CBS News/ January 24, 2013, 12:08 PM

Lance Armstrong sued for fraud over memoirs

Lance Armstrong talks with his son Luke at the last stage of the 90th Tour de France cycling race between Ville d'Avray and Paris Champs Elysees, on July 27, 2003. In his 2003 autobiography, "Every Second Counts," Armstrong wrote: "Luke's name is Armstrong and people know that name, and when he goes to school I don't want them to say, 'Oh yeah, your dad's the big fake, the doper.' That would just kill me."

Lance Armstrong talks with his son Luke at the last stage of the 90th Tour de France cycling race between Ville d'Avray and Paris Champs Elysees, on July 27, 2003. In his 2003 autobiography, "Every Second Counts," Armstrong wrote: "Luke's name is Armstrong and people know that name, and when he goes to school I don't want them to say, 'Oh yeah, your dad's the big fake, the doper.' That would just kill me." / Getty Images

Piling onto Lance Armstrong's post-doping confession downfall, two California men filed a class-action complaint in federal court in Sacramento, claiming the disgraced cycling star's memoirs, billed as non-fiction, were filled with lies, according to multiple reports.

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The named plaintiffs in the suit were Rob Stutzman, a public relations executive who served as a deputy chief of staff for former California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, and Jonathan Wheeler, a chef and amateur cyclist, Reuters reports.

The lawsuit, filed on Tuesday, said they and others "would not have purchased the books had they known the true facts concerning Armstrong's misconduct and his admitted involvement in a sports doping scandal," according to the Los Angeles Times.

Also named in the suit are several book publishers who produced Armstrong's books, the Times reports. Armstrong and his publishers are accused of violating consumer protection laws on false advertising and fraud by selling the books as works of non-fiction.

Armstrong's memoirs "It's Not About the Bike" and "Every Second Counts" recount battling through cancer, raising a family, and conquering the cycling world. Both were written with current Washington Post sports journalist Sally Jenkins, who has said in light of his confession that she was most mad about hearing of his doping through other people, and not him directly.

In the lawsuit over the books, Stutzman and Wheeler said they felt "duped," "cheated" and "betrayed" by the realization that the books, marketed as inspirational true-life memoirs, were replete with fabrications, Reuters reports.

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A similar lawsuit was filed in 2011 against Greg Mortenson, co-author of the best seller "Three Cups of Tea," accusing him of fabricating much of his story about promoting education for impoverished girls in Pakistan and Afghanistan, following a damning report on "60 Minutes". (Watch the segment at left.)

That suit, which alleged fraud and unjust enrichment, was dismissed last year by a federal judge in Montana, Reuters reports.

However, in 2007, author James Frey and his publisher settled a similar lawsuit over his alleged memoir, "A Million Little Pieces" after 1,729 readers claimed fraud.

The publishing company Random House was forced to pay $27,348 in refunds to the readers, $180,000 to charity, and $1 million in legal expenses, according to Poets & Writers magazine.

During the trial, Frey's lawyers revealed the author had been paid $4.4 million in royalties.

In an interesting convergence, Frey's memoir had been a onetime favorite of Oprah Winfrey, and he ended up going on her show to infamously answer angry questions from the TV host about lying over the veracity of parts of his story. It was also to Oprah that Armstrong confessed to doping for the first time.

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6 Comments Add a Comment
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HoleinOneGolf says:
WOW finally . . . this shouldn't be a surprise to a sensible person, As I was one of the people that provided prizes for some of Lance's contests and THE first company on the internet to do prize providing for sports events (100,000 or so around the world). We knew 25+ years ago that people "cheat" "cut corners" "break the rules" in sports contests.

I was verifying these sports claims (probably the only one in the world) 15 years before Lance started doping. IT HAPPENS. ITS SAD when it gets to that level, (its also human nature). I have witnessed numerous fraudulent winning sport claims from hometown-locals (Stamford, Los Angeles, Danbury, Hartford) to national level events. Even in golf, (maybe the highest integrity sport). Speaking out from the onset (very quietly) as no-one wanted to believe the opposite, with smoking gun facts, while continually chastised by these powerful _______?

What is REALLY DEPLORABLE are the (officials, state regulators, politicians, agencys, people, partners etc) I have come in contact with, that KNEW & ignored the truth and THEN used these NON-compliant winners, looking the other way, "grabbing onto their coattails" per se, for PR & their OWN personal gain.
. . . Lance "manned up" . . . now they all have to be exposed (CT demanded to shut down our web site that listed these facts) (any 1st amendment lawyers out there?) . . . that will be MUCH LARGER STORY in the future as the names will be household

http://www.hole-in-won.com/HIOrule-breakers.htm

http://www.kevinkolenda.com
www.hole-in-won.com
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TheDocD says:
More money grabbers going after everything they can. These morons need to be sued for being morons.
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filmguy107 says:
Their lawyer should be disbarred and jailed. It's time.
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saturn05 says:
I cannot believe what people will do to get their 15 minutes and free money. I hope this case gets thrown out. What a waste of time and money. What idiots those two guys are anyway. If you were inspired by a story go with it. Geez!
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ReasonableVoicesAmongUs says:
A money grab. Will be thrown out of court.
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rtavis says:
Yea, Oprah... the nation's confessor... (gag)
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