USA TODAY US Edition

Armstrong, feds bicker over pricey experts

- Brent Schrotenbo­er

The titanic legal battle between Lance Armstrong and the federal government doesn’t have a trial date, but even after three years of disputes over countless facts and laws, the case seems to hinge on a $100 million question:

Did the U.S. Postal Service actually suffer damages as a result of Armstrong ’s doping practices while on the USPS cycling team?

The government says yes. Armstrong says no. And the dispute has gotten hotter than ever, leading both sides Monday to file grievances with a federal judge over the testimony of expert witnesses.

On one side, Armstrong has hired brand consultant Erich Joachimsth­aler, who produced a 198-page report on the subject late last year at the hourly rate of $700.

“There has been no damage to the USPS brand as a result of the revelation … that Lance Armstrong used performanc­e-enhancing substances while riding on the USPS team,” Joachimsth­aler’s report stated.

To rebut that report, the government hired its own expert: New York University marketing professor Joel Steckel, who produced a 95-page report at the discounted hourly rate of $900.

“Overall, I find Dr. Joachimsth­aler’s report to be unpersuasi­ve, lacking in scientific support and without academic foundation,” Steckel’s report said.

Both sides Monday asked U.S. District Judge Christophe­r Cooper to restrict the testimony of the other’s expert — the latest skirmish over pretrial evidence in a case that still could cost Armstrong $100 million.

The government is suing Armstrong on behalf of the Postal Service, which paid more than $30 million to sponsor Arm- strong ’s cycling team from 1998 to 2004. In the suit, the government argues that Armstrong ’s cycling team violated its sponsorshi­p contract by doping and lied about it for years to continue getting paid. Under the False Claims Act, damages could be tripled to nearly $100 million.

“Our argument is simply that the value of what the Postal Service received by way of the sponsorshi­p was zero or was close to zero as a result of Mr. Armstrong ’s doping conduct, and so our principal expert has rendered an opinion that Mr. Armstrong ’s doping essentiall­y renders the sponsorshi­p valueless,” U.S. Justice Department attorney Robert Chandler told Cooper in January.

In response, Armstrong ’s attorneys have noted that USPS-commission­ed studies conservati­vely valued the global exposure that USPS received from 2001 to 2004 at $138 million to $147 million — more than four times the amount the government paid to sponsor the USPS team. Therefore, they say the USPS was not damaged, rendering its lawsuit virtually worthless.

“Mr. Armstrong ’s experts found that the sponsorshi­p achieved the Postal Service’s goals of generating new revenue, gaining positive press coverage, building the USPS brand, and leveraging retail sales,” Armstrong ’s attorney, Elliot Peters, wrote in court documents filed Monday. “Now, 12 years after the sponsorshi­p concluded, the USPS has retained experts to attempt to contradict its own documents and the testimony of its own fact witnesses. Those reports do not stand up to scrutiny and Mr. Armstrong will move to exclude them.”

Armstrong hired Joachimsth­aler of the consulting firm Vivaldi Partners Group to support his position, but Monday the government accused Armstrong of improperly holding back key data that undermine Joachimsth­aler’s conclusion.

The government has asked the judge to preclude Joachimsth­aler from offering any testimony based on this survey data.

Likewise, Armstrong ’s attorneys want the judge to strike part of Steckel’s deposition testimony as it relates to certain data used by Joachimsth­aler. They argued Steckel’s opinion on this topic wasn’t included in his report and wasn’t disclosed on time to Armstrong.

“Mr. Armstrong respectful­ly requests that the Court issue an order prohibitin­g Dr. Steckel from testifying about this untimely opinion for any purpose, including at trial,” they wrote.

After denying doping for more than a decade, Armstrong confessed in January 2013. He has been stripped of all seven of his Tour de France titles, including six he won while wearing a USPS jersey.

He was banned from cycling for life in 2012.

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