Sentencing Date Set For Barry Bonds
Home run king Barry Bonds will be back in federal court on Dec. 16 to be sentenced for his felony obstruction of justice conviction.
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Home run king Barry Bonds will be back in federal court on Dec. 16 to be sentenced for his felony obstruction of justice conviction.
The Barry Bonds trial may have had a strange ending, but his lawyers still face a tough fight in clearing the slugger's name. On Wednesday, a jury convicted Bonds of obstruction of justice but deadlocked on whether he committed perjury.
The jury in the Barry Bonds case has convicted him on obstruction of justice, but is deadlocked on the other charges.
The jurors weighing the Barry Bonds perjury case have returned for a third day of deliberations.
A transcript of the testimony from Barry Bonds' personal shopper was being read back to the jury at the slugger's perjury trial on Monday morning.
A prosecutor said a federal jury should convict Barry Bonds of making false statements to a grand jury, telling the panel Thursday that the slugger chose not to tell the truth about using performance-enhancing drugs.
Barry Bonds' confident defense team rested its case Wednesday without calling a single witness, just minutes after a federal judge accepted the government's request to dismiss one of the five counts against the home run king.
A federal judge has barred the jury in the Barry Bonds' perjury trial from hearing a newly discovered tape recording prosecutors say bolsters their case that the slugger knowingly took steroids.
A juror called in sick at the Barry Bonds perjury trial Monday, forcing testimony to be postponed, while the government tried to get new evidence admitted that could abruptly turn the case in its favor.
Testimony in the Barry Bonds perjury trial has been postponed until at least Tuesday because one of the jurors has called in sick.
Tears streaming from her eyes, Barry Bonds' former personal shopper became the first and only one of the government's 23 witnesses at his federal trial to say she saw the all-time home run leader getting an injection from his trainer.
Prosecutors called Barry Bonds' orthopedic surgeon to the witness stand Thursday at the slugger's perjury trial. They may wish they hadn't.
The federal judge presiding over the Barry Bonds trial is now considering whether to bar testimony regarding the slugger's testicles.
Barry Bonds' former mistress testified Monday that the slugger blamed a 1999 elbow injury on steroid use, while also conceding she capitalized financially from their nine-year relationship.
One of the key figures in the professional baseball steroid scandal sat down with CBS13 to explain why he leaked explosive information about major league drug use, an action that landed him in prison.
The government's star witness in the Barry Bonds perjury trial has testified that he saw the home run king's personal trainer leave Bonds' spring training bedroom with a syringe in 2000.
A federal judge has sent Barry Bonds' former trainer to jail for refusing to testify at the slugger's perjury trial.
Some loved Barry Bonds so much they can't be impartial. Others already believe he's guilty. A mother worried about the effect sports doping would have on her impressionable children. And so the laborious process of selecting a jury began Monday in the criminal case of USA v. Bonds.
A federal judge on Thursday barred the jury at Barry Bonds' perjury trial from hearing angry voicemails the home run king left with his mistress during a stormy nine-year relationship.
A federal judge has ordered Barry Bonds' former trainer jailed later this month unless he changes his mind about testifying against the slugger.
Barry Bonds' attorneys are seeking to keep details about the slugger's temper from the jury.
Barry Bonds' perjury trial is fast approaching and the lawyers and judge are still scrambling to set limits and rules for the month-long proceedings scheduled to start March 21.
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Sacramento police said they detained a suspect in a deadly shooting in the Oak Park area on Thursday after hours of negotiations.
Kanwal Sahil allegedly had a blood alcohol content nearly four times the legal limit when prosecutors say he ran a red light and hit Chloe Borders at a high rate of speed.
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The war with Iran is now leading to growing concerns among California farmers over a fertilizer shortage, with many fertilizing products coming from shipments that are stuck in the Persian Gulf. tuck in the Persian Gulf.
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