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Sports / Baseball

US authorities drop prosecution of Major League slugger Bonds

Published: 23 Jul 2015 - 09:56 am | Last Updated: 12 Jan 2022 - 12:22 am

Los Angeles: The US Department of Justice formally dropped efforts to prosecute Major League Baseball’s disgraced home run king Barry Bonds yesterday.
In a one-paragraph court filing, federal prosecutors said they wouldn’t try to pursue a request to the US Supreme Court to consider a lower court’s reversal of Bonds’s felony conviction for giving evasive testimony about whether he used performance-enhancing drugs.
The move ends a protracted legal saga that has lingered in the courts for more than a decade.
“The finality of today’s decision gives me great peace,” the former San Francisco Giants slugger said in a statement on his website. “I am relieved, humbled and thankful for what this means for me and my family moving forward.”
Bonds was indicted on obstruction of justice and perjury charges in 2007.
He was eventually convicted of a single count of obstruction in 2011 for a rambling answer to a federal grand jury as to whether he received injections of steroids from personal trainer Greg Anderson while he played for the Giants.
Bonds was acquitted on all perjury charges at his original trial, and in April the US Court of Appeals overturned his conviction on the obstruction charge.
Bonds had been sentenced in 2011 to two years’ probation, 250 hours of community service, a fine of $4,000 and ordered to spend a month of monitored home confinement. He served the home confinement before his conviction was overturned.
Bonds was initially called to testify before the grand jury probing the BALCO steroid distribution scandal that rocked the sports world.
Bonds testified that he wasn’t aware that substances he was using called the “cream” and the “clear” were in fact steroids.
AFP