Lance Armstrong Wins Preliminary Ruling in British Libel Case
June 30 (Bloomberg) -- Lance Armstrong, the seven-time Tour de France champion, won a preliminary ruling supporting his libel claim against a U.K. newspaper over a story alleging he had used performance-enhancing drugs.
The High Court in London today ruled that a reader of the article in the Sunday Times would have thought it meant that Armstrong had actually taken drugs. Armstrong is suing the newspaper over its 2004 review of ``LA Confidential, The Secrets of Lance Armstrong,'' a book by two European sports journalists.
``I always said that the article falsely alleged that I was guilty of doping,'' Armstrong said in a statement released by his lawyers. ``The article was based on untrue allegations, which are without substance.''
Armstrong, has repeatedly denied taking blood boosters such as EPO or any other performance-enhancing drugs. He was cleared last month by independent investigators of taking of banned substances at his first Tour victory in 1999.
Last week, Armstrong denied allegations published in France's Le Monde newspaper that he once admitted taking drugs to a doctor treating him for testicular cancer in 1996.