News broke this weekend that A-Rod allegedly tested positive for performance enhancing drugs in 2003, according to the NY Times and Yahoo! News, among others. Now, it appears that A-Rod has owned up to it.
Although the damage is done because the results (and his confession) are out, is there any way for A-Rod to deflect some of the backlash? Could A-Rod argue that the government violated his Fourth Amendment right to be free from illegal government search and seizure when it obtained his BALCO test results?
The story beganwhen MLB team owners called for confidential drug testing after several high-profile MLB players denied steroid use. Once the players underwent drug testing, federal investigators obtained a search warrant, which included the names of ten players, to search the drug testing laboratories. Investigators wanted the test information to determine whether the players that testified at the congressional hearing perjured themselves.
The problem arose when federal investigators went to BALCO and seized documents and electronic data related to the ten named players in their warrant, as well as information related to 104 other MLB players. Since BALCO refused to hand over the results of the ten named players, the federal investigators obtained everything because the ten named players were not separated out.
The United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit ruled in 2006that the government's search and seizure of the computer files did not violate the unnamed players' constitutional rights. The court found that the government respected the players' privacy when it acted pursuant to a warrant to investigate the ten named players.
This opinion was withdrawn and superseded by a January 2008 rulingby the same court. Although the 2006 opinion was withdrawn, the court in 2008 found that the government's seizure of the intermingled evidence for off-site review, through a search warrant served on an innocent third-party laboratory (BALCO), was lawful. The court also found that the issued subpoena, which sought drug testing records and specimens for all professional baseball players who tested positive for steroids, and the contemporaneous execution of the related search warrants, as part of government's ongoing grand jury investigation into illegal steroid use by professional athletes, was reasonable.
The January 2008 ruling is now being appealed, and the Ninth Circuit agreed in September to hear the case en banc, which means that the entire panel of non-recused judges will hear the case, instead of the typical three-judge panel.
Right now, it doesn't look like A-Rod will be successful if he argues that the investigators seized his test results in violation of his Fourth Amendment right to be free from illegal government search and seizure. Although, until the nine judge panel rules, A-Rod shouldn't give up hope.
At least now we know why A-Rod always came to Bonds's defense.
