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Armstrong maintains he severed professional ties with Ferrari in 2004, but an Italian law enforcement official told the AP last month that Armstrong had repeatedly met with Ferrari in recent years, including before the 2010 Tour de France. The race was Armstrong's last Tour before he retired again; he fared poorly.
Ferrari was cleared on appeal in 2006 of criminal charges accusing him of distributing doping products to athletes, but he remains barred for life by the Italian Cycling Federation. The Italian official said Armstrong's meetings with Ferrari were usually in St. Moritz, Switzerland, or Monte Carlo, Monaco.
Armstrong has since acknowledged meeting Ferrari nonprofessionally since severing formal ties. Italian officials have not yet received an official request to send evidence to the United States.
Asked if the Americans might be hesitant to go after Armstrong following the outcome of the Bonds case, one European law enforcement official responded, "Was (Bonds) also accused of fraud involving federal funds? ... I know Novitzky isn't the only one investigating."
In America, investigators from the Internal Revenue Service, the Drug Enforcement Administration, the FBI and the FDA are working on the case and reporting to officials from the Department of Justice, the AP was told. If criminal charges are ever brought against Armstrong, Levenson said it will have to get approval from DOJ brass.
"A Lance Armstrong (case) will go all the way up the chain," she said. "(Attorney General Eric) Holder or one of his chief deputies will sign off on the indictment or be briefed on it. They will have input even before this case gets indicted."
The U.S. investigators have requested urine samples that were taken from U.S. Postal riders for anti-doping controls in France and were subsequently frozen and stored by France's anti-doping agency.
Among the samples requested are those from the first Tour de France that Armstrong won in 1999 and from other years when he dominated France's storied race. The French agency also has stored Armstrong's urine samples from the 2009 Tour when he placed third on his comeback, riding for the Astana team.
"All of Lance's samples were 100 percent clean when they were first given and tested," Fabiani said. "In fact, over his 20-year career, Armstrong has taken nearly 500 drug tests, in and out of competition, and never failed a single one."
Samples must be properly transferred to the United States so they'll pass muster if entered as evidence in a U.S. court proceeding. French authorities, again acting at the request of the U.S. investigators, also are expected to interview and take witness statements from people in France.
These will include people who were connected to U.S. Postal or who worked in French anti-doping while Armstrong was competing. Pierre Bordry, the former head of France's anti-doping agency who at times had an antagonistic relationship with Armstrong, is among those expected to talk to the French investigators acting on the U.S. request, the AP was told.
Meanwhile, Novitzky, who also has been involved in the Bonds and Clemens cases, is insisting on the need for secrecy from the Europeans, warning that leaks could compromise the probe.
"They want the procedure to be solid," one official familiar with the case said.
"He is doing a very good job," the official added, referring to Novitzky's conduct during the probe. "When he bites, he doesn't let go."
[Associated Press;
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