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Stallone convicted over Aussie drug bust
RARE DEFEAT:
The actor failed to show he had valid prescriptions for human growth hormone, which he is allegedly using to treat an undisclosed condition
AP, SYDNEY
Tuesday, May 22, 2007, Page 5
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Actor Sylvester Stallone poses for a photo during a press conference to promote his latest movie Rocky Balboa at a hotel in Tokyo, Japan, on March 26. Stallone was formally convicted yesterday of importing banned drugs into Australia.
PHOTO: AP
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Hollywood star Sylvester Stallone was formally convicted yesterday of importing restricted muscle-building hormones into Australia and ordered to pay more than A$12,000 (US$9,900) in fines and costs.
New South Wales state Deputy Chief Magistrate Paul Cloran said the Rocky and Rambo star failed to show he had a valid prescription for dozens of vials of human growth hormone found in his luggage when he arrived in Sydney for a promotional tour in February.
Stallone, 60, had also failed to declare the male hormone testosterone on a customs entry form, although he had legitimate medical reasons for carrying the drug.
Cloran fined Stallone, who was not present in court and had previously pleaded guilty, a total of A$2,975 on both charges and ordered him to pay prosecution costs of A$10,000.
Calls to Stallone's publicist, Michelle Bega, were not immediately returned.
The magistrate said because of the negative publicity surrounding the case, the penalty was enough to send a clear message that such behavior would not be tolerated.
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"This stuff gives your body a boost and you feel and look good ... Doing `Rambo' is hard work ... Where do you think I am going to get this stuff in Burma?"
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Sylvester Stallone, actor
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"I don't think there is anything further the court could or should do in order to deter Mr. Stallone from committing these offenses again," Cloran said.
He said he was satisfied the human growth hormone and testosterone were for Stallone's personal use, and "there is no suggestion that the substances were being used for anything other than cosmetic or therapeutic purposes."
Stallone was charged after a customs search of his luggage at the start of a three-day visit to Sydney in February revealed 48 vials of the human growth hormone drug Jintropin.
The actor told customs officers he had purchased the drugs at a Los Angeles pharmacy, but did not have the prescription with him.
Three days later, Stallone threw four vials of the male hormone testosterone from his Sydney hotel room when customs officials arrived to search it.
Cloran said Jintropin is not legally available for sale in the US and found that Stallone had been "untruthful about the existence of a prescription."
However, citing testimony from Stallone's Beverly Hills-based doctor, Robert Huizenga, Cloran found that Stallone had been using the testosterone legally under medical supervision, although he had failed to declare it to customs officials.
In a letter to the court in which he apologized for a "terrible mistake," Stallone said he had taken the drugs for years to treat a medical condition that he didn't disclose.
In an interview with customs officials after the growth hormone was discovered in his bags, Stallone said he was carrying such a large amount of the drug because he was about to go on location in Thailand and Burma for three months to shoot the latest installment of the Rambo series.
"As you get older, the pituitary gland slows and you feel older, your bones narrow. This stuff gives your body a boost and you feel and look good," court documents quoted him as saying. "Doing Rambo is hard work ... Where do you think I am going to get this stuff in Burma?"
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