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SportsMarch 14, 2005

WASHINGTON -- Major League Baseball plans to hand over by today's due date some of the records subpoenaed by the congressional committee investigating steroids in the sport. "We're producing documents by the deadline," Rob Manfred, executive vice president for labor relations in the commissioner's office, told The Associated Press on Sunday night...

Howard Fendrich ~ The Associated Press

WASHINGTON -- Major League Baseball plans to hand over by today's due date some of the records subpoenaed by the congressional committee investigating steroids in the sport.

"We're producing documents by the deadline," Rob Manfred, executive vice president for labor relations in the commissioner's office, told The Associated Press on Sunday night.

Asked whether baseball is giving the Government Reform Committee everything it wanted, Manfred said: "Thirty-five years of documents in three days? Everything that was humanly possible."

The congressional committee gave baseball officials until today to produce documents about their new drug-testing program, including results -- with the names of players removed. The committee subpoenaed seven active or former players and four baseball executives to testify at its hearing Thursday.

The head of the panel predicted Sunday the full House easily would pass a contempt of Congress resolution if the subpoenaed players -- a group that includes Mark McGwire and Sammy Sosa -- don't show.

Government Reform Committee chairman Tom Davis, R-Va., told NBC's "Meet the Press" that one or more of the players called to testify could be excused from appearing, though he did not specify who that might be.

But Davis said his panel would vote to find players who fail to appear Thursday in contempt, and said he thinks the House would approve such a resolution by a large margin. The last contempt of Congress prosecution was in 1983.

"These people are not above the law," Davis told NBC.

He was asked why Barry Bonds wasn't invited to the hearing.

"There are a lot of reasons why people are on or off the list, including the BALCO investigation in San Francisco, but including the fact that we didn't want to make this about one player," Davis said.

Bonds reportedly testified to a grand jury in 2003 that he used a clear substance and a cream given to him by a trainer charged in the BALCO steroid-distribution case, but the San Francisco slugger also reportedly said he didn't know they were steroids.

The ranking Democrat on the House panel, Henry Waxman of California, said on "Meet the Press" that Bonds could be summoned for a future hearing.

Subpoenaed for Thursday's session: former stars McGwire and Jose Canseco and current players Sosa, Rafael Palmeiro, Curt Schilling, Frank Thomas and Jason Giambi -- whose younger brother, Jeremy, told a newspaper he used steroids.

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Canseco -- whose best-selling book about steroids helped draw Congress' attention -- asked for immunity so he can testify fully. Schilling said he's willing to testify, and Thomas might testify by telephone because of an injury. McGwire, Sosa, Giambi and Palmeiro haven't said whether they'll go.

Asked why Sosa and McGwire were called, Davis said: "They've been accused by former colleagues of having used drugs at this point. ... There is, I think, a widespread feeling that maybe they cheated their way to achieving these records by using illegal drugs."

Commissioner Bud Selig, in Scottsdale, Ariz., said Sunday he doesn't want to dwell on what's happened in the past and defended baseball's anti-steroids stance.

"I believe trying to go back and dealing in hypothesis is counterproductive. I resent people suggesting we're turning a blind eye," Selig said. "The pragmatic thing we can do is deal with the present and the future. We're not going to spend a lot of time talking about the past."

In other developments:

-- The Daily News of New York reported that McGwire's name was mentioned several times during a federal steroids investigation in the early 1990s, although he was not the target of the probe nor was any evidence collected against him. Two dealers caught in the federal investigation told the newspaper that a California man, Curtis Wenzlaff, gave Canseco and McGwire illegal anabolic steroids.

"I don't have any comment, other than we feel people should consider the source of the allegations," Marc Altieri, a spokesman for McGwire, said Sunday.

Selig wouldn't directly comment on the report, which he hadn't read, but said any investigation Major League Baseball conducts will be done "secretly and very confidentially."

-- Jeremy Giambi, now with the Chicago White Sox, told The Kansas City Star that he used steroids. "It's something I did," he said. "I apologize. I made a mistake. I moved on. I kind of want it in the past." He called off a news conference Sunday at the last minute.

-- Investigators probing a South Carolina alternative medicine doctor want to speak to at least nine current or former members of the NFL's Carolina Panthers about possible illegal steroid prescriptions. The State newspaper of Columbia, S.C., based its report on court records and sources speaking on condition of anonymity.

Davis and Waxman say they're not interested in whether individual players took steroids. They want information about how pervasive steroid use in baseball has been -- and how that might have trickled down to high school athletes.

"It seems to me that they've had a 'don't know, don't tell' policy for the last 10 years. They've said that there's a problem, but they don't know who's involved, how it happened," Waxman said on NBC.

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AP Sports Writer Ronald Blum in New York contributed to this report.

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