and
HOWARD FENDRICH
AP Sports Writers
WASHINGTON (AP) -Separated by only a few feet, Roger Clemens and his accuser were never further apart.
There they sat, the star pitcher and his former personal trainer, Brian McNamee, sharing a wooden witness table Wednesday while speaking to Congress under oath and facing blistering questions. For 4 1/2 hours, both men stuck to their versions of the he-said, he-said disagreement over whether McNamee injected Clemens with steroids and human growth hormone.
Clemens insisted it never happened. McNamee insisted it did.
discuss here today, I am never going to have my name restored.”
For some members of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, Clemens’ denials rang hollow, particularly in light of a new account of his discussion of HGH use, revealed by his friend and former teammate Andy Pettitte in a sworn affidavit.
“It’s hard to believe you, sir,” Rep. Elijah Cummings, D-Md., told Clemens. “I hate to say that. You’re one of my heroes. But it’s hard to believe.”
Clemens and McNamee, once employer and employee, and by all accounts once good friends, rarely looked at one another. Seated between them was the day’s third witness, Charles Scheeler, a lawyer who helped compile the report on drug use in baseball headed by former Senate majority leader George Mitchell.
Occasionally, Clemens stuck out his famous right arm – the one that earned 354 major league wins, seven Cy Young Awards and $160 million – to jab a finger in McNamee’s direction. Even when the pitcher gestured, though, he stared straight ahead. Just like the Rocket’s mound glare.
“I have strong disagreements with what this man says about me,” Clemens intoned.
Just like their stories, Clemens’ Texas drawl was in strong contrast to the clipped cadences of McNamee, a former New York police officer.
his table.”
Ultimately, the matter could wind up with the Justice Department if prosecutors believe either man made false statements. The Justice Department is also reviewing used needles and bloody gauze pads McNamee turned over last month. He said they contained performance-enhancing drugs and Clemens’ DNA.
“We found conflicts and inconsistencies in Mr. Clemens’ accounts,” said Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif., who is the committee’s chairman. “During his deposition he made statements we know are untrue.”
Waxman said afterward he hadn’t “reached any conclusions” as to whether a criminal investigation is warranted, although several congressmen said a referral from the committee isn’t needed to trigger one. As ranking Republican Tom Davis of Virginia, put it: “Both can’t be telling the truth.”
The session, held on the same day pitchers and catchers started reporting for spring training in Florida and Arizona, came exactly two months following the release of the Mitchell Report.
That investigation was prompted by another hearing on steroids held by the same committee in the same wood-paneled room, on March 17, 2005. That is best remembered for having tarnished the reputations of Mark McGwire – who infamously repeated, “I’m not here to talk about the past” – and Rafael Palmeiro – who wagged his finger and declared he never had used steroids, then failed a drug test months later.
that day, Rep. Mark Souder, an R-Ind., cautioned Clemens and McNamee: “It’s better not to talk about the past than to lie about the past.”
Wednesday’s hearing, which Waxman indicated would be his committee’s last on the subject, was prompted by Clemens’ various and vigorous denials of what McNamee told Mitchell. The Mitchell Report was the first public accounting of McNamee’s allegations that he injected Clemens with HGH and steroids 16 to 21 times from 1998 to 2001. McNamee said Wednesday he now thinks those numbers are too low.
“They don’t disagree on a phone call or one meeting,” Waxman said. “If Mr. McNamee is lying, he has acted inexcusably and he has made Mr. Clemens an innocent victim. If Mr. Clemens isn’t telling the truth, then he is acting shamefully and has smeared Mr. McNamee. I don’t think there is anything in between.”
Waxman said he considered calling off the hearing, but said he was persuaded to go forth by Clemens’ lawyers, an account they disputed.
Congressmen also noted that Pettitte and another former Yankees teammate of Clemens, Chuck Knoblauch, both acknowledged that McNamee was correct when he said they used performance enhancers.
At times, Clemens struggled to find the right words as he was pressed by lawmakers about McNamee’s allegations. Clemens said Pettitte “misremembers” things. He mispronounced McNamee’s name at one point. Toward the end, Clemens raised his voice to interrupt Waxman’s closing remarks. Waxman pounded his gavel and said, “Excuse me, but this is not your time to argue with me.”
It seemed clear early the committee would not treat Clemens with kid gloves, despite all the face-to-face sit-downs he did with representatives in recent days – sometimes posing for photos or signing autographs for staff members.
There was one a wide-eyed fan moment, when Rep. William Clay, D-Mo., relayed to Clemens that a congressional colleague “wants to know what uniform will you wear into the Hall of Fame?”
Eventually, though, the committee split largely along party lines, with the Democrats reserving their most pointed queries for Clemens, and the Republicans giving McNamee a rougher time.
“You’re here under oath, and yet we have lie after lie after lie after lie,” Rep. Dan Burton, R-Ind., told McNamee.
Rep. Christopher Shays, R-Conn., repeatedly called McNamee a “drug dealer.”
One of Clemens’ lawyers, Earl Ward, called it a “public flogging.”
When it was over, Clemens left the hearing room through a back door. Just before exiting, he paused to shake hands with Davis.
Clemens later spoke briefly to reporters, saying: “I’m very thankful and very grateful for this day to come. I’m glad for the opportunity finally. And, you know, I hope I get – and I know I will have – the opportunity to come here to Washington again under different terms.”
fe, Debbie, sat behind him and listened as Waxman implicated her in HGH use, citing statements by Pettitte. Clemens testified his wife took HGH once, although according to the transcript of last week’s sworn deposition, Clemens told committee lawyers he didn’t know of family members taking HGH.
IRS Special Agent Jeff Novitzky, a key member of the federal prosecution team against Barry Bonds, watched from a second-row seat. Bonds, baseball’s home run king, was indicted in November on charges of perjury and obstruction of justice stemming from his 2003 testimony to a grand jury in which he denied knowingly using performance-enhancing drugs.
Pettitte, who was excused from testifying, said in a statement to the committee that Clemens admitted to him nearly 10 years ago that he used HGH. Waxman read from affidavits by Pettitte and Pettitte’s wife, Laura, supporting the accusations.
“Andy Pettitte is my friend. He was my friend before this. He will be my friend after this and again. I think Andy has misheard,” Clemens said. “I think he misremembers.”
In his deposition, Pettitte also said that in 2003 or 2004, McNamee told him Clemens had used steroids. Committee lawyers asked Pettitte how he decided what to say, given that he was caught between conflicting accounts from two friends.
“I have to live with myself. And one day, I have to give an account to God – and not to nobody else – of what I’ve done in my life,” Pettitte replied. “And that’s why I’ve said and shared the stuff with y’all that I’ve shared with y’all today – that I wouldn’t like to share with y’all.”
Portions of that transcript and others were shown on flat-panel TVs hanging on walls in the room. It was jarring in black and white.
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On the Net:
http://oversight.house.gov/story.asp?ID1743
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AP Sports Writer Joseph White and Associated Press Writer Jim Abrams contributed to this report.
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