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Roger Clemens Trial: Drug Dealer Kirk Radomski Describes HGH Shipment To Clemens' House

AP  |  By Posted: 05/08/2012 7:12 pm Updated: 05/09/2012 5:56 pm

Roger Clemens Trial
This artist rendering shows Roger Clemens, standing left, and his lawyer Rusty Hardin, front left, facing prospective jurors inside federal court in Washington, Monday, Aril 16, 2012, as U.S. District Judge Reggie Walton, right, presides over the jury selection in the perjury trial.

WASHINGTON -- Scolded by the judge for putting on a slow and "boring" trial, prosecutors in the Roger Clemens case livened things up by introducing a convicted drug dealer who talked way too fast.

Kirk Radomski, the former New York Mets batboy who provided drugs to dozens of major league baseball players, took the stand Tuesday and described a shipment of human growth hormone he sent to Clemens' house about a decade ago.

Radomski showed the jury an old, torn shipping label he found under his television set in his bedroom in June 2008. Federal agents had failed to find the label when they searched his home three years earlier - because they apparently didn't look under what Radomski called his huge, old-model "dinosaur of a TV."

The label was addressed to Brian McNamee, Clemens' former strength coach, at Clemens' home address in Texas. Radomski said the shipment was for two kits of HGH - "about 50-100 needles" - that he estimated occurred in 2002.

McNamee has said he injected Clemens with HGH and steroids. Clemens denied to Congress in 2008 that he took either drug, which led to the perjury charges against him. The first attempt to try the 11-time All-Star pitcher last year ended in a mistrial.

The defense is expected to emphasize that the label lists McNamee, instead of Clemens, as the recipient. McNamee would often stay at Clemens' house during training sessions.

On a relatively busy day at the trial, U.S. District Judge Reggie Walton also ruled that the government could not introduce Clemens' contract with the Boston Red Sox as evidence that he was motivated by money to extend his career. The jury heard from five witnesses - more than have appeared in the rest of the trial combined.

None riveted the jury like Radomski, easily the most entertaining witness so far. Only hours earlier, Walton began the day saying how bored the jurors had become as the trial trudged through its fourth week.

Swiveling in the witness chair, Radomski spoke so energetically and in such extraordinary detail in his pronounced Bronx accent that the court reporter repeatedly had to tell him to slow down. He described how he started using steroids and HGH himself some 20 years ago, then starting selling them. One of his customers was McNamee.

Radomski called himself a "health nut" despite his past association with performance-enhancing drugs. He stumbled over pronunciations and spellings, at one point saying: "Hey, I'm from the Bronx. I'm not a scholar." He boldly suggested the judge get an "orthopedic chair" to deal with recurring back problems.

He stood and unbuttoned his coat to show the jury where on the body he would perform injections. He described the sizes of needles used for various injections. He said pitchers take performance-enhancing drugs for strength and endurance, not to bulk up their muscles. He knocked on the witness stand to describe the "knock at the door" he received when feds arrived to search his house in 2005.

Radomski cooperated with investigators and pleaded guilty to money laundering and distribution of a controlled substance in 2007.

Even Clemens, who has been watching calmly from the defense table and taking notes, was more animated. He tapped his fingers a lot, stared more intently and rubbed his hair.

Radomski will return to the stand Wednesday.

Earlier in the day, Walton turned down the government's attempt to display Clemens' Red Sox contract. The judge said showing the multimillion-dollar salaries to a jury that knows little about baseball could be prejudicial against Clemens because some people think professional athletes make an "obscene" amount of money.

"I just think we don't put someone on trial for the amount of money they make," Walton said.

The judge was in a stern mood all day, from the moment he first took his seat to give a tongue-lashing to both sets of lawyers. This trial was supposed to last four to six weeks, but it is now Week 4 - thanks to a lengthy jury selection, breaks scheduled around the judge's and jurors' schedules, acrimonious debates among the lawyers that frequently disrupt testimony and the plodding pace set by prosecutors who, for example, decided Tuesday that the jurors needed to see four generic exterior photos of the Toronto Blue Jays stadium.

The government has said it doesn't expect to call its key witness, McNamee, until next week.

"Those folk are fed up because they see their time being wasted!" Walton, his voice rising, said before the jury entered the room.

The pace has been so slow and so scattershot that one of the jurors is apparently having trouble understanding what it is actually about. Walton said a juror asked the judge's law clerk if the judge would advise what the charges are, an indication of how "far afield" the proceedings had wandered.

"When you create a boring environment which is being created in this case, it precipitates jurors to talk about the case," Walton said. "They are bored."

When jurors entered the room, Walton scolded them too, but more gently. He reminded them not to have any discussions about the case until it's time for deliberations.

The first witness was John Longmire of the FBI, who was back for a second day and wrapped up his testimony quickly. He was followed by three men who have worked with Clemens as athletic trainers: Charlie Moss and Jim Rowe from Clemens' years with the Boston Red Sox, and Tommy Craig from Clemens' stint with the Blue Jays.

Moss, Rowe and Craig testified that team employees such as strength and conditioning coaches would not be authorized to give players shots of B12 or of lidocaine, a common local anesthetic. Clemens has said he received B12 and lidocaine shots from McNamee when McNamee was the strength and conditioning coach for the Blue Jays in 1998.

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Associated Press writer Frederic J. Frommer contributed to this report.

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FOLLOW SPORTS

WASHINGTON -- Scolded by the judge for putting on a slow and "boring" trial, prosecutors in the Roger Clemens case livened things up by introducing a convicted drug dealer who talked way too fast. ...
WASHINGTON -- Scolded by the judge for putting on a slow and "boring" trial, prosecutors in the Roger Clemens case livened things up by introducing a convicted drug dealer who talked way too fast. ...
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JoeHilley
NY Times Bestselling Author
03:41 PM on 05/15/2012
I'm still trying to figure out who Roger Clemens offended - someone is really pushing this prosecution. We've got waaaayyyyy bigger problems to spend our over-borrowed federal budget on besides accusations that millionaire baseball players took steroids. Did someone in Las Vegas get mad because it ruined their point-spread forecasts?
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Bados
I love Sarah Palin. No wait...I love parasailing.
11:08 PM on 05/09/2012
Bonds trial = 2400 comments mostly saying he did it.
Clemens trail = 24 comments mostly saying he didnt LOL
06:19 PM on 05/09/2012
OK here we go. This ex-con found a shipping label under his TV in 2008 that the FBI didn't find in a 2005 search of his premises, it was addressed to McNamee AT CLEMENS ADDRESS, and it was sent sometine in 2002 containing HGH. Hmmmmm. How does an address label he still has show that this shipment was ever sent? How is he sure 10 years later that it was HGH. Why was it sent to McNamee? That it might be for Clemens would just be heresay and inadmissable. How did the label get under the TV in the first place? Too many what if's for me, but a well rehearsed/scripted testimony by the prosecutors. Sorry NOT GUILTY.
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Bados
I love Sarah Palin. No wait...I love parasailing.
11:04 PM on 05/09/2012
I'm guessing your imagination didnt work this well in the Bonds case. LOL
02:20 PM on 05/10/2012
Actually, yes he should have been completely acquitted. In fact, I think Congressional involvement in sports is a waste of taxpayers money. PED and HGH have been a part of professional sports for 40-50 years. Before the steroids and HGH, it was well know there were "Greenies" which actually were more widely used. Yet, your "holier than thou" sportswriters voted MANY a player into the various Hall of Fames. Then you have the corked bats, the spitballs, the vaseline balls, the mud in the seams and the belt buckle cuts. Even before Greenies, there were substances being used back to almost the beginning.
06:10 PM on 05/09/2012
I still don't fully understand why this is a government matter but it is looking like Clemons may not get off this time. If he did use, and I am not suggesting that he did, he should have come clean in the very beginning like so many of the others did.
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dccb3
Purging squirrels is a full-time job!
05:36 PM on 05/09/2012
The federal prosecutors should have just showed the video of Clemens' "Roid Rage" when Clemens threw the broken bat at Mike Piazza as Piazza ran towards first base. That would have done it for me...guilty!!!
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DKinCA
05:33 PM on 05/09/2012
so Clemens is on trial for lying to a bunch of habitual liars?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bill904
03:21 PM on 05/09/2012
I guess Eric Holder will go on trial for lying to congress next, , right!!,,I can't wait for tomorrow's funny paper...
07:15 PM on 05/09/2012
Lying under oath is done every day. Are they gonna prosecute everybody?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bill904
09:00 PM on 05/09/2012
your right, where do you start right? Obama, na, he wouldn't do that ,, he just lies not just to congress just to "Everyone". about "Everything". he's tumbling and can't get out of the drum,,,,,,,
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mww1017
Never apologize for being who and what you are.
03:15 PM on 05/09/2012
Why is this b/s a federal matter. I personally think there is far too much importance placed on sports/entertainment. No way is chasing balls or acting worth millions. But even if they were worth it, the various ruling bodies of those groups ( NFL, NBA, MLB,SAG,etc,etc.) should handle those who break their rules. In the case of criminal behavior the laws of the state where the infraction occured are applicable. Unless these baseball players were getting their HGH from some foreign drug cartel the feds shouldn't be involved until very late in the appeals process(if any).
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dccb3
Purging squirrels is a full-time job!
05:38 PM on 05/09/2012
Clemens made it a federal matter when he swore to tell the truth then lied UNDER OATH to an investigative body...namely congress. It's called perjury...lying under oath. It's Clemens own fault...he should have just refused to testify in front of congress or taken the fifth.
06:21 PM on 05/09/2012
You mean like Holder has done with "Fast and Furious", except it didn't cause the death of a Border Patrol Agent.
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mww1017
Never apologize for being who and what you are.
12:21 AM on 05/10/2012
He lied to congress, hmm, that still leaves the question of why this is federal. Perury  by itself is not a federal crime.
03:07 PM on 05/09/2012
we are going to have to raise our taxes to cover this trial. i sure wish my taxes were cafeterial style, that way i would know my hard earned money i give the govenment wouldnt be going toward this.
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01:33 PM on 05/09/2012
For some strange reason, Clemens reminds me of the track star, Usain Bolt.
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frank day
Obama cares about all of U.S.
02:44 PM on 05/09/2012
You're just very weird.
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11:27 AM on 05/10/2012
Weird? Really ? You mean you don't see any similarities between Bolt and Clemens?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bill904
03:21 PM on 05/09/2012
yea, right,,,,
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pleasantlyny
Addie, Carole, Cynthia & Denise, for you we fight
01:32 PM on 05/09/2012
This is a HUGE waste of taxpayer money.

If congress really cared about steriods in baseball they would subpeona scout notes and see that it was acccepted practice to note who was and was not on the "juice".

They would look at other records to see what players were recommended to take steriods to better performance for the player, therby the team and the teams bottom line.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bill904
03:24 PM on 05/09/2012
bottom line is most player that are paid use the stuff,,, let them, what difference does it make. give me a break.
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Blackspeare
11:19 AM on 05/09/2012
In the grand scheme of things, does this really matter?!
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butchcliff
The future is unwritten
07:14 AM on 05/09/2012
When Clemens went to the Jays, bulked up tremendously & got better.
03:40 AM on 05/09/2012
I know I'll feel much safer with Clemens in jail. Not to say perjury is trivial, but how many millions is the government spending on this? Meanwhile, how many predatory criminals are walking free?
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dave ochs
08:30 PM on 05/08/2012
i dont need to hear all this testiomony to know clemons took roids, he was about done with the sox who got rid of him in his mid thirties then he went on to tornoto and the yankees and houston and won like five Cy youngs and all kinds of world sereis and play-off games he's about as innocent as Barry Bonds.
dave
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08:48 PM on 05/08/2012
I agree. Once you start pitching twice as good in your 40's as you did 20-35, he is Guilty.
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Mr Anonymous
Mumpsimus, I am not entertained!
11:49 PM on 05/08/2012
You never know. Look at Moyer and Johnson. They've lasted years and are still put up great numbers into the 40's.
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probo
fear is a waste of my time
09:22 PM on 05/08/2012
He was riding high...