US sprint star Marion Jones finally stopped running from the truth on Friday, admitting she took banned steroids prior to her triumphant 2000 Olympic campaign. The belated confession, after years of vehement doping denials, could see her stripped of the five medals she won in Sydney, three of them gold.
And the guilty plea she entered in a US court - to lying to a federal agent about both her drug use and an unrelated fraud case - could land her behind bars. "I want you to know I have been dishonest, and you have the right to be angry with me," a tearful Jones said after her court appearance.
"Because of my actions, I am retiring from the sport of track and field, a sport which I deeply loved." Jones, struggling for composure as her mother stood behind her, asked her fans for forgiveness. "It is with a great amount of shame that I stand before you to tell you that I have betrayed ... your trust," she said. "I want to ask for your forgiveness for my actions."
For years Jones had aggressively denied doping, even as her name repeatedly cropped up in connection with drugs. Her first husband, shot putter C.J. Hunter, was convicted of doping, and sprinter Tim Montgomery, with whom she had a son in 2003, was stripped of his 100 meter world record and banned from the sport based on evidence gathered in the Bay Area Laboratory Co-operative (BALCO) steroid distribution scandal.
It was during that investigation, in November of 2003, that Jones lied to federal agents who asked her about her use of "the clear," a product produced by BALCO and later learned to be the synthetic steroid THG. In a statement read out to the court, Jones admitted using THG from September 2000 until July 2001.
"In September 2000, before the Sydney Olympics, (former coach Trevor) Graham began providing me with a substance he told me was flaxseed oil," she said. "I continued to use this substance until July 2001. "By November 2003, I realised that what Graham had given to me was a performance enhancing drug," Jones told the court.
She is due to be sentenced on January 11. The two charges of lying to a federal agent carry a combined maximum sentence of 10 years. In light of her plea agreement, prosecutors said they would consider a sentence of up to six months reasonable, but the sentencing judge is not bound by that recommendation.
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