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  • Sydney Roosters Drug Scandal

    SOME Sydney Roosters players are allegedly routinely using powerful prescription drugs including Valium and sleeping pills to get high after games.

    A fortnight after troubled Roosters player Jake Friend was caught with Valium tablets by police, an investigation by The Sunday Telegraph can reveal that the drug and others are being distributed among some players for recreational use. It also revealed:

    * The Roosters' sprint coach Roger Fabri spent two years in jail for drug supply in 2000;

    * A highly credible former senior player said prescription drug abuse by some players was endemic in the club;

    * A whistleblower has alleged that a member of the Roosters coaching staff buys black-market Valium for $20 a box for the players.

    And NRL chief executive David Gallop yesterday vowed to conduct a broad investigation into the "serious allegations", including other issues raised by this newspaper. The Sunday Telegraph has passed information to Eastern Beaches police investigating the Jake Friend case.

    Roosters chief executive Steve Noyce said he was unaware of Fabri's record but would talk to him tomorrow. He said the allegations about the Roosters were "offensive and untrue".

    Fabri said he had not told the club about his criminal record but had never supplied drugs to players, explaining: "The law allows you to move on with your life; I have moved on and am trying to put the pieces back together."

    Soon after Friend was charged with possession of seven Valium tablets without a prescription at 11.40pm near the Coogee McDonald's on Saturday, June 5, Roosters officials claimed there was an "innocent explanation".

    That explanation has not been forthcoming. Friend has refused to be interviewed by investigators. Mr Gallop confirmed he was awaiting a report from the club explaining why Friend was carrying the Valium and why a female's name was on the box.

    Friend was with "reformed bad boy" and Roosters 2010 recruit Todd Carney. The pair were searched after Friend was seen passing Carney a pill, which Carney later claimed was the heavy duty painkiller Tramadol. Carney was not charged. The incident occurred two hours after the pair played for the Roosters against Cronulla at the Sydney Football Stadium.

    Sources, including Roosters players, said the Friend incident was the tip of the drug-culture iceberg pervading a club that tomorrow will use its players to launch National Drugs Week and the "No Way Campaign" with a group of indigenous schoolchildren.

    The former Roosters player described the new style of drug use as a "culture shift", as players abuse prescription drugs because of the career-ending penalties applied to the use of illegal substances.

    "There is a huge illegal trade of these drugs. Footballers are into them - it's their whole thing of pushing the limits," he said.

    While clubs screen players for substances like ecstasy and cocaine, prescription drugs such as Valium, Tramadol, Stilnox and even Viagra can be freely used. The drugs are taken alone or mixed with energy drinks to enhance the buzz. He said the problem was widespread in the NRL, which has conceded it has no testing measures in place to detect the abuse of prescription medication.

    The Sunday Telegraph spoke to a whistleblower who claimed he was hired by the relative of a Rooster's employee in 2009 to purchase prescription drugs for players. The man said he and several others used welfare benefits to purchase drugs like Valium for $5.20 a box.

    "I was getting $20 a box after I sold them - it was a guaranteed money earner," he said. "There were five of us doing it last year and I was doctor-shopping for [the team official], stockpiling Valium, Stilnox and Temazepam."

    Gallop said he had spoken to Roosters management about the allegations.

    Fabri was convicted of knowingly taking part in the supply of a commercial quantity of methyl amphetamine and knowingly taking part in the supply of the drug Ecstasy. He pleaded not guilty to both charges but was sentenced to four years' jail and paroled in 2002.

    He trains the Roosters fortnightly.

    http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/spo...-1225881780195

  • #2
    What the ****, This is the biggest attack on our club I have ever witnessed.

    What i find very interesting is

    * A highly credible former senior player said prescription drug abuse by some players was endemic in the club;
    Who has an agenda?

    Comment


    • #3
      if we wore maroon nothing would happen to us

      Comment


      • #4
        blah blah blah blah blah.

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by Optimus Prime View Post

          The Sunday Telegraph spoke to a whistleblower who claimed he was hired by the relative of a Rooster's employee in 2009 to purchase prescription drugs for players. The man said he and several others used welfare benefits to purchase drugs like Valium for $5.20 a box.

          "I was getting $20 a box after I sold them - it was a guaranteed money earner," he said. "There were five of us doing it last year and I was doctor-shopping for [the team official], stockpiling Valium, Stilnox and Temazepam."

          Gallop said he had spoken to Roosters management about the allegations.

          Fabri was convicted of knowingly taking part in the supply of a commercial quantity of methyl amphetamine and knowingly taking part in the supply of the drug Ecstasy. He pleaded not guilty to both charges but was sentenced to four years' jail and paroled in 2002.

          He trains the Roosters fortnightly.

          http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/spo...-1225881780195
          What a Rort !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! My Mum and Dad are pensioners they want a cut of the action !!! imagine the cheap meds that they can get !!!!!

          this is just another scam story from the tell-u-crap. I am suprised that Daniel Conn's prescription meds indescretion (from when he was at the titans) was not brought up.......actually, now that i have mentioned it here, watch for the Tell-u-crap to link that to this now !!!!!

          Delecto Oriens est odio Meridianus
          To love Easts is to hate Souffs

          Originally posted by Bill Shankley, Liverpool FC
          At a football club, there’s a holy trinity – the players, the manager and the supporters. Directors don’t come into it. They are only there to sign the cheques.
          Originally posted by Andy Raymond Commentating Souffs V Manly 18/04/09
          The fireworks at the Easter show are making more noise than the crowd tonight

          Comment


          • #6
            So can the roosters sue for this article? It's about time that this over sensationalised piece of shit tabloid was put in its place.....

            Comment


            • #7
              Originally posted by shmitee View Post
              So can the roosters sue for this article? It's about time that this over sensationalised piece of shit tabloid was put in its place.....
              Not if its true...
              ...

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by Optimus Prime View Post
                SOME Sydney Roosters players are allegedly routinely using powerful prescription drugs including Valium and sleeping pills to get high after games.

                A fortnight after troubled Roosters player Jake Friend was caught with Valium tablets by police, an investigation by The Sunday Telegraph can reveal that the drug and others are being distributed among some players for recreational use. It also revealed:

                * The Roosters' sprint coach Roger Fabri spent two years in jail for drug supply in 2000;

                * A highly credible former senior player said prescription drug abuse by some players was endemic in the club;

                * A whistleblower has alleged that a member of the Roosters coaching staff buys black-market Valium for $20 a box for the players.

                And NRL chief executive David Gallop yesterday vowed to conduct a broad investigation into the "serious allegations", including other issues raised by this newspaper. The Sunday Telegraph has passed information to Eastern Beaches police investigating the Jake Friend case as further evidence as to the lack of ethics displayed in the refereeing ranks

                Roosters chief executive Steve Noyce said he was unaware of Fabri's record but would talk to him tomorrow. He said the allegations about the Roosters were "offensive and untrue".

                Fabri said he had not told the club about his criminal record but had never supplied drugs to players, explaining: "The law allows you to move on with your life; I have moved on and am trying to put the pieces back together."

                Soon after Friend was charged with possession of seven Valium tablets without a prescription at 11.40pm near the Coogee McDonald's on Saturday, June 5, Roosters officials claimed there was an "innocent explanation".

                That explanation has not been forthcoming. Friend has refused to be interviewed by investigators. Mr Gallop confirmed he was awaiting a report from the club explaining why Friend was carrying the Valium and why a female's name was on the box.

                Friend was with "reformed bad boy" and Roosters 2010 recruit Todd Carney. The pair were searched after Friend was seen passing Carney a pill, which Carney later claimed was the heavy duty painkiller Tramadol. Carney was not charged. The incident occurred two hours after the pair played for the Roosters against Cronulla at the Sydney Football Stadium.

                Sources, including Roosters players, said the Friend incident was the tip of the drug-culture iceberg pervading a club that tomorrow will use its players to launch National Drugs Week and the "No Way Campaign" with a group of indigenous schoolchildren.

                The former Roosters player described the new style of drug use as a "culture shift", as players abuse prescription drugs because of the career-ending penalties applied to the use of illegal substances.

                "There is a huge illegal trade of these drugs. Footballers are into them - it's their whole thing of pushing the limits," he said.

                While clubs screen players for substances like ecstasy and cocaine, prescription drugs such as Valium, Tramadol, Stilnox and even Viagra can be freely used. The drugs are taken alone or mixed with energy drinks to enhance the buzz. He said the problem was widespread in the NRL, which has conceded it has no testing measures in place to detect the abuse of prescription medication.

                The Sunday Telegraph spoke to a whistleblower who claimed he was hired by the relative of a Rooster's employee in 2009 to purchase prescription drugs for players. The man said he and several others used welfare benefits to purchase drugs like Valium for $5.20 a box.

                "I was getting $20 a box after I sold them - it was a guaranteed money earner," he said. "There were five of us doing it last year and I was doctor-shopping for [the team official], stockpiling Valium, Stilnox and Temazepam."

                Gallop said he had spoken to Roosters management about the allegations.

                Fabri was convicted of knowingly taking part in the supply of a commercial quantity of methyl amphetamine and knowingly taking part in the supply of the drug Ecstasy. He pleaded not guilty to both charges but was sentenced to four years' jail and paroled in 2002.

                He trains the Roosters fortnightly.

                http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/spo...-1225881780195
                I can alledge that we are the victims of a refereeing conspiracy in which high powered NRL figures have instructed referees to attempt to manipulate the results of our games by favouring opposition teams with key decisions.. I have this information from a cousin of my next door neighbour who once went to school with a friend of a former NRL official.. To give this more credibility I can link that former referee Sean Hampstead cheated on a police examination a number of years ago.
                Last edited by Cockadoodledoo; 06-20-2010, 11:34 AM.
                ...

                Comment


                • #9
                  So, someone has an axe to grind against the Roosters AGAIN. I want to thank Jake Friend for putting a target on his back and on the club's back so that stories like this gain currency and encourage oxygen thieves like yoni bashan of the telucrap to report such stories.
                  "The price of freedom is eternal vigilance."

                  Thomas Jefferson

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    so sick of hearing rumours about our club we have had a massive turn around and people are still trying to bring us down. if it was a qld club it would be forgotten and swept in a flash.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Who gives a ****. Nothing will be proved and big ****ing deal anyways....

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        There was another article, an editorial piece no less, stating that a Rugby league player was found lying in his own vomit out the front of the Eastern Hotel.

                        The Funny thing, they do not refer to the team this player played for, nor how long ago this incident occured.

                        YET in the next line, they are quick to Use the Roosters name and name our indescretions.

                        If this is not an attempt to de-stabalise the club AGAIN, then i don't know what is !!!!

                        Delecto Oriens est odio Meridianus
                        To love Easts is to hate Souffs

                        Originally posted by Bill Shankley, Liverpool FC
                        At a football club, there’s a holy trinity – the players, the manager and the supporters. Directors don’t come into it. They are only there to sign the cheques.
                        Originally posted by Andy Raymond Commentating Souffs V Manly 18/04/09
                        The fireworks at the Easter show are making more noise than the crowd tonight

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Watmough was blind and legless at the Manly Wharf club the other night...same place where he coincidently threw a cheap shot at my mate who confronted him about remarks he made about his pretty daughter last year and then Stewart went on to rape a girl on his walk home...same venue again...he then tried to fight the security personnel who asked him to leave...facts...eyewitnesses...but let's write and report about rumours and chinese whispers instead...

                          It would be rife across the board amongst every NRL club as well...not just the Roosters...if it's choice of poison amongst the young players it is rife across the NRL...but they turned a blind eye when it involved Thurston and stillnox...oh and the other QLD Origin players involved...

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            It would explain the inconsistent sluggish games. Everyone just felt soft and high on valium , whishing to just hold and hug there opponents rather then be violent.

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Originally posted by FoghornLeghorn View Post
                              Watmough was blind and legless at the Manly Wharf club the other night...same place where he coincidently threw a cheap shot at my mate who confronted him about remarks he made about his pretty daughter last year and then Stewart went on to rape a girl on his walk home...same venue again...he then tried to fight the security personnel who asked him to leave...facts...eyewitnesses...but let's write and report about rumours and chinese whispers instead...

                              It would be rife across the board amongst every NRL club as well...not just the Roosters...if it's choice of poison amongst the young players it is rife across the NRL...but they turned a blind eye when it involved Thurston and stillnox...oh and the other QLD Origin players involved...
                              Correct weight Foggy.. The corporation does not like the people running the club so will do whatever it takes to destabilise it.. Same goes with the people running the NRL.. 9 penalty counts won in the last 67 or so games... Corruption is endemic in the running of the NRL but it will never see the light of day in the Telegraph.
                              ...

                              Comment

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