Grand jury looking at Clemens case

Published: Monday, Jan. 12, 2009 2:28 p.m. MST
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
WASHINGTON — A federal grand jury is investigating whether Roger Clemens lied to Congress last year, two people briefed on the matter told The Associated Press on Monday.

Both spoke on condition of anonymity because grand jury proceedings are supposed to be secret.

Congress asked the Justice Department to look into whether the seven-time Cy Young Award winner lied last February when he testified under oath at a deposition and a public House hearing that he never took illegal performance-enhancing drugs.

That contradicted the sworn testimony of his former personal trainer Brian McNamee, who said under oath that he injected Clemens with steroids and human growth hormone.

By bringing the case to a grand jury, the Justice Department escalated the case from an FBI investigation. A grand jury allows prosecutors to get sworn testimony from witnesses and collect documents.

The grand jury's involvement first was reported by ESPN.com.

McNamee's lawyer, Richard Emery, said Monday his client has not been called as a grand jury witness or received a subpoena. But he does expect McNamee to testify again.

Story continues below
"We will be cooperating. We've been in contact with the federal authorities for a year and a half," Emery said. "We look forward to the results, which we fully expect will show that Brian has been telling the truth all along."

In the Mitchell Report on doping in baseball, McNamee said he injected Clemens more than a dozen times with steroids and HGH from 1998-01. Clemens' repeated denials of those accusations drew Congress' attention — and the former pitcher then made more denials under oath.

Shaun Kelley, owner of a Houston training center, said he had taken a polygraph test for FBI investigators John Longmire and Heather Young last April and that he had denied meeting Clemens or providing the pitcher or any of the pitcher's associates with illegal substances. Kelley said he employed Clemens' stepsister Bonnie Owens for about a year.

Kelley said neither he nor his lawyers had been contacted by the grand jury.

"It is just not fair for me, because they just come down here and throw me under the bus, and I lose half-a-million of business," Kelly said Monday in a telephone interview.

"I know in my heart I passed it," he said of the polygraph, "but the FBI is not known for admitting their mistakes."

Rusty Hardin, a lawyer for Clemens, could not immediately be reached for comment. Rep. Henry Waxman, the California Democrat who chaired the House committee that heard the testimony of Clemens and McNamee last year, declined to comment.

Recent comments

What a witch hunt. Hasn't congress got anything better to do? Pay...

Digbads | Jan. 12, 2009 at 2:31 p.m.

previousnext

Latest comments

Just like most defense lawyers he has no compunction in putting criminals...

Kurt Bestor: Joy for the world

The issue is whether or not you have an earring after Gordon B. Hinckley said...

Store planning for Palin crush

Two points: #1 I find the discussion of her "accomplishments" to be kind...

History Nut, it was an apology written BY Max but issued by BYU official...

Lock 'im up and throw away the key.

Letters: Roundabouts great

I concur, although some education on how to use them wouldn't hurt none. The...

BYU football: Bronco weighs in on Hall

You are wrong Max Hall issued HIS apology THROUGH the PR department (which...

You can blame the TCU-BSU matchup on BYU! The BYU-Oklahoma game was...

BCS reform still needed

You are extremely naive. I suspect the BCS had to talk long and hard, and...

To "strange | 8:22 a.m. " since when did a formal education mean that a...

Advertisements