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Roger Clemens Trial: Brian McNamee Testifies He First Gave Former Pitcher Steroids In 1998

AP  |  By Posted: Updated: 05/15/2012 6:14 pm

Roger Clemens
Roger Clemens arrives at federal court in Washington, Monday, May 14, 2012. Clemens' chief accuser is expected to testify Monday against the former pitcher, a make-or-break moment for the prosecution as it seeks to convict Clemens of perjury. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)

By JOSEPH WHITE, Associated Press

WASHINGTON -- Speaking softly, nervously and in detail, Brian McNamee testified about the life-changing moment when, he said, he first gave Roger Clemens a "booty shot" of steroids.

The government's star witness in the Clemens perjury retrial took the stand Monday and told the jury that he injected one of baseball's most successful pitchers with steroids about eight to 10 times when they were with the Toronto Blue Jays in 1998.

"I knew what I was doing was illegal," McNamee said. "I wish to God I could take it back."

Clemens is charged with lying to Congress when he testified in 2008 that he had never used steroids or human growth hormone. The first attempt to try him last July ended in a mistrial when prosecutors showed the jury a snippet of videotaped evidence that had been ruled inadmissible.

The retrial took until its fifth week to get to the heart of the government's case: McNamee is the only person who will claim firsthand knowledge of Clemens using performance-enhancing drugs.

In his thick New York accent, McNamee covered a lot of ground in about four hours on the stand - and he still has much more to tell when he returns Tuesday. He recalled how he met Clemens when McNamee was the strength and conditioning coach of the Blue Jays during the 1998 season. He said Clemens gave him a $1,000 tip at the end of spring training, that Clemens approached him one day in the clubhouse and asked him to get rid of a bag of some 20 to 30 bottles of steroids.

Then came the fateful day in June when he was asked by Clemens to come to Clemens' apartment in the Blue Jays' Skydome stadium after a game.

McNamee said he found alcohol, needle and gauze and the anabolic steroid Winstrol laid out in the bathroom. He said he felt "a little uncomfortable" while preparing the shot because he'd never done anything like it before. He said he then walked into Clemens' bedroom.

"Roger pulled down his pants, exposing his right buttocks cheek to me," McNamee said. A few seconds later, Clemens said he was ready. McNamee said he then "plunged the fluid in into his buttocks."

After it was done, they "exchanged pleasantries," according to McNamee.

"That," McNamee concluded softly, "was the first time I injected Roger Clemens."

McNamee said he didn't feel good about the moment, but he got the sense that Clemens "wasn't good at doing the `booty shot.'"

"I did it," McNamee said, "because I wanted to help and I wanted to keep my player safe. ... I wasn't under the assumption that was the first time he did that."

McNamee recited details of another injection later in the season, one he said he gave Clemens in a hurry in a small supply room in the Tampa Bay clubhouse on the getaway day of a road trip. McNamee was so concerned about being discovered that he pressed his foot against the closed door while giving the shot.

McNamee said the injections stopped after Clemens developed an abscess on his buttocks later in the season. He said Clemens walked by and "threw a whole bag (of steroids) at my locker and said, `I'm done with it.'"

McNamee recalled some scenes meticulously; other times he was more vague. He occasionally fidgeted with his white shirt or tan jacket and sometimes took long pauses before answering questions. It took him a few seconds to recall his wedding date - perhaps understandable, given he's going through a divorce - and he initially said three months, instead of three years, when asked how long he worked for the New York Police Department before becoming a bullpen catcher and batting practice pitcher for the New York Yankees in the mid-1990s.

McNamee was barely audible the first time he uttered the word "Roger." He and Clemens were once good friends; he worked with Clemens for the better part of a decade, in an official capacity with the Blue Jays and later with the Yankees, and also as a personal trainer who would run Clemens through demanding workouts, often at Clemens' home in Texas.

Clemens watched intently from the defense table, occasionally taking notes or reading materials.

When McNamee returns to the stand Tuesday, he's expected to testify that he injected Clemens with performance-enhancing drugs in 2000 and 2001. The prosecution is also expected to head off, as best it can, an upcoming cross-examination that is expected to attack McNamee's integrity. The defense wants to paint McNamee as a serial liar out for personal gain.

The two sides spent the morning arguing over which parts of McNamee's personal life can be revealed in front of the jury. U.S. District Judge Reggie Walton quashed a Clemens subpoena for McNamee's divorce records, saying it was a "fishing expedition" to look for information to disparage McNamee.

The judge did rule that Clemens' team could bring up evidence of McNamee's alleged alcohol problems, including two convictions for driving under the influence. Walton also said that if the defense had evidence that McNamee had obtained prescription drugs online without a prescription, that too could be mentioned.

But the judge said again that defense lawyers may not mention that McNamee was investigated for an alleged sexual assault over a 2001 incident at a St. Petersburg, Fla., hotel involving a woman who was found to have a date rape drug in her system. Walton said the defense could refer to it only as a "serious criminal investigation." The defense will be able to say that McNamee lied to investigators during that investigation. Charges were never filed in the case.

The day began with the government winning a significant battle about the testimony of former Clemens teammate Andy Pettitte.

Pettitte testified about a conversation 12 years ago in which Clemens supposedly admitted to using HGH - but then acknowledged under cross-examination there was a "50-50" chance he might have misunderstood Clemens' remark. The defense wanted the judge to strike Pettitte's testimony about the conversation, but Walton ruled that it will be up to the jury to decide how much weight to give it.

___

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

___

FOLLOW SPORTS

By JOSEPH WHITE, Associated Press WASHINGTON -- Speaking softly, nervously and in detail, Brian McNamee testified about the life-changing moment when, he said, he first gave Roger Clemens a "booty ...
By JOSEPH WHITE, Associated Press WASHINGTON -- Speaking softly, nervously and in detail, Brian McNamee testified about the life-changing moment when, he said, he first gave Roger Clemens a "booty ...
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11:13 PM on 05/15/2012
I was so excited when I was young and I had at least $15 worth of Clemens' baseball cards. I just knew they would double in price after he made it to the hall of fame. Time to rubber band them to my bicycle tires and call it a day.
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Blackspeare
06:02 PM on 05/15/2012
The case is over for the Feds! The prime testimony was from Andy Pettitte and when he said he was only half sure of what he heard from Clemens that was the end of the game. The other witnesses are just schemers with their own agendas. Time to go home!
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SaddleBum
you want this hat, admit it
12:05 PM on 05/15/2012
how many decades has this case been going on?
08:31 AM on 05/15/2012
Clemens should be shot. I think everyone knows he took steroids. All he is doing is trying to dupe his fans. Just tell them the truth. You were a great pitcher who wanted to hold on too long so you cheated. I'd be able to forgive that a lot easier than listening to your bull crap..
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OrwellianOne
10:45 AM on 05/15/2012
Should be shot?

Crazy much?
07:25 AM on 05/15/2012
Clemens should have done what McGwire did and just admit it so we can all move on with this black mark on Baseball. I don't want to see the guy go to jail over this, but he and Bonds are so defiant because of their ego's I have no sympathy for them. The whole era is tainted, and I will never look at Clemens and Bonds the same way I look at Mays and Koufax. The sad thing is Clemens and Bonds were Hall of Famers before they started doing steroids, and the irony is they beefed up their career stats, but lost the respect of fans like me.
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OrwellianOne
10:46 AM on 05/15/2012
I'm sorry, when did baseball not have a black mark on it?
12:45 PM on 05/15/2012
From '47 until the roid era, or error, whichever you choose.
12:17 AM on 05/15/2012
Roger like Bonds will in the end have this bullet miss him but neither should go in the Hall. The others shouldn't either.
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Bados
I love Sarah Palin. No wait...I love parasailing.
03:15 AM on 05/15/2012
The pursuit of Bonds was rabid though.
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cameron d
Good Guys Win
12:02 AM on 05/15/2012
You had to know there was a reason why he got better all of a sudden after stinking for Boston.
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SonnyBono
Cogito ergo sum ​​liberalis
10:39 PM on 05/14/2012
Roger's defense is going to be that Brian McNamee misremembered the buttocks that he injected - perhaps it was Roger's wife. Heck, Clemens threw her under the bus once so she should be used to it by now.
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sugarmoes
what doth life?
10:15 PM on 05/14/2012
fess up, clemens
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canpete
09:07 PM on 05/14/2012
no hall of fame for the "roided roger".....
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butchcliff
The future is unwritten
08:22 PM on 05/14/2012
Deny deny deny...Clemens figured was his best pitch. He being hit over the wall on it