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Judge Wipes Away 5 Counts Against Bonds Bonds could still spend 50 years in prison

Updated 3:22 PM PDT, Mon, Nov 24, 2008

Related Topics: Barry Bonds | Crime | Perjury

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Five down, eleven to go!

 

Home run champion Barry Bonds won a reduction of the criminal charges pending against him Monday when a federal judge in San Francisco dismissed five of the 15 counts he faced.

Bonds, 44, is due to go on trial in March in the court of U.S.  District Judge Susan Illston on charges of making false statements and obstructing justice in 2003 grand jury testimony in a sports steroids probe.

The former San Francisco Giants slugger is accused of lying when he denied ever receiving anabolic steroids or human growth hormone.

In a pretrial ruling, Illston granted a request by Bonds' six defense lawyers for dismissal of five of the false statements counts on the grounds they were legally defective.

The judge found that two counts duplicated other counts, two were based on ambiguous questions or answers and one other charge contained a typo in which prosecutors left out a key word.

But the judge turned down Bonds' request for dismissal of five other counts.

The ruling still leaves Bonds facing 10 criminal counts, each of which carries a potential maximum sentence of five years in prison. In addition, prosecutors have said they plan to seek a new indictment correcting the charge in which a word was left out, which would bring the total number of counts to 11.

If Bonds is convicted, however, the actual penalty would be determined under federal sentencing guidelines and is expected to be lower than the maximum five years.

Last month, Illston sentenced two other sports figures who were convicted of lying in the steroids probe to home confinement or probation.

Bonds, now a free agent, set the Major League Baseball record for career home runs while playing for the Giants last year.

Copyright Bay City News

Comments (10)

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  • Misdirection Tuesday, Nov 25 at 10:09 AM FLAG COMMENT All of this over baseball? Baseball? Are you kidding me? Who cares. The economy is in freefall and this is what the justice system is preoccupied with? All these guys use drugs at the elite level. deal with it and move on. Stop wasting taxpayer dollars on this and deal with more important issues.
  • John Woods Monday, Nov 24 at 8:23 PM FLAG COMMENT Looks like someone has this kangaroo judge in their back pocket! http://www.privacy.es.tc
  • Anonymous Monday, Nov 24 at 8:08 PM FLAG COMMENT What a Country, It saddens me that a person can get jail time for crimes like this yet the people that steal billions of dollars from the tax payers go free, sometimes are paid to go free. We need to get our heads out of our behinds and get our priorities straight.
  • Ace Monday, Nov 24 at 7:56 PM FLAG COMMENT Rot in prison, scumchop. Perhaps then you'll learn the gratitude and humility which have been so profoundly lacking in your public conduct in your life thus far.
  • diatom86 Monday, Nov 24 at 7:41 PM FLAG COMMENT The court is making an example out of him.

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