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Echo
January 11th, 2008, 12:24 PM
(01-11) 10:17 PST White Plains, N.Y. (AP) --

Marion Jones was sentenced Friday to six months in prison for lying about using steroids and a check-fraud scam, despite beseeching the judge that she not be separated from her two young children "even for a short period of time."


"I ask you to be as merciful as a human being can be," said Jones, who cried on her husband's shoulder after she was sentenced.


The disgraced former Olympic champion was ordered to surrender March 11 to begin her term.


U.S. District Judge Kenneth Karas said he gave her the maximum under her plea deal to send a message to athletes who have abused drugs and overlooked the values of "hard work, dedication, teamwork and sportsmanship."


"Athletes in society have an elevated status, they entertain, they inspire, and perhaps, most important, they serve as role models," Karas said.

Later Friday, Karas was to sentence Jones' former coach, Olympic champion Steve Riddick, who was convicted in the check-fraud scam.

The 31-year-old Jones also was given two years' probation and supervised release, during which she will be required to perform 800 hours of community service.


The judge said this would take advantage of Jones'"eloquence, strength and her ability to work with kids."


It was her children that worried Jones as she pleaded for a lighter sentence, talking at length about her two boys, including the infant son she's still nursing.


"My passion in life has always been my family," Jones said. "I know the day is quickly approaching when my boys ask me about these current events. I intend to be honest and forthright ... and guide them into not making the same mistakes."


The sentence completes a stunning fall for the woman who was once the most celebrated female athlete in the world. She won three gold and two bronze medals at the 2000 Sydney Olympics.


After long denying she ever had used performance-enhancing drugs, Jones admitted last October she lied to federal investigators in November 2003, acknowledging she took the designer steroid "the clear" from September 2000 to July 2001. "The clear" has been linked to BALCO, the lab at the center of the steroids scandal in professional sports.


She also admitted lying about her knowledge of the involvement of Tim Montgomery, the father of her older son Monty, in a scheme to cash millions of dollars worth of stolen or forged checks. Montgomery and several others have been convicted in that scam.


"The revelation that one of the sport's biggest stars took performance-enhancing drugs and repeatedly lied about it, in addition to being a party to fraud, has no silver lining," USA Track & Field president Bill Roe and CEO Craig Masback said in a statement. "But, it is a vivid morality play that graphically illustrates the wages of cheating in any facet of life, on or off the track."


After her guilty pleas last October, Jones made an apologetic and teary-eyed statement outside court, saying, "It's with a great amount of shame that I stand before you and tell you that I have betrayed your trust."

"I have been dishonest, and you have the right to be angry with me," she added. "I have let (my family) down. I have let my country down, and I have let myself down. ... I want to ask for your forgiveness for my actions, and I hope you can find it in your heart to forgive me."


Jones returned her Olympic medals — golds in the 100 meters, 200 meters and 1,600-meter relay and bronzes in the long jump and 400-meter relay — even before the International Olympic Committee ordered her to do so and wiped her results from the books.


Jones was among the many athletes who testified in 2003 before a grand jury investigating the Bay Area Laboratory Co-Operative.


On the day she pleaded guilty, prosecutors said a 2003 search warrant at BALCO uncovered ledgers, purchases, doping calendars, and various blood-test results connected to Jones and former coach Trevor Graham.

She took EPO, human growth hormone and THG using drops and injections, according to the court documents that show use in 2000 and 2001.

Zennie
January 14th, 2008, 02:50 AM
(01-11) 10:17 PST White Plains, N.Y. (AP) --

Marion Jones was sentenced Friday to six months in prison for lying about using steroids and a check-fraud scam, despite beseeching the judge that she not be separated from her two young children "even for a short period of time."


"I ask you to be as merciful as a human being can be," said Jones, who cried on her husband's shoulder after she was sentenced.


The disgraced former Olympic champion was ordered to surrender March 11 to begin her term.


U.S. District Judge Kenneth Karas said he gave her the maximum under her plea deal to send a message to athletes who have abused drugs and overlooked the values of "hard work, dedication, teamwork and sportsmanship."


"Athletes in society have an elevated status, they entertain, they inspire, and perhaps, most important, they serve as role models," Karas said.

Later Friday, Karas was to sentence Jones' former coach, Olympic champion Steve Riddick, who was convicted in the check-fraud scam.

The 31-year-old Jones also was given two years' probation and supervised release, during which she will be required to perform 800 hours of community service.


The judge said this would take advantage of Jones'"eloquence, strength and her ability to work with kids."


It was her children that worried Jones as she pleaded for a lighter sentence, talking at length about her two boys, including the infant son she's still nursing.


"My passion in life has always been my family," Jones said. "I know the day is quickly approaching when my boys ask me about these current events. I intend to be honest and forthright ... and guide them into not making the same mistakes."


The sentence completes a stunning fall for the woman who was once the most celebrated female athlete in the world. She won three gold and two bronze medals at the 2000 Sydney Olympics.


After long denying she ever had used performance-enhancing drugs, Jones admitted last October she lied to federal investigators in November 2003, acknowledging she took the designer steroid "the clear" from September 2000 to July 2001. "The clear" has been linked to BALCO, the lab at the center of the steroids scandal in professional sports.


She also admitted lying about her knowledge of the involvement of Tim Montgomery, the father of her older son Monty, in a scheme to cash millions of dollars worth of stolen or forged checks. Montgomery and several others have been convicted in that scam.


"The revelation that one of the sport's biggest stars took performance-enhancing drugs and repeatedly lied about it, in addition to being a party to fraud, has no silver lining," USA Track & Field president Bill Roe and CEO Craig Masback said in a statement. "But, it is a vivid morality play that graphically illustrates the wages of cheating in any facet of life, on or off the track."


After her guilty pleas last October, Jones made an apologetic and teary-eyed statement outside court, saying, "It's with a great amount of shame that I stand before you and tell you that I have betrayed your trust."

"I have been dishonest, and you have the right to be angry with me," she added. "I have let (my family) down. I have let my country down, and I have let myself down. ... I want to ask for your forgiveness for my actions, and I hope you can find it in your heart to forgive me."


Jones returned her Olympic medals — golds in the 100 meters, 200 meters and 1,600-meter relay and bronzes in the long jump and 400-meter relay — even before the International Olympic Committee ordered her to do so and wiped her results from the books.


Jones was among the many athletes who testified in 2003 before a grand jury investigating the Bay Area Laboratory Co-Operative.


On the day she pleaded guilty, prosecutors said a 2003 search warrant at BALCO uncovered ledgers, purchases, doping calendars, and various blood-test results connected to Jones and former coach Trevor Graham.

She took EPO, human growth hormone and THG using drops and injections, according to the court documents that show use in 2000 and 2001.


If Marion has a decent lawyer he or she would work to get her out based on "cruel and unusual" punishment. Six months is too long.

sphinx
January 14th, 2008, 07:04 PM
I bet you she is going to own her cell block

Echo
January 14th, 2008, 11:06 PM
I bet you she is going to own her cell block

No she is not. She lost virtually all her financial earnings and filed for bankruptcy several months ago. She sold all of her homes including a home she had purchased for her mother. She entered a third marriage with virtually nothing in the way of financial assets.

dano
January 15th, 2008, 12:03 AM
If Marion has a decent lawyer he or she would work to get her out based on "cruel and unusual" punishment. Six months is too long.

what are you smoking?

MsGuns
January 15th, 2008, 08:56 PM
Her marriage to Thompson is her SECOND...
She was NOT married to her 1st child's father Tim Montgomery.
6 months is TOO SHORT...she lied for 7 yrs to the world and lied 3 times to the grand jury...1 count about steriods and 2 counts about money laundering.

Echo
January 16th, 2008, 01:14 AM
Her marriage to Thompson is her SECOND...
She was NOT married to her 1st child's father Tim Montgomery.
6 months is TOO SHORT...she lied for 7 yrs to the world and lied 3 times to the grand jury...1 count about steriods and 2 counts about money laundering.

Jones' first marriage was with CJ Hunter.

Jones had a baby with Tim Montgomery and maintained a joint checking account with him. I inferred that she was married to him, but this is incorrect. She was never married to Montgomery. She might as well have.

Yes, her marriage to Thompson is her second.

Six month in jail is not only a punishment to Jones, it is a punishment to her infant child and to her present husband, Thompson. Her children and Thompson are innocent in this and should not be punished. Jones can perform public service and "pay her debt to society."

Jones didn't lie three times to the grand jury. For the purposes of her sentencing, she lied twice over the course of seven years. She lied to Jeff Novitsky, an IRS agent who was criminally investigating Victor Conte and BALCO. (She denied using performance enhancing drugs.) She also lied to an "ICE" (Immigration and Customs Enforcement) agent who was investigating the check fraud scheme. (She couldn't recall receiving a $25,000 check from Nathaniel Alexander, she denied knowledge of Montgomery receiving a $200,00 check from Alexander, and she denied knowledge of Montgomery's involvement with Alexander in the check fraud scheme.)

Jones is financially bankrupt. She returned all her medals. She has admitted guilt. She has been humiliated in public. All of her world records have been wiped off the books. Her international competitive accomplishments no longer exist.... as if they never happened. Meanwhile, Jason Giambi is still making millions of dollars playing for the New York Yankees after admitting in the same BALCO investigation that he used steroids and growth hormone.

So, how did Jones' lies personally damage you, Ms. Guns? Is the world a better place now that she will be spending six months in jail? Do you feel just a little better now?

sphinx
January 22nd, 2008, 06:14 PM
No she is not. She lost virtually all her financial earnings and filed for bankruptcy several months ago. She sold all of her homes including a home she had purchased for her mother. She entered a third marriage with virtually nothing in the way of financial assets.

I wasn't referring to anything financially or economically, when I said "own", I was referring to the fact she will kick all those other chicks asses. Time for you to download some rap tunes. lol

ibarramedia
January 22nd, 2008, 08:37 PM
Do you think Marion has a future in Fbb when she comes out?

Echo
January 22nd, 2008, 09:26 PM
I wasn't referring to anything financially or economically, when I said "own", I was referring to the fact she will kick all those other chicks asses. Time for you to download some rap tunes. lol

What, the Kanye West that I work out to ain't good enough for you, Dog? When you busted out that line about owning her cell block, I thought you wuz talkin' "bout some of that Martha Stewart type sh1t going down.

sphinx
January 23rd, 2008, 04:02 AM
What, the Kanye West that I work out to ain't good enough for you, Dog? When you busted out that line about owning her cell block, I thought you wuz talkin' "bout some of that Martha Stewart type sh1t going down.

lol, yeah Kanye is good enough

CalJoe
January 24th, 2008, 09:13 PM
Jones' first marriage was with CJ Hunter.

Jones had a baby with Tim Montgomery and maintained a joint checking account with him. I inferred that she was married to him, but this is incorrect. She was never married to Montgomery. She might as well have.

Yes, her marriage to Thompson is her second.

Six month in jail is not only a punishment to Jones, it is a punishment to her infant child and to her present husband, Thompson. Her children and Thompson are innocent in this and should not be punished. Jones can perform public service and "pay her debt to society."

Jones didn't lie three times to the grand jury. For the purposes of her sentencing, she lied twice over the course of seven years. She lied to Jeff Novitsky, an IRS agent who was criminally investigating Victor Conte and BALCO. (She denied using performance enhancing drugs.) She also lied to an "ICE" (Immigration and Customs Enforcement) agent who was investigating the check fraud scheme. (She couldn't recall receiving a $25,000 check from Nathaniel Alexander, she denied knowledge of Montgomery receiving a $200,00 check from Alexander, and she denied knowledge of Montgomery's involvement with Alexander in the check fraud scheme.)

Jones is financially bankrupt. She returned all her medals. She has admitted guilt. She has been humiliated in public. All of her world records have been wiped off the books. Her international competitive accomplishments no longer exist.... as if they never happened. Meanwhile, Jason Giambi is still making millions of dollars playing for the New York Yankees after admitting in the same BALCO investigation that he used steroids and growth hormone.

So, how did Jones' lies personally damage you, Ms. Guns? Is the world a better place now that she will be spending six months in jail? Do you feel just a little better now?
In the case of Ford and Firestone and the Explorers recall, 60 Minutes did a piece a couple of years ago, where it was reported that executives at Ford and Firestone were fully aware of the problem they had on their hands with regard to Firestone tires coming off Explorers (over 100 people died as a result of these preventable accidents). The tragedy is that according to internal memos and documents provided to 60 minutes by an insider at Ford, Ford decided to NOT recall the Explorers, because the cost of recalling all these vehicles would have exceeded the anticipated cost of settling potential wrongful death lawsuits. In other words, they factored loss of human life into their fiscal and financial decisions.

Marion Jones will have served more time than anyone from Ford or Firestone and more time than anyone from Merck Industries and Pharmaceuticals, who gave us Vioxx. The FDA advised Merck to recall Vioxx, and Merck decided to not follow the recommendations of the FDA. Vioxx wound up contributing to approximately 160,000 heart attacks and strokes.

I don't see anyone from Merck or Ford going to jail for killing people through reckless negligence and outright premeditated manslaughter.