Scott Schoeneweis, the veteran New York Mets reliever and a survivor of testiticular cancer, received six steroid shipments from Signature Pharmacy while playing for the Chicago White Sox in 2003 and 2004, ESPN has learned.
According to a source in Florida close to the ongoing investigation of Signature, Schoeneweis' name appears on packages that were sent to Comiskey Park while the White Sox were battling to win the AL Central title in 2003. Two more shipments arrived at the stadium in 2004, months before Schoeneweis underwent arthroscopic surgery on his left elbow.
The doctor who prescribed the drugs, Ramon Scruggs of the New Hope Health Center in Tustin, Calif., also wrote prescriptions for Toronto third baseman Troy Glaus. Scruggs has since been suspended by California's state medical board on charges that he "prescribed approximately 6,073 prescriptions of dangerous drugs or controlled substances over the Internet without a good faith examination of the patients."
After the 2004 season, Schoeneweis was traded to Toronto, where he had an up-and-down two years. The Cincinnati Reds signed him in 2006 and a strong finish convinced the Mets to offer him a $10.8 million, three-year deal. The 33-year-old Schoeneweis pitched 59 innings with a 5.03 ERA this year and was part of the bullpen collapse that caused the Mets to miss the postseason after having a seven game lead in September.
An aide to his agent, Scott Boras, was not able to make Schoeneweis available for an interview Monday, when the Mets cleaned out their lockers.
In a February interview with the New York Post, Schoeneweis, a New Jersey native, opened up about his bout with testicular cancer. He said he was diagnosed before his sophomore year at Duke in 1994 -- nine years before, according to the source, Schoeneweis received his first shipment from Signature.
Talking to the Post, Schoeneweis said surgery eliminated the tumor, but that his doctors wanted him to take an additional six months of chemotherapy. Since he didn't want to risk his sophomore season, he said his doctors "gave me the six months worth of chemo in three months."
As Schoeneweis told reporter Mark Hale, he was so weak afterward that he couldn't open a refrigerator door. After losing 20 pounds, Schoeneweis rallied to make the team again, but he suffered an elbow injury that required Tommy John surgery. He returned for a successful senior season and in 1996 pitched for the U.S. National Team.
The source who reviewed the invoices said that Schoeneweis spent $1,160 on the steroids. The packages he received on May 23 and June 25, 2003, contained 10 milliliter bottles of both testosterone and stanozolol. The package sent on Sept. 3 had double the dose of stanozolol -- the same drug that caused Rafael Palmiero to be suspended for 10 games in 2005 after it showed up in his urine. The last three shipments -- on Nov. 18, 2003, and April 15 and June 24, 2004 -- contained one 10 ml bottle of testosterone.
Gary Wadler, a physician and member of the World Anti-Doping Agency, said that while it might make sense for someone with hormone deficiencies to take testosterone, he had never heard of anyone taking stanozolol to help with the affliction.
"It's not an approved use, as far as I'm aware of," he said.
The disclosure about Schoeneweis is the latest to emerge from a year-long probe into Signature being conducted by Albany, N.Y., district attorney David Soares. Last month, Sports Illustrated reported that Baltimore outfielder Jay Gibbons received shipments of steroids and growth hormone from the pharmacy between 2003 and 2005. Gibbons met with MLB officials on Sept. 17, afterward telling reporters he was "happy to answer all of their questions." He did not elaborate.
Soares is accusing Signature's owners, Stan and Naomi Loomis, of running a prescription mill in which doctors furnished prescriptions online for as little as $25 each without ever meeting patients. The married pharmacists are charged with unlawfully distributing steroids and other drugs.
Another 21 people have been indicted and 10 have pleaded guilty, including five doctors.
Shaun Assael is a senior writer for ESPN The Magazine.
Source: ESPN.com
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