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Inside Peyton Manning’s secret investigation into Al Jazeera documentary

cigaretteman

HB King
May 29, 2001
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Five days before a documentary alleged that quarterback Peyton Manning and other star athletes had used performance-enhancing drugs, two men hired by Manning’s lawyers visited the parents of the documentary’s key witness. Both men wore black overcoats and jeans and, according to a 911 call from the house that evening, one initially said he was a law enforcement officer but didn’t have a badge.

After they told their daughter to call 911 the night of Dec. 22, Randall and Judith Sly stepped outside to talk to the strangers, who clarified they were private investigators, not cops. They had come to this red brick house with a well-manicured lawn looking for the Slys’ 31-year-old son, Charlie, a pharmacist who was the primary source in the upcoming documentary.

The revelation of the visit to the Slys’ home in this rural, upper middle class suburb is another in what has been a series of strange twists and turns since the Al Jazeera documentary, “The Dark Side: The Secret World of Sports Doping,” first aired. In the documentary, Sly boasted about helping pro football and baseball players cheat. In one scene, Sly implied that Manning took human growth hormone prescribed by an Indianapolis anti-aging clinic and shipped to Manning’s wife, Ashley.

Manning and most of the other athletes named in the report have denied taking banned substances. Sly has since recanted his accusations, which were recorded by Al Jazeera without his knowledge.

Sly’s claims have spurred investigations from the NFL and Major League Baseball that likely will take months. But the first investigation of Sly came before the documentary even aired, and was bankrolled by Manning, who will lead the Denver Broncos against the Carolina Panthers in Sunday’s Super Bowl.

Manning’s lawyers launched the private probe shortly after Al Jazeera started contacting athletes who would be named in the documentary. They hired investigators to identify, locate and interrogate Sly, and sent a lawyer to examine Peyton and Ashley’s medical records at the Guyer Institute of Molecular Medicine in Indianapolis.

Manning’s investigative team did nothing that would interfere with subsequent investigations, said Ari Fleischer, the former White House press secretary and crisis management consultant Manning has hired.

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The lawyer who visited the Guyer Institute did not remove any records, Fleischer said, and Manning’s investigators in no way influenced or coerced Sly into issuing his recanting statement, which he recorded Dec. 24, the day after they had questioned him.

Sly’s lawyer, Travis Cohron, also said his client’s statement — which Sly issued without knowing exactly what he was recanting — was Sly’s idea. According to Cohron, everything Sly said in the documentary about helping pro athletes take performance-enhancing drugs was a fabrication to impress Al Jazeera’s undercover reporter, whom Sly claims he thought was a potential business partner.

“It was pure puffery,” Cohron said of his client’s words. “He was manufacturing a story to bolster his own appearance.”

The story Sly said he made up contained at least a bit of truth, though: The Guyer Institute did ship medication to Ashley Manning, Fleischer confirmed. Citing Ashley’s right to privacy, Fleischer declined to specify whether the medication was human growth hormone, which is banned by professional sports leagues and only legal to prescribe in America for a few specific conditions, such as growth hormone deficiency, HIV wasting syndrome and short bowel syndrome.


Manning’s pre-emptive investigation, Fleischer said, was a “natural reaction” to being asked to respond to anonymous allegations.

“When somebody accuses you of doing something you didn’t do — and Al Jazeera refused to tell us who it was — it’s only logical to say, ‘Who is it, and why are they doing this?’ ” Fleischer said. “That’s human nature.”

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In the Al Jazeera documentary, Liam Collins, a former British hurdler, went undercover and claimed to pharmacists and doctors he was trying to revive his running career and was willing to cheat. With hidden cameras, Collins recorded Sly and asked him about procuring performance-enhancing drugs.

In speaking with Collins, Sly alleged illicit drug use by Washington Nationals third baseman Ryan Zimmerman and Philadelphia Phillies first baseman Ryan Howard, as well as by Pittsburgh Steelers linebacker James Harrison. Sly also said he helped numerous Green Bay Packers take banned substances, including linebackers Clay Matthews and Mike Neal, and defensive end Julius Peppers. (All of the players have denied the claims; Zimmerman and Howard have sued Al Jazeera for libel.)

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On Dec. 4, Al Jazeera sent a wave of emails marked “urgent.” One arrived in the inbox of Tom Condon, Manning’s agent. Another went to Dr. Leonard “Dale” Guyer. Another went to Charlie Sly.

The personalized emails — which Al Jazeera said it sent to every person named in “The Dark Side” — detailed allegations against each person and requested comment. (Spokesmen for Manning and Sly described the emails to The Washington Post, but declined to share them. Al Jazeera’s lawyers also declined to provide the emails.)

Within days, Manning hired both the Gibson Dunn law firm and public relations consultant Fleischer to handle the situation. Fleischer said all parties agreed on a plan of attack: Identify the source and scrutinize the claims.

“Our thinking was it would be very helpful to find whoever it was who was making up lies about Peyton, and figure out why someone would fabricate information like this,” Fleischer said.

While Al Jazeera refused to identify its source, employees at the Guyer Institute noticed something familiar.

The unnamed source, Al Jazeera wrote in the email to Guyer, alleged that Peyton and Ashley Manning visited the anti-aging clinic after hours to “get IVs and shit .” The last two words reminded a few Guyer employees of a fleshy, fast-talking intern from a few years before.

“Guyer’s a small place,” Fleischer said. “They thought, ‘Well, of all the people who have been here, no one really talks like that but Charlie Sly.’ ”

Armed with a name, Manning’s investigators went looking for Sly, who had bounced around over the last few years, living alternately in Nevada, Texas and Indiana.

[Meet Charlie Sly, the man telling — and recanting — doping tales]

Sly was living in Austin and, according to his lawyer, completely unaware that professional athletes across the country — some of whom Sly now claims he has never met — were getting emails describing things Sly had said about them. Al Jazeera’s Dec. 4 email to Sly — which explained that Collins had lied and recorded all their conversations, and that all of this would soon be on television — ended up in Sly’s junk folder, according to his lawyer.

(In an email to the Post, Bob Corn-Revere, a lawyer for Al Jazeera, noted that, in addition to the Dec. 4 email, Al Jazeera sent Sly a registered letter Dec. 7 and left him a voicemail that he never returned.)

On Dec. 18 or 19, Sly got a phone call from Dustin Keller, the former New York Jets tight end Sly has known since they went to high school together in Indiana. Keller had gotten an email from Al Jazeera, requesting comment, and had deduced the source against him was Sly. (In the documentary, Sly says he helped Keller take banned substances throughout his college football career at Purdue University as well as in the NFL. Keller has not replied to multiple requests to comment.)

Even after that call, which Sly discussed with his family, Sly didn’t comprehend what was about to happen, his lawyer said. This was partly because the Slys were only vaguely familiar with Al Jazeera.

“The Sly family’s initial thoughts were, ‘This must be a scam,’ ” Cohron said. “His dad thought they [Al Jazeera] were only in the Middle East and they reported on terrorist attacks. The whole situation was surreal.”



https://www.washingtonpost.com/spor...ble-main_manning-jazeera-925pm:homepage/story
 
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