Well, he's guilty as sin.
The problem baseball has is that he didn't commit any crime . . . . . not as per baseball rules at the time.
But you are certainly seeing people rounding on Bonds right now - as they should - but we should ask ourselves where they were when they were cheering Bonds and his kind on in those grand home run derby's.
How about Bill Plaschke today in the LA Times with this comment?:
After years of protecting steroid-using criminals such as Bonds, it is only fitting that baseball now spend a summer sharing his cell with no hope of escape.
http://www.latimes.com/sports/baseba...adlines-sports
Was Plaschke calling Bonds a criminal the glory years? I rather doubt it. It was probably the opposite.
There is still a chance Bonds could become a criminal, if its determined he lied before a grand jury.
Cowperson