RALEIGH, North Carolina (Reuters) - A $30 million slander lawsuit
against the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency, filed by the former coach of
disgraced sprinters Marion Jones, Justin Gatlin and Tim Montgomery, has
been dismissed.
Federal judge James Fox said his court lacked
jurisdiction to hear claims by Trevor Graham, who said USADA had
slandered him based on allegations he gave performance enhancing drugs
to athletes and affiliated his name with the Bay Area Laboratory
Co-Operative doping scandal.
"He is contesting his eligibility
to coach amateur athletes involved in Olympic sports, a remedy only
available under the (U.S.) Amateur Sports Act," Fox wrote in his March
31 ruling.
"Consequently, these claims are outside the subject matter jurisdiction of this court."
Although a number of athletes coached or previously coached by Graham
have admitted to taking banned substances or have been suspended for
their use, he has denied any involvement.
The Jamaican-born
Graham, who was banned from coaching for life by USADA in 2008, also
said the agency had not given him a hearing on his case. But Fox ruled
USADA followed the proper protocol in determining Graham's sanction.
Graham played a key role in unraveling the BALCO scandal in 2003 when
he anonymously sent USADA a syringe containing the designer drug
tetrahydrogestrinone.
He was found guilty by a U.S. court in
2008 of lying to federal agents and sentenced to a year of home
confinement.
"We knew the case was baseless," USADA chief executive Travis Tygart, said in an email to Reuters on Thursday.
"It is unfortunate that Trevor Graham chose to waste everyone's time
and resources in his quest to avoid taking responsibility for cheating
sport.
Graham was not available for comment.
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