Untold: Hall of Shame (2023)

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Untold: Hall of Shame (2023)

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[mesmerizing music playing]

[beeps]

[Victor Conte] People joke that

I like to blow things up

just to see where all the pieces land.

They've called me...

A lot of people have called me a genius...

- [intriguing music playing]

- ...but, you know,

sometimes people call that reckless.

This is a story that broke last week

and it's been growing ever since.

A federal grand jury

is going to begin hearing testimony

this week from some very major athletes.

[reporter 1] Investigating Victor Conte.

[reporters] Victor Conte.

[reporter 2] The president

of BALCO Laboratories.

[Conte] "BALCO" is a word

that's now forever in the lexicon.

[man] BALCO.

BALCO.

The biggest doping scandal

in sports history.

[Conte] Articles had come out saying

I was a modern-day Al Capone,

the BALCO mastermind...

[chuckling]...Dr. Frankenstein,

you know, from BALCO.

[reporter 3] They were searching

for evidence,

linking Conte to a previously

undetected steroid known as THG.

They called it The Clear.

It is a designer steroid...

Made for the sole purpose of cheating.

It is now a full-blown conspiracy

with ties to top athletes...

[news anchor 1] From baseball,

football, track and field...

[news anchor 2] Including

home run record breaker, Barry Bonds.

[commentator] A high drive...

[Conte] The whole investigation,

in my opinion,

was all about chasing headlines.

Unfortunately, some in professional sports

are not setting much of an example.

This is about values,

it's about our culture.

Major League Baseball had a very,

very serious problem with steroids.

It wasn't dealt with.

[Conte] I knew

they didn't have the evidence

that they claimed that they had,

and that's why I walked out into

a sea of reporters and did this.

That meant this.

[Tim Montgomery] Victor Conte

is a person that can come across

to be anybody he wants to.

[Jeff Novitzky] I think most people

who hear and see Victor Conte

realize him for who he is,

and that's, you know, a used car,

snake oil salesman, bullshit artist.

[Conte] It was fun, it was exciting.

It was about trying to be great.

When Marion Jones hit the finish line

and won the gold medal,

when Barry Bonds hit all those home runs.

[riveting music playing]

[commentator] Bonds hits one!

Deep to right field.

The record has changed again. Barry Bonds...

[Conte] You know,

any of these great accomplishments,

those are things

that I'll always be proud of.

["Your Sweet Love"

by Lee Hazlewood playing]

Stranger's arms reach out

To me

'Cause they know

I'm so lonely

Then my mind

Goes back to you

Your sweet love

Sees me through

- [insects trilling]

- [panting]

[dog barking in distance]

[nuanced music playing]

Welcome to the hall of fame,

or hall of shame,

depending upon your viewpoint.

Okay, this is one

of, uh, two autographed photos

that I have from Barry.

This one's "To Victor"

and the other one is "To BALCO."

And this is a Sports Illustrated

of Marion Jones here.

This is back in the 2000 time frame.

This is Tim Montgomery

at the world championships in 2001.

That was in Edmonton, Canada.

When we started working with him,

his name was Tiny Tim.

Charlie Francis, he said,

"Show me somebody not on steroids

and I'll show you a loser."

There is a level playing field,

it's just not the one

everyone thought it was, okay?

[producer] A lot of these people

used steroids, right?

From 1984 when I started BALCO

until 2000, for 16 years,

I never gave anybody

any sort of illegal dr*gs.

It was a legitimate business providing

nutritional element information

through comprehensive blood testing.

Thank you very much.

Yes, as Ken stated,

my name is Victor Conte,

and I'm the executive director

of BALCO Laboratories,

BALCO standing for, uh,

Bay Area Laboratory Co-operative,

and I'm also the... the founder

of something called the SNAC system.

They've called it Victor's knack,

that whatever I decide to do,

I can go straight to the top,

and I taught myself.

I got a library card,

and I pulled

all these scientific journals,

then I would read 'em all.

I went across zinc and muscle strength,

zinc and testosterone.

I learned athletes can be low in iron,

they could be lower in copper.

Some of these deficiencies are connected

with various symptoms like

muscle cramps or lack of concentration.

And we... Hopefully, by, uh,

giving some input,

we can help the United States

win a few more gold medals.

I put together this partnership

and raised money and started BALCO.

Update on the BALCO Laboratory facility.

There's a new building.

We'll walk into the lab area.

We started testing athletes,

one led to another, and...

The first-world-class athletes

that I tested were in track and field.

And then Matt Biondi, who was the world's

fastest swimmer at the time.

So I could collect all this data

that was valuable to them.

You know, I was kind of

a natural-born promoter.

The next thing you know, NBA players.

I worked with the entire

Seattle SuperSonics team in '92 and '93.

[sports commentator speaks indistinctly]

But for me to actually enhance

the performance of the athletes,

I had to learn

how to formulate supplements.

So I created a whole line of mineral

and trace element products

and formulated ZMA, and that... I mean,

it was like a rocket ship.

Pretty soon, Bill Romanowski showed up

from the Denver Broncos.

And he... he was the gateway

to the NFL for... for me.

Then all of a sudden

I had 250 NFL players.

[indistinct chatter and laughter]

[Conte] Are you going to as*ault

the world record, Gregg?

[chuckles] Mr. Zinc. Call me Zinc.

- [Conte] Mr. Zinc.

- [laughter]

[Conte] So from '84,

all the way until 2000,

everything that BALCO and SNAC did

was completely legal, completely clean.

No athletes were ever given

any sort of performance-enhancing drug.

[chuckling] Now, were some of these guys

using dr*gs, like sh*t putters? Of course.

I just wasn't involved

in... in providing those to them.

[clapping]

But I knew the use

of performance-enhancing dr*gs

in Olympic sport was rampant.

[commentator] Carl Lewis is in lane three.

[Conte] In the Olympic Games

in '88 in Seoul,

of course Ben Johnson stands out.

[commentator 1] And Johnson does it again.

Unbelievable. Nine-seven-nine.

[commentator 2]

New world record. Incredible.

Now, I've just been handed

a piece of paper that, if it's right,

it'll be the most dramatic story out of

these Olympics or perhaps any others.

Ben Johnson

has been stripped of his gold medal

for testing positive to using

anabolic steroids.

[reporter] He is one of the athletes

under a cloud of suspicion for a while,

as is his coach, Charlie Francis.

[Charlie Francis] Where you offer

an athlete only two choices,

run clean and lose or take dr*gs and win,

then of course the choices will be clear.

[Conte] Working with elite athletes,

I realized this is what happens

at the elite level of sport.

This is what it takes

to go to the next level.

Reports on a frightening sign

that sports competition

is being pushed too far.

Steroids.

[reporter] America's newest drug epidemic.

President Bush recently signed a bill

which, for the first time, classifies

steroids as controlled substances.

Said it's the classic dilemma between

the fair play associated with sport

and the desire to win.

[people clamoring]

In my experience, 80% of athletes say,

"I'm not gonna invest 10 years of my life

then walk away, so give me those pills."

[Montgomery] I hate losing.

I hate for anyone to look at me

and say they b*at me.

And I think that comes from my childhood,

because they called me Tiny Tim.

I hate the name Tiny Tim.

I remember watching Conan the Barbarian.

["Wheel of Pain" by B. Poledouris plays]

How he pushed the wheel

and he became so strong.

I would cut grass.

We had an old push lawn mower.

The lawn mower was this tall,

and it had a little centerpiece there,

so I'd be pushing, you know,

and everybody was looking at me,

at little Timmy push the lawn mower.

I'd push all that yard because I wanted

to be like Conan the Barbarian.

I wanted to be stronger, faster.

I wanted to be everything.

So I was really, in essence,

training myself for my near future.

My goal was... was

to be the best in the world,

the greatest of all time.

[commentator] Tim Montgomery of the US

may be, uh, a sleeper in this field.

[Montgomery] In 1997, I ran nine times

under ten seconds...

[commentator]

Montgomery and Donovan Bailey.

...so I knew what I could do naturally.

I just needed more power.

[commentator] He's a little bit smaller.

I think he may need

to put on a few pounds,

and I think his time is coming...

[Montgomery] So, in 1999,

I moved down to Raleigh, North Carolina,

and I started training with Trevor Graham,

Marion Jones' coach.

And the workouts was...

Couldn't finish 'em.

So I go to Trevor's house

and he got tapes of Ben Johnson.

I mean...

I can't do no start like that.

It ain't how I start.

He's like, "No, you see that raw power?"

And that's when I was introduced

to the dark side.

Performance-enhancing dr*gs.

[Conte] The Ben Johnson race,

eventually, something like six or seven

out of the eight guys

were suspected of using

performance-enhancing dr*gs.

If you run at least two meters faster,

this is the difference

of 10 flat and 9-8. Okay?

So you're... you're... A guy not on stuff

is going to have a very difficult time

competing with somebody who's on stuff.

[Montgomery] When I got with Graham,

I saw that the best was doing it.

I assumed that this was

what everybody was doing.

[Conte] When I realized

the hypocrisy of all of this,

I decided it was time to start playing

by the real rules of sport,

and the rest is history, as they say.

[hard rock music playing]

[Conte] I went to a... a bodybuilding show

in San Francisco,

and I was introduced

to these 25 pro bodybuilders,

all the biggest names in the sport.

Whoo!

[Conte] And it's

the only professional sport

where the use of steroids is a mandate.

And so I stood up to tell them we did this

testing of minerals and trace elements,

but we also have the ability to do

all of the comprehensive drug testing.

[hard rock music continues]

[Conte] We tested those 25 bodybuilders...

[ding]

...and I said, "These Winstrol

tablets you think you're taking?"

"There's no Winstrol in your urine.

These are fake."

That's how I became a part of that world

and tried to learn about steroids.

It was a new challenge,

and that's what makes me tick.

You know,

that's what got the wheels turning.

[riveting music playing]

[Catlin] I'm Oliver Catlin.

I am the son of the guru

of sport drug testing, Dr. Don Catlin.

And today I am the president

of Banned Substances Control Group.

In anti-doping, the level playing field

is what we strive for,

but it's hard to achieve.

Victor knew what he wanted

in undetectable dr*gs,

but he didn't know

how to make those himself,

and that's where the skill set

of Patrick Arnold as a chemist came in.

[Conte] At the Mr. Olympia Expo

in Las Vegas

is where I met Patrick Arnold,

and he just said he had some stuff

that seemed to, you know,

help with recovery.

He didn't really even tell me what it was.

And so I bought a bottle of it from him.

It was a clear liquid,

you used an eyedropper

and you put drops under your tongue.

It was sublingual absorption.

Took it myself and it felt great.

And then I did some testing on it,

where I measured my testosterone

the next day, the next day and the next.

And I realized, "Boy, this stuff

acts like an anabolic steroid."

Many of the steroids had been built

by pharmaceuticals and just not used,

but when we got to BALCO,

new dr*gs were literally created.

Patrick bubbled hydrogen through

gestrinone, a birth control pill,

and it turned into one of the most

anabolic steroids that was ever created.

[Conte] Then when I did the comprehensive

drug testing, it came back as clean.

- [ding]

- It was undetectable.

Oh, sh*t, you know?

Then the light bulb went on.

[Catlin] And I think he saw

performance-enhancing dr*gs

that were undetectable

were a much quicker avenue

than the legitimate nutrition products

that he was selling.

That's when I started giving it

to athletes, at the beginning of 2000.

How about this?

[producer] What do you got?

This is Marion Jones

at the, uh, 2000 Olympics in Sydney

that they opened up where she wins

by something like four meters.

That just shows you the type of dominance

that Marion had at that time.

Going into the 2000 Summer Olympics,

Marion Jones was the golden girl.

[commentator 1] ...Jones taking command.

[commentator 2] She has yet to be beaten.

[commentator 3] Her goal this year,

she'll say it: To be undefeated.

She's a competitor.

Marion Jones is making

three million dollars a year.

In Sydney, she's going for five medals,

trying to be the greatest of all time.

The only time I even consider

the quest for five

is when people mention it. [laughs]

[Conte] She had sponsorships

with General Motors,

American Express, Nike, you know,

the commercial "Can you dig it?"

[Jones] We need more role models.

The more, the better.

Can you dig it?

I had not talked with Marion,

but had talked with her trainer,

Trevor Graham.

They were using traditional testosterone

and EPO and growth hormone,

and they said, "We hear you have

this undetectable substance."

"Can you help, uh, Marion Jones?"

And immediately I realized

this was a very, very big moment,

and I sent a box

of some of this stuff to them.

[Australia's National Anthem,

"Advance Australia Fair" playing]

[woman] I promise that we shall take part

in these Olympic Games,

committing ourselves to a sport

without doping and without dr*gs.

Once we got there,

we created a... a calendar for Marion.

We determined what to take,

how much to take, when to take it.

Of course, it was all based

on circumventing the testing.

[commentator] Marion Jones has seven

of the fastest 11 times ever run.

[Conte] I got tickets to sit

at the finish line of the 100 meters.

It was insane.

[commentator] Set.

Away. Pretty good start for Jones.

She's in the winning position.

Early startup, pulling away slowly.

We were sh**ting

for the... for the top of the mountain.

[commentator] Jones going hard.

Lawrence has had a good first 50.

Jones clearly in front.

Look at the margin.

She's straining them.

[Conte] I knew she would win,

but I didn't think

she'd blow everybody away Flo-Jo style

and win by four meters.

[commentator]

She absolutely annihilated them.

[Conte] Marion ended up winning

five medals at the Olympics in Sydney.

It felt great to just be

a part of her success.

- We're done. We're done.

- We're done.

[Michael Schmidt] I think the... the thing

about the BALCO investigation

is that it brings you behind the scenes

into largely criminal activity

that was done in secret.

And it's... it's exposing

what these athletes were willing to do

to try and succeed.

[commentator] That one's high.

Deep right field, gone!

Home run, Barry Bonds.

[audience cheering]

[Schmidt] Steroids were banned

in baseball at the time,

but there was no testing for them,

and, in the late '90s

into the early 2000s,

it's just like an expl*si*n in home runs.

[commentator] Canseco looks like

the sort of a comic book hero: Huge.

Wow, did he crush that one?

Then in 1998, there was this chase

to break the single-season home run record

between two great sluggers, Mark McGwire...

[commentator] Number 45 for McGwire.

[Schmidt]...and Sammy Sosa.

[commentator] One for two

and he sends a rocket. Number 48.

And it completely captivated the country.

[commentator 1] Sixty!

[commentator 2] Can you say "66"?

[commentator speaking indistinctly]

Number 70! How much more can

you give us than that? Number 70...

[Schmidt] Bonds saw

what Sosa and McGwire had done.

At that point in Bonds' career,

he was already a Hall of Famer.

He basically said to himself,

"I know I'm better than these guys."

[man] Whoo!

[Schmidt] "There's no reason

I shouldn't be performing at that level."

But he was at an age

when most players' careers

are on the downtick,

when they retire from the game.

And... And I'm trying to think of,

what next level can I get to?

What... What can keep me motivated

to do the things that I've been doing

day in and day out?

[Conte] Greg Anderson, Barry's trainer,

brought him to... to BALCO.

You know,

he asked if... if we could work with Barry

and test his blood and see what

nutritional elements that he may need.

And then after providing Barry

with a number of different

legal nutritional supplements.

I've lost more championships

in my life more than ever, ever.

I mean, I almost get numb at times.

It just eats me up so bad.

[Conte] In a year's time there,

Barry put on, like,

20 pounds in an off-season.

My recollection is he weighed 208,

and then the following season

he weighed 228.

And so we provided all sorts

of nutritional supplements,

but nothing beyond that.

[producer] I think people assume you're

his doctor giving steroids all the time.

Not true. He does have a personal doctor,

who I met, but...

[chuckles]...it's not me.

I not only didn't give him

The Clear or The Cream

or any other anabolic steroids,

but I've never even discussed steroids

with him, not a word ever.

In my opinion,

the entire investigation was...

Had everything to do with Barry Bonds.

He was the target.

[Novitzky] My name is Jeff Novitzky.

I was lead investigator

on the BALCO Laboratories investigation,

one of the highest-profile

performance-enhancing drug investigations

of all time.

And I carry an immense,

immense love for sport.

Basketball, I wanted to go

to the NBA until,

maybe mid-part of college

where you realize

that's probably not in the cards.

And after college, came across an entry

from IRS criminal investigation division,

and I'll never forget this, their motto

was "Be an accountant with a g*n."

And I thought, "All right,

that's something

I could be interested in."

I remember sitting in a class

and having a senior agent come in saying,

"Make cases out of things

that you just see around you."

"You don't need to wait

for an official referral

from Washington, D.C."

"If you see this really nice Ferrari

going down the street,

run their plate and see if that person

would be making that kind of money."

"If they don't, then maybe

you should look further into that."

And I started to hear

in the '90s about BALCO Laboratories,

which, as the crow flies, is probably

less than a mile from where I lived.

And that, despite them claiming

that they were a blood testing laboratory,

what they were really doing is providing

athletes with performance-enhancing dr*gs.

One of the first things I did was query

the currency transaction database,

and saw that Victor Conte

and BALCO Laboratories

were withdrawing hundreds

of thousands of dollars in currency

for a purported blood testing laboratory.

That, by itself, appeared suspicious

and didn't seem right.

Go on to some

of the online message boards,

and Victor Conte talks very openly

about steroids

and his knowledge of what dr*gs do what,

about how much they cost,

about every athlete that he's worked with,

and when I saw these athletes

that were going to BALCO,

including Barry Bonds,

I thought to myself,

"This could potentially get more attention

than any investigation before it,

so we probably need to kind of expand

and see who else is involved."

My first time seeing Victor was in Sydney,

and we partied every single day.

Every single day.

[chuckles]

[Conte] At that time,

he was ranked number eight in the world.

[commentator] Men's 4 by 100 underway,

and here's the handoff to Tim Montgomery

and the US has the lead...

[Conte] He was one of the top guys.

I decided it was time

to take it to another level,

and help him break the world record.

[Montgomery] At that time, the record

was 9.79, held by Maurice Greene.

I was in that race,

1999, when he broke it in Greece.

[commentator] Nine-seven-nine.

Does that ring a bell?

As just mentioned, Ben Johnson

had that very same time

at the '88 Olympics in Seoul,

only to be stripped of the gold medal

after testing positive.

[Montgomery] Whoever broke

the world record in the 100 meters,

you were the fastest human ever.

It's like a unicorn.

I told Maurice, "It's yours for now,

but I'll be back to get it."

I had already run down

nine-nine-two in 1997. Clean.

[commentator] ...at the finish line...

Once Victor understood

that I had been clean,

he said,

"You're gonna break the world record."

I told Victor Conte,

"I don't care if I die."

"I want to see what it feels like to be

the greatest at any cost possible."

It's almost like

selling your soul to the devil.

And that's when I made that decision

to help Tim Montgomery

to become the world's fastest human,

and... and I took it as a challenge.

And we were gonna call it

Project World Record.

[man] Set.

[intriguing jazz music playing]

[Montgomery] When we got back,

we were going to put together the plan.

What do the program needs to look like

in order to get nine-nine-two

to nine-seven-five?

So you can talk about stuff,

but can you implement and achieve it?

That's a whole 'nother...

That separates the men from the boys.

I immediately reached out

to Charlie Francis,

who was Ben Johnson's coach

and he lived in Toronto,

and then I reached out to Milos Sarcev.

They call him Milos the Mind

because he's a very smart guy.

In terms of the weight training program,

Trevor Graham really was kind of

the frontman as a coach.

[Montgomery] And then Victor Conte,

you're behind the pharmacology.

[Conte] Taking growth hormones,

taking insulin, EPO, taking The Clear,

and we created a... a calendar.

[Montgomery] So when you on steroids,

you have to have a plan

that goes with the medication.

It was thrilling.

[Conte] You know,

more does not mean better.

This is how you optimize the dr*gs.

He had a system.

I got me a real connect. A real doctor.

Until I found out Victor wasn't a doctor.

[Conte] A lot of people

mistakenly call me doctor.

I don't know why, 'cause I... I guess

because I'm interpreting

blood test results and I'm giving them

the type of information that a doctor

would give them, I guess.

Most people know me as a bass player.

I played with many groups that had albums.

Uh, the most famous

would be Tower of Power.

["What is Hip" by Tower of Power playing]

The passing years would show

You into a hip trip

But I had three daughters.

I was on the road ten months a year,

and I'd come back

and they'd be this much taller.

Hi, camera.

- [Conte] Well, how are you?

- How are you?

[Conte] I want you to tell me

what your name is.

What's your name?

[Conte] No, you tell me what's your name.

- My name is Veronica.

- [Conte] Where do you live at?

We... I live at my house.

My youngest memory, there were always

athletes around, and oftentimes,

the people we were going to support

were making big achievements

and so it was exciting.

[Conte] Could you tell Daddy what the name

of the place is that he works at?

- Yeah.

- [Conte] What's the name?

It's BALCO.

[Conte] BALCO? What is...

What does BALCO do?

You working.

[Conte] I know, but what do I do there?

What kind of work?

So I would say in my teenage years was

when I really knew, "Okay, this is..."

"My dad's involved in the dark side."

And he was just open and honest with me

about what was going on.

At the time,

I knew that he was kind of the mastermind

behind this Project World Record effort.

[indistinct chatter]

[Conte] Oh, this is Modesto Relays.

This is May of 2001.

[commentator] Tim Montgomery in two...

That was the first race

where he won in a world-leading time.

Tim just destroyed it.

[Veronica] Tim won. Tim won!

- [man] He did?

- [Veronica] Tim won!

- Oh my God!

- [man] They're shaking hands.

[Veronica] They're shaking hands, so cute.

I love this!

This is the most exciting thing

I've ever experienced.

[Conte] On the back of his shirt,

it says "Project World Record."

We were there announcing

that we were going

to break the world record.

I ran nine-nine-six.

We knew from then it was no stopping.

[propulsive music playing]

[Conte] The transformation was incredible.

[Montgomery]

Starting Project World Record,

I weighed 148 pounds.

[Conte] We bulked him up to 176.

We put, like, 28 pounds of muscle on him

in a short period of time.

Greg Anderson was coming to BALCO

to help Tim Montgomery

with all the weight training,

and in eight weeks his bench press

went from 265 to 345.

Ten pounds a week increase.

He looked like an NFL linebacker,

and previously they called him Tiny Tim.

[Montgomery] It was incredible.

Felt like Conan the Barbarian.

[clang]

[Montgomery] Me and Victor,

we were together all day.

Ate breakfast together, lunch together,

dinner together, we partied together.

It became like we're a team.

My habits changed.

I had a plan,

how much to take, when to take them,

and what to take with them.

You know, he became kind of muscle-bound.

You could see he was running like this

because his lats were so big.

Then we cut him back to about 160.

Victor Conte was honcho.

And then from there, I went to Oslo.

[commentator] On the right,

here comes Tim Montgomery.

It's Montgomery in lane four

with a late surge.

Unofficially 9.84 seconds.

[Montgomery] And I felt so good.

Oh, I could b*at everybody.

[commentator] Boy, the difference

has been pronounced this year.

Only Maurice Greene has ever run faster.

This is the transformation that happens.

It... It makes you Superman.

[reporter] Montgomery makes history,

but more importantly,

he sends shock waves

through the sprint world.

What has Trevor been teaching you?

Trevor Graham, your coach now.

To stay patient and wait for it to come.

Don't try to break the world record,

let the world record come to you.

[man] Go!

We were like,

"Next race we break the world record."

"Next race. Next race up,

we break the world record."

You're on the edge

of greatness and disaster.

That feeling becomes addictive.

[pouring]

[ding]

[Novitzky] For me, this thing

that I love so much, sport,

were being sullied by the presence

of PEDs and breaking rules,

and the unethical decisions of,

"Well, I'm gonna break this rule

because it's gonna get me

something good on the other end."

And so this case consumed my life.

It literally consumed my life, and...

From the time I woke up in the morning,

to the time that I went to sleep at night,

that's literally all I was thinking of.

- [whirring]

- [mellow jazz music playing]

[producer] What gave you the idea

to go through his trash to begin with?

Yeah, I think that was a technique

in the first couple of years of my career,

and a lot of agents didn't like to do it,

'cause it wasn't fun.

[jazz music continues]

However, I don't think trash examinations

have ever gotten as much notoriety...

[chuckling]...and coverage as mine did.

So BALCO was

a lower-risk trash collection.

They put their trash out

every Monday night.

And I'd go, you know, 11:00, midnight,

got in and out of there

as fast as possible.

This is just various stuff

that was unsealed during the BALCO trial.

This is where the trash

was placed every night.

Was right about here,

where in the mornings,

the dump... you know,

the trashman would come collect it,

but he'd come here and it'd be empty

'cause I took it the night before.

I'd usually drive it to a dumpster

that was well-lit, kind of in the area,

so that I could discard the smelly stuff,

food items, that I didn't want.

I remember bringing stuff home

the first night

and I started finding these, uh,

medications, used like, torn-up wrappers.

And I'm like, "Hey, am I... am I right

in seeing what I'm seeing right here?"

[Catlin] He needed to know

what the dr*gs were that he was finding,

and so he called our lab.

[chuckling] The lab folks

were suspicious, frankly.

They were just... You know, it was some

random person playing an IRS agent.

[Novitzky] Basically came out

and told him what I was doing, um,

and what I was finding.

[chuckling] And realized

that Jeff really was an IRS agent.

[Novitzky] We started putting

some pieces of the puzzle together.

So this was the first night I did,

and this was human growth hormone,

a torn-up box, the box of testosterone.

Here's the note

from a world champion sh*t putter.

"Here's a check for the next cycle.

I need it by the end of the week."

"Thanks. Kevin."

He was just careless and haphazard

in what trash he threw away

as anyone I've ever run across

in my law enforcement career.

[tense music builds]

[commentator 1] Top of the wrist...

[commentator 2] Here's a long home run

by Bonds, number 39.

It sails over the fence.

This is the hottest man

in the history of baseball, home run-wise,

at this point

in any season over 100 years.

In 2001, Barry was going

for the 70 home run... The season record.

It was very exciting

for me to... to know him

and to be a fan of his

and doing my best to help him

in any way that I could.

[commentator] Number 43

on the year for Bonds.

[Schmidt] So you've had this guy

with a Hall of Fame career,

he's on the downslide,

and all of a sudden

he begins performing at a level

that... that even Babe Ruth couldn't.

[commentator] Number 45 for Bonds.

I've never seen anything like this

in my life besides Mark McGwire,

and Sammy Sosa...

[reporter] Forty-nine homers faster

than any major-leaguer in history.

I can't explain it.

If I knew what I was doing

I would've done this a long time ago.

[commentator] Fifty for Barry Bonds.

[Novitzky] I think it was almost genius

that his scheme primarily was,

"Barry Bonds, I'm going

to give you these dr*gs."

"Don't pay me checks, money orders, wire."

"Instead, you're going to promote

my SNAC line of supplements."

The acronym stands for Scientific

Nutrition for Advanced Conditioning.

The AM formula is called Vitalize.

The PM formula is called ZMA.

Tell the world that this is the reason why

you're approaching the home run record.

[commentator] It is outta here!

[Conte] Would you like to vitalize

your mind and vitalize your body?

Then it's time to get

vitalized with the SNAC system.

[rock music playing]

[Conte] ZMA, it blew up

to the point where, in 2000,

we had four different brands of ZMA

in all 9,000 GNC stores nationwide.

So you'd walk around any mall

and see ZMA in the window.

This is Mr. Barry Bonds.

This is a photo sh**t that he did

and they had a capture of him

on the front cover.

[Novitzky] "And I want you to go out

and talk to Muscle and Fitness

about how great my supplement line is."

"Say, 'Liquid ZMA

helped me get five medals

at the Sydney Olympics and break

these home run records.'"

And, I mean,

that paid off a tremendous amount.

I'm sure hundreds of thousands,

if not millions, in sales.

[commentator] Here's the pitch.

Bonds hits one hard to right field.

Outta here!

And he joins Mark McGwire, Sammy Sosa,

Babe Ruth and Roger Maris,

the only players to hit 60

or more home runs in a season.

[Conte] Oh.

This is a... This is a room

where we dress up all the athletes.

[chuckling] As you can see,

we got lots of different gear here.

So, branding is how I win.

[Montgomery] We were thinking that,

okay, we promote the ZMA,

no one would find out

about what's behind the scene of the ZMA.

He has the top athletes.

It's like, when you're doing a crime,

you think you're the smartest person

that's committing the crime.

Then you look back and say, "That was

the dumbest thing I ever thought of."

[commentator 1] The men's 100-meter dash

presented by Pontiac Grand Prix.

[commentator 2] And there's a man who

I think is running very well this year.

Tim Montgomery, I think,

is the favorite going into this final.

[commentator 1] Has to be.

Back in the finals

of the men's 100 meters at US trials,

Nike was going to give me $50,000

to wear their clothes in the finals.

[Conte] Tim wore the ZMA logo

and we had two or three

different outfits made

that were one piece that had ZMA on 'em,

and he wore them in many races.

We already had an agreement

that was made that he would wear it,

and then at the last minute

there was some mention that,

"Oh, Nike wants me to wear their stuff."

And Victor was like,

"Who you going to be loyal to,

me or them?"

So I'm like, "It's 50,000 dollar, homie."

And he was like,

"My time is worth millions."

Project team leader's the boss,

the project team leader's the one

that finances the whole project.

So I say, "Okay, you have been with me.

I'm going to wear ZMA in the finals."

Not one person in track and field

has ever run with a vitamin company...

[chuckling]...on their uniform

in the history of track and field.

[commentator] Here comes Montgomery,

and it is Tim Montgomery...

[Montgomery] I wore ZMA in the finals

and then I signed with Nike

after the race,

and Victor was upset

because he wanted

to control that contract.

He went from being a doctor

to now an agent.

If I had a signed agreement with Victor,

you would have seen it on the screen.

For going to the world championship,

Victor had already hit me with...

He wanted 35 percent of my winnings.

It was the percentage

that he wanted going forward.

[Conte] That's... I never asked

for any percentage of his winnings ever.

That's just a complete lie

and a fabrication by... by Tim.

He was committed to me.

I brought him to the dance,

now he's gonna dance with somebody else?

You tell me, is that... is that fair?

And so, at a certain point, I just said,

"Well, I can't continue with this guy."

I terminated my relationship with him.

[Montgomery] I'm trying to fathom him

saying he ended the relationship with me

and I'm on the verge

of breaking the world record.

Listen, I like Victor.

Victor hurt me...

when he wanted 35%,

because I considered him as a friend.

"Look into my eyes and tell me

you feel like I owe you something."

"What did you give me

for wearing ZMA at US trials?"

So I was done with Victor, period.

And Victor was like,

"Oh. Oh, you can't walk away."

"I'm the show.

You ain't gonna run fast without me."

I said, "Watch me.

I can do this on my own."

[engine running]

[engine stops]

[door closes]

[suspenseful music playing]

[Novitzky] One thing, I was finding, uh,

dozens of discarded

one-use syringe wrappers

but no syringes, and thought,

"Man, if I had the syringe,

maybe I could send the syringe

for DNA analysis."

We were able to subpoena

the medical waste company,

so when they picked up the medical waste,

the sharps box from BALCO

on a weekly basis,

they'd bring it back to their hub,

set it aside for me

and I would go through that.

Syringes we sent to laboratories.

They were able to extract

what the substances were

being, uh, injected.

We were keeping track

of what mail was being delivered.

They will give you where the mail's

coming from and who it's addressed to.

And even found

an email from Patrick Arnold,

where he's chronicling sending

Victor Conte the designer steroid.

Financial ledgers

showing payments from the athletes,

invoices for a substance

called epitestosterone.

When you use The Clear,

it would throw your natural hormone

imbalance completely out of whack,

and that was something

that anti-doping was looking at.

They were looking at something called

the testosterone to epitestosterone ratio.

In sport, there's a four to one ratio

that we look for of T to E.

If it's above four to one, that's a sign

that somebody's doping with testosterone.

[Novitzky] Victor Conte

created the Cream to bring up that ratio

so that the testosterone

would not get out of whack

and show an abnormal ratio.

Using these protocols

to try to avoid detection,

it's absolutely a cat-and-mouse game.

[commentator] Annihilated it,

but to the second baseman,

who turned it into a double play

the first time he faced him.

Bonds swings, and there it goes.

It's heading for McCovey Cove.

It is gone!

A home run.

Number 69 for Bonds.

[Schmidt] I think the whole thing

starts to get a little curious.

Like, what's really going on here?

You know, baseball made a big deal

and the media made a big deal

that players were, you know,

lifting weights, you know, in ways

that players hadn't in decades before,

and they're eating better and, you know,

that's why they're hitting more home runs,

but it didn't totally add up.

[commentator] He's within

one of the record.

You know,

I saw these numbers being put out

and knew what was going on

behind the scenes

and knew that they weren't real.

They were as a result

of using these... these substances.

[audience cheering]

[commentator] Bonds with a drive...

Looks like number 70 for Barry Bonds.

And it is! Tying the all-time record set

in 1998 by Mark McGwire.

[Conte] Can somebody gain 20 pounds

in a year, you know,

without using steroids?

And the answer is, they can.

You know, it depends upon

what sort of training you're doing,

how many calories you're consuming,

and what those calories consist of.

[producer] I thought you gave

Barry Bonds a lot of steroids?

[chuckles] No, I did not

give Barry Bonds any steroids.

[commentator] There's a high drive

deep into right center field,

to the big part of the ballpark!

Number 71!

And what a sh*t!

Over the 421-foot marker.

[Conte] I mean, I was not with him

when he was training.

Greg was pretty much administering

whatever supplements that he took.

[producer] And had you given

The Clear to Greg?

Yes.

This seems like a gotcha moment

that you want to go say,

"I... I know Barry Bonds took steroids."

That's not gonna happen

because I don't know that.

Now, do you want me to guess?

You want me to guess

if I think Barry Bonds took steroids?

I think it's likely.

Do I have any direct evidence?

Only what I saw in terms of the discovery

that they gave me

after the fact of some of the records

that Greg kept indicate that.

[producer] Who's this one?

It says "Bib," B-I-B.

I... I don't know who that is.

And then it says "March"

and it says "April."

Let me see what else is on there.

[producer] Could that be

Barry Lamar Bonds?

[Conte] Could... Could be B-L-B,

but this... this is not my handwriting.

I hate to speculate or guess.

You know,

this could have been Greg Anderson,

I... I don't know that.

So, I... This is the first time

I've ever seen this.

[Montgomery] In 2002,

I had no reason to panic,

I had every reason to be happy.

I'm training good.

My times were even better

or the same, you know?

[commentator] Tim Montgomery pulling away

from everybody with 9.91 seconds.

He is getting more and more consistent.

[Conte] He continued on

working with Charlie Francis

with Trevor Graham as the frontman.

And he had stockpiled enough of the dr*gs

that I'd given him.

[Montgomery stammering] No.

No.

Not a person in this world

got a year's supply from Victor.

He rations out everything week by week.

I only had insulin

that was non-detectable,

and I had HGH.

So, as the year kept going,

I kept getting faster.

And so last track meet of the year,

we at Grand Prix finals.

[commentator] Running 9.91

earlier this year

was Tim Montgomery in lane five.

My mind was all over the place

coming out there.

I just rolled with it.

[commentator] ...Olympic gold medalist

and world record holder.

You feel like you are ready for it

'cause you trained up to that moment

to do something great.

Greatness comes when greatness comes.

- [commentator] ...is in lane four.

- [man] Set!

[commentator] Very fast start.

Out quickly is Tim Montgomery.

Chambers beside him now.

That was the part of me dreaming

that one day I'd be a part

of something that would be great.

[commentator] Montgomery with slight lead,

Montgomery by two feet, three feet.

Nine-point-seven-eight seconds,

a world record for Tim Montgomery.

Sensational performance to win...

It was historic.

[commentator] Nine-seven-eight.

They posted what his reaction

time out of the blocks was.

You cannot be

faster than one-tenth of a second.

And so everybody,

"You see what you just done?"

And I look back...

it is nine-seven-eight, and I'm like...

And the world just go black.

[commentator] And it is official,

a world record for Tim Montgomery.

[Montgomery] When I took the lap

and I came back around

and I took the picture by 9.78,

I said to myself, "You done it."

"You done it."

[Conte] You know,

it was kind of bittersweet because

I knew that wouldn't have happened

without me and without Milos

and without Charlie,

and it... it was a brain trust.

It took... He certainly

couldn't have done it on his own.

That's my opinion anyway.

[reporter] ...new world record holder,

Tim Montgomery.

You just stepped right in and took it all.

It's unbelievable.

That's all I can say. It's unbelievable.

[laughter]

[reporter] How you gonna top this

for next year, Tim?

Nine-seventy-five.

I thought the next chapter of my life

was going to be, oh,

the greatest of all time.

Ended up being a nightmare. [chuckles]

This instrument over here

that we have is a triple quad LC-MS.

What you're looking at here

can take apart a molecule,

put it into multiple different peaks

that can then be fingerprinted

and matched to a drug in question.

So, this was what we used

to be able to break the code

and break the back of BALCO.

[click]

[Catlin] The process

of actually decoding what The Clear was

started when this mystery

syringe arrived at our laboratory.

[Novitzky] Turned out that that steroid

was given to USADA by Trevor Graham,

the track and field coach

who, at one time,

was working with BALCO and Victor Conte

but had a falling out.

It was not at all simple for us

to figure out what it was.

We put it through our instruments,

and when you put a substance

into a mass spectrometer,

you come up with a bunch of peaks,

and it's a matter of trying

to identify those peaks,

and that was ultimately the work

that took many months for us to do.

[Novitzky] And they basically

reverse engineered it,

and figured out what exactly

that they were looking at.

So, unbeknownst to the athletes,

they had created a test for that

when they thought they were using

a substance there was no test for yet.

[tense music playing]

[Conte] I knew for months and months

somebody's watching,

and it started with the mailman saying,

"Listen, there's law enforcement

of some kind

that's copying all your mail every day."

I need to start paying

attention a bit more,

'cause it's... Big Brother's watching.

[Novitzky] Near the tail end of that year,

where I was collecting trash,

I had a dumpster that was well lit

that I was regularly going to,

and they moved the dumpster.

And so I located what I thought

was another secure one.

[Conte] Started getting calls

from the owner of the building.

And he said,

"Stop dumping your trash in our dumpster."

I said, "Oh my God."

I went over there to see,

and sure enough, our trash was

in his dumpster. I said, "Oh my God."

They did it again. They did it again.

But the third time, this guy called,

he said, "I'm calling the police, okay?"

My dad called me and said, "Hey, have you

looked at the throwaway paper this week?"

I'm like, "No, why?" He goes,

"Look at their police blotter section."

Sure enough, there's a story about trash

from BALCO Laboratories illegally dumped.

Scared me.

You know, I came very close,

I think, to... to being caught.

So, the combination

of the trash being discovered,

the mail cover being disclosed,

we thought it's about time now, I think,

that we needed to go overt in this case.

[tense music sting]

[Cheryl Hurd] So, on September 3rd, 2003,

my assignment desk

received this weird call,

"Go to this location." "But what time?"

"Well, we don't know what time."

"Just be there and wait."

We started seeing cars coming in.

Looks like agents.

What kind of agents?

The IRS?

We didn't know who they were after,

how long it was going to last.

They're going into this building.

I don't know what BALCO is.

We were on edge.

We... We didn't know

if... if there would be g*nf*re.

It was... It was very intense.

And right through that driveway,

and in here and here and here

and around the corner,

that's where six or seven black

cars came in full of SWAT team agents

wearing flak jackets with r*fles

and... and a helicopter came

and was hovering right there.

[reporter] Federal agents raided

a Burlingame building

housing the Bay Area

Laboratory Co-operative, BALCO.

All of a sudden, SWAT teams came in.

It was... It was like out of the movies.

[Novitzky] There was

some controversy over,

"Oh, they brought, you know,

20, 30 agents, they all had g*ns."

Well, we... we carry g*ns.

That's what we did,

and we brought these g*ns

to every search warrant we did.

Everything I saw,

they were secured to their side.

They weren't drawn

as we were making entry.

I looked out the window

and here comes ABC, NBC, CBS.

Next thing you know,

these satellites are coming up.

So somebody from Novitzky's team

must have called the news desk.

[producer] Can you say

who your sources were?

Of course I can't say who my sources are.

I did not tip them off, no.

Their neighbors are seeing

who the customers are of this business.

They're seeing Barry Bonds

walk into this business frequently.

People are going to start talking

and making some calls.

[Hurd] A representative of BALCO

was escorted out of the building.

[reporter] Victor Conte

is one of four people

charged with distributing

the illegal substances.

[Hurd] I'm looking and I'm saying,

"Who is that guy with the ZMA hat on

kind of cocked to the side,

sweating profusely?"

He must be the bad guy.

That's my job as a reporter.

Find out who the bad guy is.

Federal officials wouldn't tell us

what they found

inside BALCO Laboratories last week.

No one has been charged,

and no arrests have been made.

[reporter] But US Olympic officials

believe BALCO

could be involved in a conspiracy

to b*at drug tests

by designing a new steroid.

[Veronica] It felt very over the top.

Like, "Is there more to this story

than I know?" You know?

Like, why is this being amplified so much?

[tense music playing]

[Novitzky] When we were conducting

the search warrant at BALCO,

we found bankers boxes

with athletes' names on the box...

On these folders within that box,

and then within those folders

were doping calendars,

financial ledgers, uh, Quest, uh,

urine steroid tests,

some of them positive, um,

and then multiple boxes

full of these dr*gs.

It was a virtual pharmacy, uh,

that we found in the storage locker.

And based on the amount of evidence

that I had collected,

I knew what questions to ask.

I'm reading here

from the memorandum of interview

written by Jeff Novitzky,

September 3rd, 2003.

And he had a list that he had made.

It said, "Track and Field,"

"NFL," and "MLB,"

and he had these names on the list.

[Novitzky] We went down that list,

and absolutely, he said,

definitively, "I've given these athletes

The Clear and The Cream."

[Conte] He said, "Did you work

with these players or these athletes?"

And I thought he meant blood testing,

nutritional supplements,

developing individualized program.

No mention about giving

any dr*gs to any of them.

Yeah, that's not the truth.

I mean, I was very explicit about that.

Think about it, I go in there and say,

"Have you worked with these athletes?"

And not ask,

"What does that work entail?

Have you given them dr*gs?"

That's the whole reason I was there.

Never gave Barry Bonds

The Cream or The Clear.

He can't give you one shred of evidence

linking me to having anything to do

with giving Barry Bonds steroids.

And if he's got it, where is it?

[Novitzky] Barry Bonds was consistently

providing urine

and blood samples to BALCO.

I have those records and they showed

he was testing positive for things like

methenolone,

high-level anabolic steroid, nandrolone,

so there is no doubt he knowingly used

performance-enhancing dr*gs

and used a lot of them

for a several-year period

that assisted him in achieving

these... these hallowed records in sports,

without a doubt.

[unsettling music playing]

[reporter] This evening,

you've heard it before.

Athletes and steroids.

Dozens of the biggest names in sports

will be taking time off from competition

to tell a grand jury what they know about

the maker of a so-called designer steroid.

[Novitzky] After the raid,

we subpoenaed several dozen

of these high-profile athletes

to the grand jury in San Francisco

and told 'em, "Tell the truth in there,

this may be the last you hear from us."

"You're certainly not going to be

a target of this investigation

if you go in and tell the truth."

I get, uh, a... subpoena,

and they're sitting down saying that

they have ledgers and everything

on us working with Victor.

So I talked about my involvement.

I was taking The Clear.

HGH, I did use.

And I told them grand jurors

that you don't know

what you was getting for Victor.

Victor was a con artist.

He's not a doctor.

[Novitzky] These powerful

hormonal substances

really hadn't undergone

any clinical trials or human testing.

So they were literally

using these athletes as guinea pigs.

[Montgomery] Victor can read about

what HGH does to the body,

he can read about what EPO does,

and then he can use you to see

if he got the formula right.

[Novitzky] Even found an email

from Patrick Arnold:

"Hey, here's what I've created,

but I don't quite know what the dosage is

so you have to experiment on that."

Some of the female athletes said,

they didn't get their menstrual cycles

for months if not years

while they were on this stuff.

Victor Conte is your doctor

and your pharmacist.

That's very, very dangerous.

Oh, my God. So I've been doing

comprehensive blood testing on everybody,

making sure

there were no adverse health effects

and all the dosages were correct.

So the opposite was true.

You become numb

to what's right and what's wrong.

At the end of the day,

I wanted something so bad...

at any price... possible.

[John Ashcroft]

After an 18-month investigation,

a federal grand jury

in the Northern District of California

unsealed a 42-count indictment

charging four individuals

with distribution of illegal

anabolic steroids to dozens of athletes.

[reporter] Today's indictment

charges Bonds' trainer, Greg Anderson,

and this man, Victor Conte,

with running the operation,

money laundering and using code names

for dr*gs to cover up the scheme.

Illegal steroid use calls into question

not only the integrity

of the athletes who used them,

but also the integrity

of the sports that those athletes play.

Well, I think it's rather odd

that, uh, Mr. Ashcroft got involved.

I don't want to say it's political,

but it is political.

The use of performance-enhancing dr*gs

like steroids

in baseball, football and other sports,

is dangerous

and it sends the wrong message.

So tonight I call on team owners,

coaches and players to take the lead,

to get tough

and to get rid of steroids now.

It's like, uh,

going after a fly with a bazooka

when there are thousands

of other flies running around.

It's not even going

to make a dent in the problem.

[tense music playing]

[reporter] If convicted on all counts,

the defendants face

long prison terms and hefty fines.

I knew that they didn't have the evidence

that they claimed that they had.

Why do you think on the day

of the 42-count indictment

that I walked out

into a sea of reporters and did this?

That meant this.

[Veronica] At that point, there were times

he was in the news every day.

So every time there were court hearings,

there was a ton of media

really villainizing him.

Um, forty-two counts,

it seemed like a lot.

You know, I remember him grabbing my hand

to guide me through the media

and all the cameras

and everyone shouting, and...

it's intimidating.

The whole investigation, in my opinion,

was all about chasing headlines.

Novitzky was bragging

to the undercover agents, you know,

saying, "I'm going to be

the modern-day Eliot Ness."

"I'm going to bust Al Capone.

Movie deals, book deals."

Yeah, I probably said that because,

going back to my training,

you, as an agent,

need to find those investigations

that are going to get the most coverage.

And hopefully, other people out there

that are breaking a similar law

are gonna say, "I don't want to get

caught up in this, so I'm gonna back out."

I believe that Jeff Novitzky

was feeding information to the Chronicle.

Nope. Not whatsoever.

I think it was

his narcissistic personality

that, you know, Victor was like,

"No publicity is bad publicity."

Um, you know, I remember

the night he went on 20/20.

He was indicted,

but the case hasn't been resolved yet,

and we got a call

from his defense attorneys saying,

"I don't know what our guy's doing.

He's going on 20/20 tonight."

"An entire hour is dedicated

to everything he's been doing."

I knew that this was the most coveted

of all, you know, records and gold medals.

Um, so we kind of had a collective dream

and I was the mastermind, so to speak.

[Martin Bashir] You're designing,

in effect, a criminal conspiracy

to break the world record.

That's what it was, wasn't it?

Well, if you're asking if it included

illegal activity, the answer would be yes.

And sure enough,

he disclosed all of his criminal activity

on national television.

Nobody does that.

Are you saying Marion Jones

was a dr*gs cheat?

Without a doubt.

And that you saw her even inject herself?

You saw that happen?

That's correct.

Victor Conte is delusional. [chuckles]

To start taking out athletes

on the system he was part of.

[Bashir] Did you fear there was

a moral problem when you realized

that if you wanted to compete

you had to cheat?

The answer is no.

If you've got the knowledge that

that's what everybody's doing,

and those are the real rules of the game,

then you're not cheating.

[Conte] I... I was called

a lot of very bad names.

Dr. Frankenstein,

the S*ddam Hussein of sports.

But one of the most important things

you learn is that you need adversity.

You know?

If you want to build big muscles

you got to lift big weights.

[Ed Swanson]

Victor was in a difficult spot

when we got into the case.

Uh, he had done the 20/20 interview,

the case was on the boil

and it wasn't headed in the direction

that he wanted it to go.

Victor's previous counsel

had already filed a number of motions

to suppress evidence,

to suppress statements,

dealing with the agents

in a very confrontational manner,

and Victor had to make a big decision,

whether or not

to try and resolve the case,

or whether to be embroiled

in this battle for the next year.

And Victor made the decision

to have us negotiate the case.

We thought this case involved warehouses

of steroids and millions of dollars,

because that's the way

the story was being told.

Once we started to look at it,

everything began to shrink

and the millions became hundreds

and the warehouse became a locker,

and the amount of dr*gs became something

you could fit in your hand.

Our technical term for the amount of dr*gs

in this case was "teensy."

Week after week,

we would sit down with the prosecutors

and would take another piece of the case,

and we would say, "You've charged this,

it's not illegal and here's why."

To their credit, they listened to us

and they pushed back,

and it was so much fun.

There's no question what he had done.

He had provided athletes

with the substance.

The question was, was that illegal?

The Clear was not illegal,

and our position was

even The Cream was not illegal.

[McNamara] Which was a diluted

amount of steroid testosterone

in a lotion to be applied on the skin.

And the law didn't apply to mixtures.

[McNamara] The amount of money

that Victor was transacting

amounted to less than a thousand dollars,

which is so below the power of what

federal prosecutions generally prosecute.

[Swanson] It was as thin as it gets.

There's never another case we've seen

where someone was charged

with drug distribution of an amount

that doesn't even register

in the sentencing guidelines,

but that was their case.

[reporter] Anything to say today, Victor?

Uh, afterwards.

[camera shutter clicking]

[Conte] I will never forget the day

that I picked up the front page

of the San Francisco Chronicle,

and the headline said,

"40 of 42 BALCO charges dropped."

And the subtitle was,

"The wrist slap heard around the world."

- [reporters clamoring]

- [reporter] Mr. Conte, care to comment...

[Hurd] Victor Conte pleaded guilty

to two felony counts today.

One, conspiracy to distribute steroids,

the other, money laundering.

The Feds should be embarrassed.

It started with 42 counts,

Victor Conte will now plead guilty

to only two counts.

And we quote, "This deal

does not require Mr. Conte to assist

the prosecution of any other person

involved in the investigation."

- [woman] So the athletes walk.

- [man] There'll be no federal charges

and no criminal charges

against any athlete.

Victor Conte was sentenced

to six months in federal prison.

Typically, in federal prison,

with good behavior,

you do 85% of that time.

So he did a little over four months.

Here's some pictures that my dad sent me

from the, um, prison camp.

This is him and his cellmate.

His name was Evil.

He was a scare to my dad at first,

let me tell you, as you can imagine why.

Like, oh, I'm dead meat in this cell...

[laughs] You know, when he first met him,

but he had his back,

and they became good friends.

They're still friends to this day.

I was happy to see

that he was making friends and really...

You know, it was humbling.

Humbling experience for him, so...

[Conte] I took full responsibility,

did not cooperate

in any way, shape or form.

I did some wrongdoing,

I deserved to go

to prison camp just like I did.

I went and I served my time.

And, of course,

when I went through the... the front door,

they immediately grabbed me

and they put me through

the metal detector,

and it was, "Toes and nose

against the wall."

And here I am being handcuffed,

and I realized, "I belong to them now."

And I had mailed myself some magazines,

and I timed it so that it would get there

when I got there.

When they brought the mail that day,

they put my mail

through the food slot in the door.

In addition to the magazines

I'd sent myself

was this letter from my youngest daughter.

Where do you live at?

I live at my house.

[Conte] What's... Where's your house?

In what city?

[voice breaking] And there were pictures

of my kids, and, uh...

[emotional music playing]

Yeah, that's kind of when it all hit me.

[sniffles]

[voice breaks] I realized that

I'd completely lost control of my life.

I hadn't really

reflected upon, you know...

how serious the consequences were.

But I thought that,

"I'm a big boy, I'm a man."

"Whatever happens,

I'll be able to deal with it."

I was... Had been a horrible father.

I took... I took their sense of security

away from them.

And created a lot of uncertainty.

[Veronica] I think

success is addictive, uh,

praise and credit is addictive,

but I don't defend what my dad did.

I think it's clear

that he crossed some ethical lines.

And I wish he didn't.

[voice breaking] But I didn't realize

that this was the same effect

on all the athletes' families.

That they had to deal with their kids

coming home saying,

"Dad, at school

they're saying you used steroids."

"Did you use steroids?"

And kids don't understand,

you know, so it's, uh...

[trembling]

[Montgomery] Three of my kids

run track and field.

The second-oldest boy

has been training with me.

He's like,

"Dad, what steroids do for you?"

And I said, "Ruin your whole life."

Runners, take your mark.

Set.

I told him, "If you cross the finish line

and you were first and tested positive,

what did you gain?"

When you leave,

you wanna know that you did it right.

Sometimes you can over try.

You got to always feel like

you don't have a second chance.

Everything I did in the past,

all the wrongs I did,

well, my son said,

"Dad, I care nothing about that."

"I believe in you right now."

And so, as I think about it...

Victor Conte believed

in Project World Record the same way.

He believed in the dream.

I guess in some respects,

did we create a monster?

Uh, maybe a little, but, I mean, I think

most people who hear and see Victor Conte

realize him for who he is,

and that's, you know,

a used car, snake oil salesman guy,

bullshit artist.

I'd like to dedicate my life

to helping to create a level playing field

for the young athletes of the future.

I'm, by far, most proud of my contribution

to the anti-doping movement,

and went and met with WADA,

the World Anti Doping Agency.

I reveal specifically how these athletes

are circumventing the anti-doping policies

and procedures in place.

What they're doing now is they're using

duck and dodge techniques.

Just take it like this

and put it under the tongue.

I think there's abuse going on.

I think there needs to be

a further investigation.

- But how many guys are using it?

- My guess is about 50%.

[Rogan] Fifty of MMA athletes,

or professional athletes?

Yes, of MMA.

Now because you can't make

a living cheating anymore,

you want to flip the other side

and call people out, pointing fingers?

I can't believe anybody

even listens to this guy,

anybody even quotes this guy.

Victor Conte is a two-faced piece of sh*t.

So Victor administrated the dr*gs,

then he gave the drug people the system

on how to catch you now

so that he can do something different.

And that's something

you can never take from a hustler,

the hustle.

[Conte] It just so happens

that the red-light district of sport,

which is boxing,

I was able to find a home there.

[grunts]

- [bell rings]

- [grunts]

With Victor,

people will come to me and say,

"He's a cheater and he's going to try to

give you dr*gs or he is giving you dr*gs,"

and stuff like that,

but I never really paid attention to it.

Yeah, I would say that

it is performance-enhancing,

just without the dr*gs.

[chuckling] Victor's definitely

the mad scientist.

You're a beast.

When you're doing high oxygen here,

it increases

the production of lactic acid,

that, in turn, triggers the production

of testosterone and growth hormone.

Your speed and your power are 10% greater.

There's a lot of things that work

that are legal.

[commentator] Wanted to see another gear

from Devin, he's showing us another gear.

Devin Haney is 30 and O.

He defends the undisputed...

[Novitzky] He'll take any publicity

as long as his name is in the lights,

so I don't think

you can believe a word that guy says.

[riveting music playing]

The BALCO investigation changed

the country's perspective

and the perspective

of the leagues towards dr*gs.

This record is not tainted at all.

At all.

[Schmidt] And it set off

consequential developments

that create

the drug-testing systems today.

[Veronica] I think the masses

remember Victor Conte

as the guy who single-handedly

brought down the world of sport.

I hope that changes.

[Hurd] Victor makes things work for him.

I think that that has a lot to do with him

controlling his own narrative.

I mean, it's the American way.

Isn't he still driving a Bentley?

[Conte] I realized there's no such thing

as bad publicity.

Like, Google Ads,

whatever the keywords that you put in,

if you put in "Barry Bonds"

or "Marion Jones"

or "BALCO" or whatever it is,

right next to it's an ad for ZMA, right?

So, in essence,

I was turning the lemon into lemonade.

Should I send the Feds a thank-you card?

They might have made me

millions of dollars.

[chuckles]

["It's All in the Game"

by Tommy Edwards plays]

But it's all in the game

All in the wonderful game...

[commentator] ...deals,

and Bonds hits one high, hits it deep!

It is outta here!

Seven-fifty-six!

And your future's looking dim

[audience cheering]

But these things

Your hearts can rise above

Once in a while he won't call

But it's all

In the game

Soon he'll be there at your side

With a sweet...

[commentator] 9.78 seconds.

A world record for Tim Montgomery.

[indistinct chatter]

[Montgomery] Did I deserve

to get taken away? Yes, I did.

But the experience I'll always live with,

and that's what they can't take back.

That moment of doing this...

they can never take it back.

[music stops]

That's the original sign

that was up behind the spectrometer

and the laboratory of BALCO for 20 years.

Probably worth at least a buck or two

I would think.

- [producer] You're gonna sell it?

- I don't know.

No, we'll probably just give it

to the baseball hall of fame.
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