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Like the players' union, the commissioner's office is angry about names becoming public. The list is under court seal, and the case is before the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. It may end up being decided by the Supreme Court.
MLB says at most 96 urine samples tested positive in the 2003 survey, and the union disputes 13 of those.
"We are continuing to be frustrated there are individuals that feel breaking the law for whatever reason they do it, do it maliciously and clearly in violation of standing court orders," DuPuy said. "People should be careful before they toss allegations around based on information that may or may not be accurate."
Leyland predicted another player will be identified in a month.
"I know the media has to report information," Leyland said. "I'm not blaming the media, but they're not going to let it alone. I'm not blaming anybody because it's news and that's what you people do for a living."
[Associated Press;
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