Palmeiro faces scrutiny
WASHINGTON – Congress will investigate whether baseball slugger Rafael Palmeiro perjured himself when he told a House committee that he hadn’t taken steroids.
With the player’s consent, Rep. Tom Davis, R-Va., chairman of the House Government Reform Committee, and the committee’s ranking Democrat, Rep. Henry Waxman of California, asked Major League Baseball on Wednesday to turn over information about the failed drug test that resulted in a 10-day suspension for Palmeiro this week.
On March 17, Palmeiro appeared before their panel and said under oath: “I have never used steroids. Period.”
“As a practical matter, perjury referrals are uncommon,” Davis told The Associated Press. “Prosecutions are rare. But this is a high-profile case, so I think it will get an honest look-see. I don’t think anyone can avoid it.
“If we did nothing, I think we’d look like idiots, don’t you?”
Palmeiro, of the Baltimore Orioles, tested positive for the powerful steroid stanozolol, a person with knowledge of the sport’s drug-testing program told The AP on condition of anonymity. The person did not want to be identified because the sport prohibits disclosure of test results without authorization.
The positive test came after Palmeiro’s appearance before Congress but before he recorded his 3,000th hit last month. That means he reached the milestone – joining Hank Aaron, Willie Mays and Eddie Murray as the only players in major league history with 3,000 hits and 500 homers – after he knew about the positive results, the source told the AP.
When the suspension was announced Monday, Palmeiro stood by his statements to Congress and said he didn’t know what caused the positive test.
Stanozolol is what sprinter Ben Johnson of Canada tested positive for when he was stripped of his gold medal and world record in the 100 meters at the 1988 Olympics. It is not available in over-the-counter supplements and is known as a powerful strength-builder.
“It’s hard for me to reconcile that someone doesn’t know that they have steroids in their body. I’m extraordinarily skeptical,” said committee member Rep. Christopher Shays, R-Conn.
“It obviously was disappointing and a little unsettling that the one person so emphatic about not taking steroids was one of the first since then to be disciplined,” Shays added.
Rather than relying on news reports, Davis said, Congress will wait to see what it learns from the information baseball provides.
The lawmakers asked for the complete results of all drug tests taken by Palmeiro, including what was detected and how much.
The lawmakers asked for the complete results of all drug tests taken by Palmeiro, including what was detected and how much. During a telephone conversation with Davis on Tuesday night, Palmeiro agreed to have baseball release that information to Congress.
“He was pretty adamant about the point he didn’t do anything,” Davis said.