Several weeks ago, the Toledo Blade Newspaper in Ohio erroneously identified clenbuterol and/or human growth hormone as anabolic steroids in the case of Johnathan Roumaya. Roumaya was sentenced on Monday for the misdemeanor charge of possession of dangerous drugs.
The Toledo Blade once again erred in calling the confiscated drug(s) anabolic steroids (“Oregon bar workers gets 3 days in jail over steroids,” April 15).
Authorities searched the bar in January as part of the crash investigation and found steroids and syringes in a filing cabinet.
But steroid ignorance is apparently contagious in Toledo, Ohio permeating the local media, attorneys and courts.
The NBC 24 affiliate in Toledo also misidentified clenbuterol and growth hormone as steroids, lifting a description of the drugs (practically verbatim) from a March 8th report by Laren Weber of the Toledo Blade (“Rodeo Bar owner sentenced for possession of drugs,” April 14).
Authorities searched the bar in Jan. and found steroids and syringes in a filing cabinet. The items found were listed as a blister pack containing nine tablets of Clenbuterol, a bottle with liquid Clenbuterol, several vials of the human growth hormone Jintropin, and a bag of syringes. Clenbuterol is a steroid used in meat production that is banned in the US.
Surely, the ABC 13 affiliate in Toledo would accurately identify clenbuterol and growth hormone, right? Maybe not. (“Rodeo Bar owner behind bars,” April 14)
Police found body building drugs, box syringes, and an illegal steroid at the bar during a search.
And the CBS 11 affiliate in Toledo? (“Owner of Rodeo Bar sentenced for HGH possession,” April 14)
One of the owners of the Rodeo Bar and Grill pleaded no contest last month to possessing human growth hormone.
Finally! But CBS goes on to paraphrase Roumaya’s attorney who apparently identifies growth hormone as an anabolic steroid! Dohh!
An attorney for Jon Roumaya said he was trying to lose weight, so he used the steroid.
CBS and ABC affiliates in Toledo also report that the courts apparently suffer from steroid ignorance too. “Random steroid drug testing” was a condition of Roumaya’s sentence (even though anabolic steroids were not involved in the case).
About the author
Millard writes about anabolic steroids and performance enhancing drugs and their use and impact in sport and society. He discusses the medical and non-medical uses of anabolic-androgenic steroids while advocating a harm reduction approach to steroid education.
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