The Justice Department’s attempt to maintain a criminal conviction against retired baseball slugger Barry Bonds is a swing and miss, several U.S. appeals court judges ruled.
Reuters reports that the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals had serious doubts that Bonds’ testimony about steroids amounted to a crime.
“I find your reading of the statute absolutely alarming,” Judge William Fletcher told the government.
Bonds testified in 2003 under a grant of immunity that he did not use performance-enhancing drugs.
The judges expressed serious doubts that Bonds committed a crime.
In April 2011, the slugger was convicted of one obstruction charge, while the jury couldn’t reach a verdict on three perjury charges.