accused of injecting at least one NFL player with Actovegin and providing a retired player with human growth hormone after his playing days had ended. He billed three football players about $200,000, prosecutors said.

U.S. Attorney William Hochul, after court, said prosecutors agreed to the plea deal for Galea because it was "a certain conviction" that would save taxpayers money and make the doctor "a convicted felon."

Prosecutors said they would recommend a sentence of 12 to 18 months in prison for him.

Defense attorney Brian Greenspan, who represents Galea in the Canadian case, stressed that his client pleaded guilty in New York to a charge involving improperly branded substances, which could include those with foreign labels. He said Woods, who recently has been blighted by personal problems and injuries, was not treated with HGH or any other illegal substances.

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BUFFALO, N.Y. — A Canadian sports doctor whose high-profile clients have included Tiger Woods and Alex Rodriguez pleaded guilty in federal court Wednesday to bringing into the United States unap...
BUFFALO, N.Y. — A Canadian sports doctor whose high-profile clients have included Tiger Woods and Alex Rodriguez pleaded guilty in federal court Wednesday to bringing into the United States unap...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
chaz
06:53 PM on 07/07/2011
Tiger got some splaining to do.
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NeverRepublican
Earthling growing my own
05:17 PM on 07/07/2011
Who better to get prime doses from than your own Dr.!
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whatsit2yadudes
Veni, Vidi, Dormivi
03:51 PM on 07/07/2011
OMG, Huff Post! This was moving way faster yesterday. C'mon, people...
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whatsit2yadudes
Veni, Vidi, Dormivi
03:48 PM on 07/07/2011
WOW.....any faster Huff Post in posting comments here, you would have to back up just to move forward.
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whatsit2yadudes
Veni, Vidi, Dormivi
03:41 PM on 07/07/2011
1 pending comment.....and you still are THIS slow posting comments. Geez!!!!
02:31 PM on 07/07/2011
nooooooooooooooooooooooooo

oneeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee

caRESSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS
01:56 PM on 07/07/2011
I looked at the picture of this guy and he does not look 51. He looks more like 30. I wonder what he is taking to look young and is it OK for me to get it?
12:17 PM on 07/07/2011
This title is too misleading. Tiger or A-Rod had nothing to do with PED's being smuggled into the country by Galea.Why even mention thir names in the title.
01:21 PM on 07/07/2011
DC72478, I agree. The only reason Tiger and A-Rod were mentioned was to try to stir up controversy, internet "hits," and guilt by association. A cosmetic surgeon my give chemical peel facials and/OR the invasive liposuction. What some Tiger critics have done is the equivalent of saying a patient getting a chemical peel from a doctor somehow had the same "procedure" as the patient getting liposuction JUST because the doctor's the same. If I'm not mistaken, though, A-Rod has admitted to taking PED's. In stark contrast, Tiger Woods never needed to take them because he's been winning major golf tournaments since he was practically a baby! And unlike greats in other sports, great golfers in history have often won MORE tournaments AFTER they hit 30 years-old than before. Of course Tiger was a child prodigy and he won several before the age of 30 as well.
11:07 AM on 07/07/2011
but can we smuggle tiger woods and A rod out of the question as a solution
10:33 AM on 07/07/2011
But Tiger is innocent, he has told us so.
01:26 PM on 07/07/2011
eroteme3, not only has Tiger told us he has NOT done PED's, but so has the doctor pleading guilty. If the doctor is willing to tell the truth about HIMSELF even though that lands him in serious legal trouble, he is most likely telling the TRUTH about Tiger's innocence in this regard.Tiger's former swing coach, Hank Haney, also said that Tiger never did enhancers. And Hank is the person who introduced Tiger to said doctor --- and apparently only to let Tiger try the "spinning" treatment that consisted of removing his own blood platelets and reintroducing them to the body.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Guy Fratianni
my micro has gone bio
01:54 PM on 07/07/2011
Tiger's truth now comes into play because of how truthful he was to begin with in his own family life. He created this himself. That being said it's just funny since this controversy started that Wood's body is beginning to break down faster when PED would have helped the recovery.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Larry Sirhall
10:16 AM on 07/07/2011
Look at photos of Tiger in the mid-1990s and then at photos from the 2000s. He has "grown" much larger. Then, when the HGH spotlight surfaces, so do the injuries. Reports indicate that about 50% of the PGA believe Tiger has used HGH. Me, personally, based upon the photos, would be in that 50%. It's the same as looking at major league baseball players from the 1960s and 1970s compared to the 1980s and 1990s. The old adage, a picture is worth a thousand words. Larry
01:33 PM on 07/07/2011
Larry, you couldn't be more wrong. Tiger Woods was a skinny kid when he lapped the field and won by a record margin in his first Masters win more than a decade ago. Tiger does not NEED bulk to win golf tournaments. Tiger has gotten older and he has also learned how to work out in a gym. For years people didn't see his musculature because he wore baggy shirts. When he began to wear medium's instead of larges his impressive musculature was on display. It was hardly a "sudden" change. Jealous peers would, out of aforementioned envy or arrogant "wishful" thinking, pretend that of Tiger. But the FACT is that at least TEN other golfers officially hit the ball FARTHER than Tiger the year the first evil white-supremacist "journalist" first insinuated that demonic lie about Tiger. Were those WHITE golfers who hit the ball FARTHER than Tiger, "suspect?" NO! Wonder why!! Rolling my eyes.
02:08 PM on 07/07/2011
I thought my growth was do to aging. Man, I did not realize I was taking drugs to get larger. I was looking at pictures of myself 10 - 15 years ago, boy have I used a lot of drugs. I'm much larger!!!!!
10:08 AM on 07/07/2011
SHAME ON YOU for this headline. Tiger Woods has NOTHING to do with this case and yet you just HAD to get his name in the headline in some way. I think he should sue you for trying to make it look as if he had something to do with this smuggling of drugs. Just one more way the media has made some bucks or tried to off of this poor man's name. I would think he would need an entire staff just to keep track of the misuse of his name in print. You're just one example of this. Again I say, SHAME ON YOU for such a deceptive headline. What poor journalistic integrity.
10:16 PM on 07/08/2011
I agree with you about the 'SHAME ON YOU'. That was totally gratuitous and a cheap ploy to get attention.
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Djay0252
American First, Second, and ALWAYS
09:57 AM on 07/07/2011
They think they will never get caught but somehow they always do. Entitlement is what it is all about. The rich whether athelete or movie vampire they think they are above the law. Keep cracking done on these "people." And don't think Woods is innocent either!
01:41 PM on 07/07/2011
Djay0252, Tiger Woods IS innocent! He's been winning major golf tournaments since he was practically a baby! In STARK contrast, some of his COMPETITION may have felt compelled to desperately try to "catch" him by using "extra" help. Case in point? Shaun Micheel. After golf officials stated they'd have testing, Micheel for the FIRST time admitted taking "extra" testosterone!! Micheel actually WON the PGA of America -- a major -- while he was on that "extra" testosterone. And a clean, innocent Tiger Woods was in the field at the time Micheel won! It was Tiger Woods who had to mightily and naturally work to stay ahead of cheaters. Tiger even requested that all drivers be tested since he knew that some players were using "hot" ones. The result? ONLY Tiger's driver was tested!!! Demonic white-supremacy is a terrible thing. Shaking my head.
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icegold66
banned from commenting
09:38 AM on 07/07/2011
The baseball records will have to be rewritten. I know the "modern" era in baseball is the period that followed the year 1900. Now the record books will have to cite the "steroids" era, which probably gained prominence in the early 1990s until maybe a few of years ago. So during that span of approximately 20 years, any record that was broken, any milestone that was reached, any title that was won should be doubted and considered fraudulent.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
taina2
Spending my money smarter than government
09:22 AM on 07/07/2011
Guilt by association?