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CBS/ AP/ May 21, 2010, 12:42 PM

Floyd Landis Admits Doping, Accuses Armstrong

Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and Indian Foreign Minister S.M. Krishna take part in a joint news conference at the State Department in Washington, Wednesday, June 13, 2012. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)

Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and Indian Foreign Minister S.M. Krishna take part in a joint news conference at the State Department in Washington, Wednesday, June 13, 2012. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta) / Manuel Balce Ceneta

Last updated at 6:45 p.m. ET

Disgraced U.S. cyclist Floyd Landis revealed new cheating allegations in a series of messages to sponsors and officials, alleging that former teammate Lance Armstrong not only joined him in doping but taught others how to beat the system and paid an official to keep a failed test quiet.

With international cycling season in full swing, Landis admitted for the first time what had long been suspected - that he was guilty of doping for several years before being stripped of his 2006 Tour de France title.

CBSSports.com: Landis Comes Clean, Accuses Armstrong
Proving Floyd Landis' Doping Accusations

His fresh accusations, contained in e-mails sent last month, prompted Armstrong to hold an impromptu press conference Thursday before he began the fifth stage of the Tour of California in Visalia.

"If you said, 'Give me one word to sum this all up,' credibility," the seven-time Tour de France winner said. "Floyd lost his credibility a long time ago."

"We have nothing to hide. We have nothing to run from," said Armstrong, who later quit the race to go to a hospital for X-rays after crashing just outside of Visalia, Calif.

Though Landis lost his title, he denied cheating until now, and his recent e-mails detail his blood doping.

"I want to clear my conscience," Landis told ESPN.com. "I don't want to be part of the problem any more."

He claims that Armstrong and longtime coach Johan Bruyneel paid an International Cycling Union official to cover-up a test in 2002 after Armstrong purportedly tested positive for the blood-boosting drug EPO. The UCI, however, denied changing or concealing a positive test result.

In an e-mail Landis sent to USA Cycling chief Steve Johnson, he said Armstrong's positive EPO test was in 2002, around the time he won the Tour de Suisse. Armstrong won the Tour de Suisse in 2001 and did not compete in 2002.

"We're a little confused, maybe just as confused as you guys," Armstrong said, with Bruyneel by his side. "The timeline is off, year by year."

The Wall Street Journal first reported the details of the e-mails.

Landis also implicated other cyclists, including longtime Armstrong confidant George Hincapie and Olympic medalist Levi Leipheimer, and acknowledged using human growth hormone starting in 2003. The Wall Street Journal reported another e-mail from Landis also linked another top American racer, Dave Zabriskie, to doping.

"Look forward to much more detail as soon as you can demonstrate that you can be trusted to do the right thing," Landis wrote in the e-mail to Johnson.

Landis said he was asked at one point to stay in an apartment where Armstrong was living and check the temperature in a refrigerator where blood was being stored for future transfusions. "Mr. Armstrong was planning on being gone for a few weeks to train he asked me to stay in his place and make sure the electricity didn't turn off or something go wrong with the refrigerator," Landis wrote.

Hincapie said he was "really disappointed" by the allegations. Jim Ochowicz, a former top USA Cycling official - who was also implicated by Landis - defended himself and Hincapie.

"These allegations are not true, absolutely unfounded and unproven," said Ochowicz, now the president of BMC Racing, Hincapie's current team. "This is disappointing to anyone who works in the sport or is a fan of the sport."

Johnson said USA Cycling would not comment about Landis' series of e-mails, citing its policy on not discussing "doping allegations, investigations or any aspect of an adjudication process."

The U.S. Anti-Doping Agency also declined comment for similar reasons, and Landis did not respond to messages left by The AP.

More accusations from Landis could be coming, however. In his e-mail to Johnson, Landis indicated he has several diaries detailing other experiences.

"I've always known Floyd as an angry person ... somebody who's basically angry with the world," Bruyneel said. "To me it sounds like he just wants to drag down people who are still there and enjoying this."

Until about 2005, Armstrong worked extensively with Michele Ferrari, an Italian doctor who was linked to numerous doping issues, but was cleared by an appeals court in 2006. Landis claimed Ferrari extracted "half a liter of blood" from him in 2002, so he could have it transfused during the Tour de France.

"Mr. Armstrong was not witness to the extraction but he and I had lengthy discussions about it on our training rides during which time he also explained to me the evolution of EPO testing and how transfusions were now necessary due to the inconvenience of the new test," Landis wrote.

Landis also alleges that after one stage of 2004 Tour de France, the team got off their bikes and boarded a bus where each of them received blood transfusions on the side of the road, reports CBS News correspondent Ben Tracy.

Andy Rihs, the owner of the Phonak team for which Landis rode when he won the Tour, issued a statement saying Landis' claims were "lies" and a "last, tragic attempt" to get publicity. In the April 30 e-mail, Landis alleges that Rihs was aware of his doping and helped fund it.

Like Armstrong, UCI president Pat McQuaid questioned Landis' credibility.

"He already made those accusations in the past," McQuaid said. "Armstrong has been accused many times in the past but nothing has been proved against him. And in this case, I have to question the guy's credibility. There is no proof of what he says. We are speaking about a guy who has been condemned for doping before a court."

Armstrong said Landis started threatening him and other top riders such as Leipheimer and Zabriskie to make allegations like these long ago.

"I'd remind everybody that this is a man that's been under oath several times and had a very different version," Armstrong said. "This is a man that wrote a book for profit that had a completely different version. This is somebody that took, some would say, close to $1 million from innocent people for his defense under a different premise. Now when it's all run out the story changes."

A French judge issued an international arrest warrant for Landis in February in connection with a case of data hacking at a doping laboratory.

French judge Thomas Cassuto wanted to question Landis about computer hacking dating back to September 2006 at the Chatenay-Malabry lab.

It was that lab which months earlier had uncovered abnormally elevated testosterone levels in Landis' samples collected in the run-up to his 2006 Tour victory.
CBS/ AP
31 Comments Add a Comment
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rwsmith29456 says:
Just trying to divert attention from himself. Sports just aren't sports to me any more. This culture of "You won't win if you don't cheat" is seriously undermining our values in this country.
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rocketjl says:
Is this the same guy that made the same accusation years ago when Armstrong beat him. Armstrong was cleared then, but this guy seems to be a really low class sore loser.
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curiously1 says:
Next, is a book deal. You see the sequence now?
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stupa5 says:
Let's see landis the cry baby boy rat..." got cheating & admitted it" "so I'll point the finger at somebody else so the heats offme me and I can make millions in TV shows & books..."
Fool take your medicine like a man...your not a detective, judge & jury...your a cheating "LOSER that got caught"...Whether Armstrong & the rest of thecyclist cheated or not is for other to determine not childish crybabies like your self..worse than a cheater a RAT! to bad you didn't have big sponsors & money to cover your tail...wake up to the real & nasty world of big money sports...fool!
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larrryshrine says:
by Empire-George- May 20, 2010 10:46 AM EDT
I used to respect Greg Lemond, until he started attacking Armstrong for no reason, because Lance was becoming the American Cycling hero, instead of Lemond.
-----

Hi Empire. Yes, this clown denies, denies, denies for four years, then he "comes clean" and decides to drag a bunch of others down with him. Hard to put much credence in a word he says. Glad they stripped him of the title back then.
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bradkt1 says:
To me, if he can't prove it, then why do this? The uncorroborated word of a now-admitted liar like Floyd Landis means nothing...even if he is now teling the truth. This isn't about his desire to clean up the sport. This is about his desire to dirty the name of everyone else so he doesn't look so bad in comparison.

It doesn't work like that.

I remember during his hearing the sleazy attempt to sully the name of a fellow cyclist by leaking some appalling intimate details of that cyclist's private life. This was the act of a total scumbag...and that's what I think of Floyd Landis.
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careifucan says:
Why si every time some one gets caught they try to take a bunch down wiht them? Like a bunch of kids, I did it but so did Lance. Grow up buddy. Your caught and the focus is on you.
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bciss says:
WHAT athletes cheating by using performance enhancing drugs?!! Say it ain't so. What other incredible shocks and earth shattering revelations await......
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Empire-George- says:
I used to respect Greg Lemond, until he started attacking Armstrong for no reason, because Lance was becoming the American Cycling hero, instead of Lemond.
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Henri_Rochard replies:
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Tour de France. Don't the Americans usually win it ??

Lemond 3 times, Armstrong 7 times.
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bobnjersey says:
[American cyclist Floyd Landis has admitted to doping throughout his professional career and said many of his top competitors, including Lance Armstrong, also used banned performance enhancing drugs. ]

wow ... what a class act. first he cheats ... which is his business. then when caught he denies it ... even insists thru multiple appeals and reviews that there must be an error. then ... when he decides that it's time to come clean ... he drags others into it?

what a tool ... i hope he has other talents besides riding a bicycle fast. what goes around comes around floyd.
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