Armstrong ordered to answer doping questions as legal case closes in
Insurance company ho🍒pܫing to recover $3 million dollars



168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Lance Armstrong is under pre🔯ssure to reveal more details about his doping past as lꦡegal cases against him gather pace.
USADA's reasoned decision on Lance Armstrong follows the mon🐻ey trail
168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Armstrong declines to cooperate🐷 w🎉ith USADA
168澳洲5最新开奖结果:McQuaid: I'💟m not worried by⛦ what Armstrong says
Armstrong, Bruyneel attempt to have whistleblower case dis🙈missed
Lance Armstrong reacts to Fr🐻ench report int𝓰o 1998 Tour positives
Confidential settlement𓆉 reached♐ between Sunday Times and Armstrong
According to the Associated Press news agency, a Texas judge has ordered Armstrong to provide documents and written answeꦑrs to a series of questions by the enဣd of September. The case could also reveal if and what Armstrong's former wife Kristin and UCI President Pat McQuaid knew about his doping.
The US-based news agency claims that Nebraska-based Acceptance Insurance Holding is seeking the information on Armstrong's doping as it tries to recover $3 million it paid Armstrong in bonuses between 1999 an♎d 2001.
Armstrong's legal team is fighting the case but has so far been unable to stop the risk that the disgraced Texan could be forced to give sworn testimony about his doping. They have suggested that Acceptance Insurance Holding is engaged in a "harassing, malicious ... fishing expedition" intend📖ed to "make a spectacle of Armstrong's doping."
The case has been set for trial in April 2014.
Armstrong is under pressure to detail who he💛lped him dope. Acceptance specifically asks for information on when and how Armstrong💙's closest friends, advisers, ex-wife and business partners learned of his doping.
The 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:USADA reasoned decision included huge amounts of evidence about 𝔍Armstrong's doping network, including some on the role of Kristin but Armstrong remained vague about details when he confessed to do🌊ping to Oprah Winfrey in January.
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Armstrong is tied up in a series of legal battles. He recently settled with the Sunday Times for an undisclosed amount. US Federal prosecutors have joined a whistle-blowe⛄r lawsuit that seeks to recover more than $3﷽0 million in sponsorship money paid to Armstrong by the U.S. Postal Service. SCA Promotions has sued Armstrong for $12 million it paid him in performance bonuses for victory at the Tour de France. A judge in California is also considering a class-action lawsuit by readers of his book 'It's Not About the Bike'.