Linda McMahon: Obstructing Justice?
Posted by David Damage on Friday, April 29, 2011
Under: Archive News
Source: www.pwtorch.com
Linda McMahon deals with
After
months of occupational health issues and questionable WWE TV content
being generally linked to former WWE CEO Linda McMahon during her
Connecticut Senate campaign, a report by Ted Mann of The New London Day
directly links McMahon to tipping off former wrestling doctor George
Zahorian in December 1989 that he could be facing a potential federal
investigation for steroid distribution to WWE wrestlers.
Mann
reported that a confidential memo sent by McMahon to then-WWF corporate
executives suggested Zahorian should be contacted before federal agents
approached him about his relationship to WWE. The key passage from
Mann's report reads as belows:
The WWF, she wrote, should alert
Dr. George T. Zahorian III that a criminal investigation could be
heading his way, according to court documents reviewed by The Day.
"Although
you and I discussed before about continuing to have Zahorian at our
events as the doctor on call, I think that is now not a good idea,"
McMahon wrote in the memo. "Vince (McMahon) agreed, and would like for
you to call Zahorian and to tell him not to come to any more of our
events and to also clue him in on any action that the Justice Department
is thinking of taking."
Some time that month, not long before
Zahorian was arrested and charged with illegally selling steroids,
federal prosecutors alleged that an unnamed Titan Sports official called
the doctor and instructed him to "destroy any evidence of his contact
with WWF or WWF wrestling personnel."
The report does not use the
magic words "obstruction of justice" to describe how McMahon's activity
could be interpreted. Instead, long-time WWE attorney Jerry McDevitt
used the phrase in an attempt to refute the story.
"At no time
did they ever charge anybody with any kind of obstruction of justice or
whatever it is you were suggesting by that last question, on this memo
or otherwise," McDevitt told Mann.
In 1994, WWE (then Titan
Sports) was put on trial by federal prosecutors seeking charges for
alleged steroid distribution. WWE was acquitted of all charges, but the
following is a key passage from George Zahorian's testimony during the
trial reported in Pro Wrestling Torch Newsletter #288/289 that adds more
background to the story reported today:
He (Zahorian) said later
in 1989 he received a message to call (Pat) Patterson. When he called
Patterson back, Patterson told him to call back on a pay phone. "He told
me there was an investigation going on that concerned Titan Sports."
Because of the investigation, he said Patterson told him he and McMahon
wanted him to destroy all information of phone numbers and information
on wrestlers. "He said it may be something minor, but I should be
careful. He said after this was over we could meet and continue with our
relationship." Zahorian said he took all records for wrestlers and put
them in a storage area in the basement of his office building and
eventually brought them to his lawyer's office for protective custody.
Linda
McMahon was contacted for the story last week, which gave her time to
form a response before the story broke. In the story, she naturally
pointed to the "evolving" current Wellness Policy and WWE being
acquitted of all charges related to any steroid distribution accusations
that federal prosecutors presented in 1994.
"I don't pretend to
remember to go back, to revisit all the aspects of that case," McMahon
said. "It has been tried, acquitted, and done with, and WWE has evolved
its total Health and Wellness Policy over the years, and I'm sure will
continue to evolve."
According to sources, The Day's story was
originally scheduled to run at the end of the weekend for reporters to
react on Monday, however Politico.com ran the story on Friday evening,
prompting The Day to run the story earlier than planned.
The
timing works in McMahon's favor, with the potentially damaging news
coming out late on a Friday evening, which is a dead zone for news.
Instead of the story running on Sunday and being fresh for Monday news
coverage, the story could be lost on local reporters and, as a result,
not make an impact on potential Connecticut voters.
Caldwell's
Analysis: The headline coming out of this story is Linda McMahon's
fingerprints on a controversial issue from her past as a top WWE
executive. McMahon and her expensive consultants have been able to avoid
or deflect many of the controversial issues from her past, so it will
be interesting to see how much this issue has an effect on her Senate
campaign with a paper trail linking back to McMahon. Wrestling author
Irv Muchnick added his analysis to the story tonight looking at the
significance of the revelation and more background on the federal trial.
In : Archive News