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Saturday, May 17, 2008
Olympian Montgomery gets 46 months for check fraud
By JIM FITZGERALD
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Olympian Tim Montgomery had everything he ever wanted. Once known as the "world's fastest man," Montgomery won a silver medal in the 400 relay at the 1996 Olympics and gold in the same event in 2000. In 2002, he set a record of 9.78 seconds in the 100-meter dash.

"I've stood on top of the mountain," he said.

But Montgomery's once-celebrated life has been on a downward spiral for years after a spate of legal problems. Now, he said, he's rooming with murderers and pedophiles in a Virginia jail.

The world record, and all his other performances after March 31, 2001, were wiped from the books, and he was banned from track for two years, for doping linked to the investigation of BALCO, the lab at the center of a steroid scandal in sports. Montgomery never tested positive for drugs, but he retired after the ban was imposed.

And on Friday, a federal judge sentenced the former track star to nearly four years in prison for dealing in bad checks.

"The gold medal, all those people cheering, that was part of another world," he said. "In jail, my status is gone."

Judge Kenneth Karas also warned Montgomery, 33, that the evidence against him "does not appear to be flimsy" in an ongoing case in Virginia, where he is accused of selling heroin. A conviction there would carry a minimum mandatory five-year sentence.

Montgomery, wearing a white T-shirt and baggy pants, lamented the turns his life has taken as he asked the judge for leniency just before the 46-month sentence was imposed.

Montgomery told the judge he had let other people run his life, right down to deciding what to eat for breakfast. And his lawyer, Timothy Heaphy, said Montgomery had been led astray by, among others, track superstar Marion Jones. Jones, who had a son with Montgomery, is serving her own 6-month prison term for lying about Montgomery's involvement in the check scam and about her use of performance-enhancing drugs.

The check case also ensnared Montgomery's former coach, gold medalist Steve Riddick, and agent, Charles Wells. Both pleaded guilty.

But the judge said others were not to blame in the check case.

"`You should commit bank fraud' is not the same as `You should eat Wheaties,'" Karas said. "There is not a single shred of evidence here that this was anyone else's fault."

A small group of family and friends traveled to the sentencing from South Carolina. Montgomery's father, Eddie Montgomery, asked the judge for leniency, saying the supportive family would help keep his son straight after prison.

Karas praised the family but said close family ties only showed that Montgomery had no difficult childhood or broken home to blame for his wrongdoing. Continued...

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