




US District Court judge Kenneth Karas imposed the sentence after Jones pleaded guilty to two charges last October, part of a stunning demise of the five-time medalist from the 2000 Sydney Olympics.
Karas gave Jones six months for lying about steroid use and two months — to run concurrently — for a separate charge of misleading federal investigators about her knowledge of a checque fraud case involving her ex-boyfriend, former 100 metres world record holder Tim Montgomery.
Jones, 32, became the biggest name in international sport to admit to using steroids with her guilty plea in October. She tearfully admitted to betraying the trust of her fans and country after years of vehemently denying she used performance enhancing drugs.
She confessed to lying to federal investigators in 2003 when she denied knowing that she took the banned substance tetrahydrogestrinone (THG), known as “the clear,” before the 2000 Olympics.
Jones, who once pulled in millions of dollars in product endorsements, is now in financial ruin.
Poised, articulate and gloriously talented, Marion Jones was an immediate sensation on her first tour of Europe in 1997. While Carl Lewis was making his farewell circuit of the continent’s great athletics stadia, Jones captivated opponents, spectators and journalists alike.
Three years later, Jones would enter territory where even Lewis and Jesse Owens did not venture.
At the 2000 Sydney Olympics, the American planned to add the 4x400 metres relay gold to the 100, 200, 4x100 and long jump titles won by Lewis in Los Angeles in 1984 and Owens at the 1936 Berlin Games.
Jones finished with three gold and two bronze medals, was featured on the covers of Vogue, Time and Newsweek magazines and clinched multi-million dollar contracts.
Seven years later the 32-year-old was a sporting pariah.
The Jones story began in Los Angeles. She idolised 1988 Olympic double sprint champion Florence Griffith Joyner, who was to die in her sleep 10 years later, and became a top athlete.
There was one small blot on her CV. As a teenager Jones missed a drugs test and her mother hired a lawyer to avoid a four-year sanction. Her choice was Johnnie Cochrane, who successfully defended OJ Simpson on a murder charge.
She was married to burly shot putter CJ Hunter, who won the world title at the 1999 Seville world championships but pulled out of the Sydney Games citing a knee injury.
In Sydney, Jones romped to victory in the 100 and 200 and won bronze in the long jump and 4x100 relay. An astonishing third leg in the 4x400 gave the American a third gold. But by then a shadow had fallen over Sydney after Hunter admitted he had tested positive for nandrolone four times in 1999.
Jones stood expressionless beside her man at a packed news conference. So too did Cochrane and former jazz musician Victor Conte, who explained he was Hunter’s nutritionist and said the positive tests must have been the result of a contaminated iron supplement. Conte was head of the BALCO laboratory.
In 2002 she found a new partner in Tim Montgomery, who broke the world 100 record in Paris and became the first man to run faster than Ben Johnson, whose gold medal and world record at the 1988 Seoul Olympics were stripped after a positive test.
Jones did not compete at the 2003 Paris world championships after becoming pregnant and, as the clouds of suspicion thickened, she did not win a medal at the 2004 Athens Olympics.
Clear facts
Born on October 12, 1975, in Los Angeles and grew up in Southern California.
Won gold in the 100m, 200m and 4x400m relay at the 2000 Sydney Olympics and took bronze in the long jump and 4x100 relay, becoming the first woman to win five track and field medals in a single Olympics
Jones was long been tied to BALCO, the San Francisco-based nutritional supplement company at the heart of a US sports steroid scandal
Jones had never failed a drug test until 2006 when traces of the banned substance erythropoietin (EPO) were found. She was cleared when a backup test proved negative
The International Olympic Committee in December officially stripped Jones of her five Sydney medals after she admitted in October to using performance-enhancing drugs


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