Can Floyd Landis Tell the Truth About Lance Armstrong and Cheating?
After Floyd Landis won the Tour de France, in 2006, he tested positive for using performance
enhancing drugs (PED’s) to win the race. Once he was caught by race officials, he lied about his guilt.
Landis then appealed his positive PED test to the Court of Arbitration for Sport and there he lied. Not to be outdone, after losing in the Court of Arbitration for Sport, Landis wrote a book to proclaim his innocence from the use of PED’s and appeared on talk shows. Now we know, the only thing his book contained was lies. Lies, lies, lies.
Days ago, Landis sent some emails out admitting his guilt and declaring that he “did not want to be part of the problem” anymore. Well, Floyd, you still are.
In his emails, Landis accused Lance Armstrong and the US Cycling team of doping and covering up a positive test concerning Armstrong. More importantly, Landis now claims that not only did Armstrong use PED’s, Armstrong showed other riders how to dope their blood to avoid positive tests.
If Landis truly wants to remove himself from being “part of the problem” there is only one thing he can do. Landis must supply Cycling officials (and maybe the DEA) with razor sharp specific evidence. Since Landis has no credibility on his own, he must provide investigators with specific names, dates, times, place and methods of blood doping. Anything less with only show the Landis the same as he ever was – a liar.
My name is Christopher Fusco. I am the managing partner of Callahan & Fusco, LLC with offices in New York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania.