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Old Mon Dec 17, 2007, 08:37pm
jimpiano jimpiano is offline
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Join Date: Mar 2007
Posts: 747
Quote:
Originally Posted by JRutledge
Let me give you an example of why I have a problem with this report. David Justice was accused of using steroids because he had a conversation with someone associated with a club he was on. No paper trail, no eyewitness reports, just a conversation that he had years ago about the drug which even did not suggest that Justice claimed he was using or used the drugs previously.

I keep bring it back to officiating. Would it be fair if you worked a conferences and someone took a conversation you had years ago and assumed that you helped throw a game all based on a conversation? Then as a result you are known as a cheater by everyone because your name was put in a report with people they actually proved or admitted to throwing games? I put this on the same plane as NBA Officials being mentioned in a report about throwing games with Tim Donaghy based only on information that they had a conversation with Donaghy or were accused by Donaghy without any cooperation and then the accused official also loses their job or their reputation.

Would that be fair?

Peace
The Mitchell Report is not based on any conversation....it is based on verifiable conversations. It is not legal evidence, but it is dependable evidence on what players talked about and did.