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Bonds, Thomas and Graham were the only three BALCO figures who pleaded not guilty and went to trial on charges of lying about performance enhancing drugs.
Prosecutors on Wednesday dismissed the counts "without prejudice," meaning they could reinstate the charges before the statute of limitations expires. However, that's a routine legal maneuver when dismissing criminal charges and dropped cases are rarely reinstated.
Attorney William Keane, who represented Graham, said it's highly unlikely prosecutors will reinstate the charges, and that he expects Bonds won't go to prison even though prosecutors are expected to argue for that.
"Given that the core part of the case hung and given the other sentences in the BALCO cases," Keane said, "Bonds has a reasonably good chance of avoiding prison time."
Peter Keane, a Golden Gate University law professor, said he was "a little surprised" that prosecutors decided to drop the charge on which jurors voted 11-1 to convict Bonds.
"But at the end of the day, he's a convicted felon and was shown to have obstructed a federal grand jury," Keane said. "The prosecutors won."
[Associated Press;
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