Bruce Francis and TV legal dramas or the letter to the Minister for Sport

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Lack of positive tests is irrelevant in this matter. A positive test is not an element to the offence.

That said, the fact the players were tested and nothing was found may be relevant.
Hm not really. They "were on the right path". Just because it came back negative, doesn't mean there weren't potential indications to believe it was TB4
 
That's the point.....THERE ONLY NEEDS TO BE A REASONABLE SATISFACTION.

This is not a court of law.

We cannot have a system where an Olympic athlete missed a few tests, is suspended for 19 months for merely the inference of taking something and a whole team getting off, with absolutely no scripts, notes of any kind, to what was injected into players.

Simply, that would be a travesty to the Australian sporting industry.

Depends if you are an EFC supporter or not.
Sport is littered with supposed dumb asses being suspended for years for pathetic excuses for missing tests, etc ......

But to the Kool Aid brigade it all makes perfect sense.

It's just amazing that before being caught Dank decided to play a straight bat at EFC after doing dodgy stuff everywhere else.

JUST

MAKES

PERFECT

SENSE

....... Right!
 

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Yes really.

I would put it forward for the players. The case is circumstantial. It does go to show that there was no TB4 detected prior to the date of the tests.
Could it also be dependant on what the lab results were? Say if there was something odd in the blood samples, which can lead to TB4?
 
Could it also be dependant on what the lab results were? Say if there was something odd in the blood samples, which can lead to TB4?

Maybe.

All Im saying is that if a circumstantial case is put before you, you should place as much evidence as you can to refute anything that circumstantial evidence seeks to prove.

I would have thought that if ASADA was seeking to establish a circumstantial case against a person for 'using' TB-4, the person could (and should) put evidence forward of a blood test (conducted by ASADA at the time I was purported to be using) that showed I didn't use TB-4.

That said, remember - its my understanding that the charge is 'for use or attempted use'. Blood tests don't rule out the attempted use part. Also, didnt the blood tests at Essendon happen before the 'thymoisin' regime started?
 
Maybe.

All Im saying is that if a circumstantial case is put before you, you should place as much evidence as you can to refute anything that circumstantial evidence seeks to prove.

I would have thought that if ASADA was seeking to establish a circumstantial case against a person for 'using' TB-4, the person could (and should) put evidence forward of a blood test (conducted by ASADA at the time I was purported to be using) that showed I didn't use TB-4.

That said, remember - its my understanding that the charge is 'for use or attempted use'. Blood tests don't rule out the attempted use part. Also, didnt the blood tests at Essendon happen before the 'thymoisin' regime started?
And we don't what the rules of evidence are either.
 
Yes really.

I would put it forward for the players. The case is circumstantial. It does go to show that there was no TB4 detected prior to the date of the tests.
What test would they use to test for TB4? The ELISA test is not dependable enough to sanctioned by WADA and I am not aware of any other test for TB4. So how would they be able to test positive if there is no test?
 
I would have thought that if ASADA was seeking to establish a circumstantial case against a person for 'using' TB-4, the person could (and should) put evidence forward of a blood test (conducted by ASADA at the time I was purported to be using) that showed I didn't use TB-4.

It wouldn't show whether or not you had used TB4. It would detect that you had blood and one of the constituent ingredients of blood (TB4), and that you hadn't injected synthetic TB4 in the 30 minutes prior to the sample being taken. It is rather like submitting a blood test for alcohol taken in March as proof that you didn't have a drink in February.
 

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Maybe.

All Im saying is that if a circumstantial case is put before you, you should place as much evidence as you can to refute anything that circumstantial evidence seeks to prove.

I would have thought that if ASADA was seeking to establish a circumstantial case against a person for 'using' TB-4, the person could (and should) put evidence forward of a blood test (conducted by ASADA at the time I was purported to be using) that showed I didn't use TB-4.

That said, remember - its my understanding that the charge is 'for use or attempted use'. Blood tests don't rule out the attempted use part. Also, didnt the blood tests at Essendon happen before the 'thymoisin' regime started?

My understanding was that the AFL requested that ASADA test the Essendon players and there was elevated levels that raised eyebrows and ASADA then continued target testing of Essendon after that. As others have said there is no accepted WADA test for TB4, but there are elevated levels than can indicate a balance of probabilities that it may have been used.
 
My understanding was that the AFL requested that ASADA test the Essendon players and there was elevated levels that raised eyebrows and ASADA then continued target testing of Essendon after that. As others have said there is no accepted WADA test for TB4, but there are elevated levels than can indicate a balance of probabilities that it may have been used.
The continued testing could also build a case could it not. Showing that the levels started to taper off after the testing commenced?
 
The continued testing could also build a case could it not. Showing that the levels started to taper off after the testing commenced?

They can't actually do much with the levels themselves. Your levels vary during the day, whether you are tired, hungry, sick etc. They go up when you exercise and fall when you rest.

The test relies on the fact that the body produces a few types of HGH. However the stuff you inject is only 1 type. So if you inject a heap of that 1 type the ratios of the different types will change (for about 24-36 hours).

Whether stuff like TB4 which triggers HGH production triggers all types of HGH or just some I don't know. If it triggers all types then the ratios will be fine and it will be almost impossible to return a positive test.

Unless HGH levels are massivly high (over a threshold) you will never be able to look at HGH levels and tell if someone is doping or is simply sick, tired, hungry, fresh, obese etc etc etc.
 
They can't actually do much with the levels themselves. Your levels vary during the day, whether you are tired, hungry, sick etc. They go up when you exercise and fall when you rest.

The test relies on the fact that the body produces a few types of HGH. However the stuff you inject is only 1 type. So if you inject a heap of that 1 type the ratios of the different types will change (for about 24-36 hours).

Whether stuff like TB4 which triggers HGH production triggers all types of HGH or just some I don't know. If it triggers all types then the ratios will be fine and it will be almost impossible to return a positive test.

Unless HGH levels are massivly high (over a threshold) you will never be able to look at HGH levels and tell if someone is doping or is simply sick, tired, hungry, fresh, obese etc etc etc.
34 though?
 
34 though?

All you could tell is that a group of samples didn't look random enough. However that could be because everyone was at the same 21st the night before, or a bug was going through a club, or they had all spent the afternoon getting manicures and spa treatments.

It is why Harcout has said the results indicate 'something' but are not conclusive.

The Bruce Francis OH+S crusade that the AFL should have detected and stopped Essendon really ignores that the chances of any form of analytical detection are zero. When Harcourt sends the tests away to Cologne he would have done so shrugging his shoulders, knowing there was no chance of them finding anything but there being nothing else he could really do.
 
One's heart is warmed by the rhetorical techniques employed by Mr Francis.

As he so ably displayed in his dismantling of the pseudo-medical ramblings of Ancient Tiger, Bruce employs logical, analytic, non-emotional ways of demonstrating he is the only person in the world who is correct about everything.

Well played.
 
What test would they use to test for TB4? The ELISA test is not dependable enough to sanctioned by WADA and I am not aware of any other test for TB4. So how would they be able to test positive if there is no test?

Correct there is no accredited test, so the tests conducted were not for TB4. I would suggest they were similar to those done by Dank looking for elevated secondary hormones (again probably those related to the administration of HGH, Hexarelin, CJC, GHRP6 etc). That fact that they were interesting could mean that the samples may have had close to threshold levels for multiple players? Who knows.


Eg Armstrong et al would EPO dope to just under the hemocrit threshold as there was no test.
 

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