There is something fishy about France’s latest probe into the former team of seven-time Tour de France champion Lance Armstrong.
Leaving no stones — or in this case, syringes — unturned in the battle against doping is commendable. Unless, of course, the investigation proves to be little more than a vendetta against the cyclist some French people love to hate, convinced as they are that the cancer-survivor can only have triumphed through doping.
The facts: After this year’s Tour, French police descended on a waste management firm, Cosmolys, that many teams use to dispose of their medical trash — bloody bandages, used sticking plasters, etc.
The officers seized 15 containers, according to a French judicial official who was happy to brief reporters about the probe but not to be identified by name.
ASTANA’S BOX?
The officers went through the boxes. All of them checked out except one that the judicial official said was labeled as belonging to Armstrong’s Astana team. The official said the box was stuffed with a “large quantity” of syringes and, most alarming, equipment for performing intravenous infusions. Under the World Anti-Doping Code, such IV drips are banned without a compelling medical need.
This paraphernalia is now being inspected by a laboratory, Toxlab, which also worked on the investigation into Princess Diana’s death. It is looking at whether the syringes contained substances banned for athletes and, if so, whether blood specks on some needles could, through DNA analysis, be traced to riders.
Now for the troubling aspects.
The probe comes amid a public dispute between the UCI, which governs world cycling, and France’s anti-doping agency, known by its French initials AFLD.
Ideally, they should be partners. But they don’t trust each other. Officials at the AFLD suspect the UCI isn’t doing everything it could against doping. In a 10-page report to the UCI leaked to French media this month, the agency accused the cycling body of messing up drug tests at this year’s Tour. Perhaps most damagingly, it claimed that the UCI’s testers granted “privileged treatment” to Astana, which Tour champion Alberto Contador also rides for.
The view at the UCI is that AFLD officials are unreliable publicity hounds. To rid cycling of its drug-tainted image, the UCI has spent a small fortune building one of the most sophisticated anti-doping programs in sports. It rejoiced that, for the first time in years, no rider tested positive at this year’s Tour. It is miffed at AFLD suggestions that its efforts are still full of holes.
The syringe probe could work in AFLD’s favor by giving an impression that there may have been nefarious goings-on at the Tour that the UCI missed or ignored.
LEGITIMATE REASONS?
But what prompted police to search the garbage receptacles in the first place? Did they have legitimate reasons or are they being manipulated by people seeking to embarrass Armstrong and the UCI? Would they have gone to such lengths with other sports? They are refusing to comment on this case.
“We never hear of police going through the bins at Roland Garros or after a football match,” notes Gerard Guillaume, a doctor for French team Francaise des Jeux.
What is clear is that the probe was kept quiet for three months until last week, when word leaked to French media just before Armstrong flew to Paris for the unveiling of next year’s Tour route.



