OLYMPICS Ex-husband accuses Jones of steroid use



C.J. Hunter claims he injected her with performance-enhancing drugs.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
The ex-husband of three-time Olympic champion Marion Jones told federal investigators that she used several banned performance-enhancing drugs during the 2000 Olympics in Sydney, two newspapers reported.
Jones won an unprecedented five track medals at those games, three of them gold.
Her attorney Joseph Burton accused C.J. Hunter of lying out of bitterness over the breakup of the couple's marriage.
Hunter told Internal Revenue Service investigators that he injected his then-wife with banned substances and saw Jones inject herself with the drugs at their home in Australia, the San Francisco Chronicle said.
The San Jose Mercury News also reported Hunter's comments, citing anonymous sources.
Details
Human growth hormone, the steroid THG, insulin and the endurance-boosting drug EPO were among the substances Hunter alleged Jones used.
Angela DeMent, Hunter's lead attorney, told the Mercury News, "It is totally inappropriate for me or any attorney to publicly comment about the facts of a pending case or pending investigation. That being said, perjury is a serious crime and those who commit that crime should be punished accordingly."
Hunter, the 1999 world shot put champion, tested positive for steroids four times in 2000 -- when he was married to Jones.
At a packed news conference in Sydney where Hunter broke down in tears and tried to explain away his positive tests, Victor Conte sat by his side and commented as his "nutritionist."
Conte founded the Bay Area Laboratory Co-Operative and is one of four people charged with distributing steroids through the laboratory. Jones and boyfriend Tim Montgomery -- world record holder at 100 meters -- were among those who testified before the grand jury that indicted the four.
Jones has asked that her grand jury testimony be made public, and has provided a lie detector test results as evidence she told the truth when she adamantly denied using banned substances.
Montgomery, however, is among four track athletes accused by the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency of drug violations, even though they have not tested positive. The accusations are based on evidence gathered by the USADA as a result of the BALCO probe. USADA is seeking to ban all four from the sport for life.
Report
Citing investigators' memos, the Chronicle reported that Hunter gave a 21/2-hour interview to IRS investigators on June 8 in Raleigh, N.C., and had a follow-up call a week later.
During the interview, Hunter alleged that Jones had used banned substances before, during and after the Sydney Olympics.
Hunter said that Jones obtained performance-enhancing drugs from Conte and her then-coach Trevor Graham. Graham has denied ever supplying an athlete with banned substances. Three of the sprinters Graham coaches -- Shawn Crawford, Justin Gatlin and LaTasha Colander -- qualified for the U.S. team in Athens and are considered medal contenders.
Burton lashed back in a letter today to the U.S. attorney in San Francisco, saying he and his client "expect" federal authorities to administer a lie-detector test to Hunter, then charge him with lying to authorities if he fails, "as he most certainly will."
In his letter to U.S. attorney Kevin Ryan, obtained by The Associated Press, Burton asked for an investigation into the leaks, and he called the government "a prime suspect" as their source.