From Comcast SportsNetTuesday, August 23, 2011
LOS ANGELES (AP) -- United States government prosecutors have responded to complaints by lawyers acting for Lance Armstrong about leaks in a grand jury investigation of the cyclist without publicly revealing their response.U.S. Attorney's spokesman Thom Mrozek says prosecutors filed their response Monday under seal to avoid violating rules that require the secrecy of grand jury proceedings.Armstrong's attorneys filed a motion in July, claiming information from the grand jury inquiry have sullied the reputation of the seven-time Tour de France winner. The filing, which was left unsealed, claimed some of the material reported by The Associated Press, The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times and others could have only come from government officials leaking the information.A grand jury in Los Angeles has been investigating claims that Armstrong used performance-enhancing drugs during his string of Tour victories from 1999-2005. The cyclist and cancer survivor denies he ever doped.
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