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Barry Bonds says he wants to start serving his sentence

Former baseball star Barry Bonds, in a March 2011 file photo, says he wants to begin serving his sentence on an obstruction of justice conviction.
Former baseball star Barry Bonds, in a March 2011 file photo, says he wants to begin serving his sentence on an obstruction of justice conviction.
(Jeff Chiu / AP)
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SAN FRANCISCO -- Former San Francisco Giant and home run king Barry Bonds said late Friday that he wants to begin serving his sentence on an obstruction of justice conviction.

Earlier in the day, a federal appeals court upheld his conviction for obstruction of justice for being evasive during grand jury testimony.

A three-judge panel of the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that someone may be convicted of obstruction for making factually true statements if they are intended to mislead or evade.

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During testimony in 2003 before a federal grand jury investigating the distribution of performance-enhancing drugs, Bonds was asked if his trainer ever provided him with substances that could be injected. Bonds gave a long-winded answer about being a celebrity child before he denied being given any such drug.

Bonds was tried in San Francisco in 2011 on charges of making false statements to a grand jury and obstruction. The jury was hung on three counts of false statements but convicted him on the obstruction charge, a felony.

PHOTOS: Barry Bonds through the years

Bonds appealed, arguing he could not be found guilty of a crime for giving a truthful, albeit meandering, statement.

The court said that Bonds’ statements about being the child of a famous baseball player “had nothing to do with the question” and was “at the very least misleading.”

“The statement served to divert the grand jury’s attention away from the relevant inquiry of the investigation,” the court concluded.

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Bonds was sentenced to two years’ probation, 250 hours of community service, a $4,000 fine and a month of monitored home confinement, all of which had been put on hold pending his appeal.

But on his website late Friday, Bonds said that though he was disappointed about the ruling and would appeal, he wanted to start serving his sentence immediately.
In the statement, Bonds did not specify his next legal move, but he could ask a larger panel of the 9th Circuit to review the case. He called the U.S. justice system “the best in the world” and thanked the judges and staff of the 9th Circuit “for the difficult work that they do.

“This has been a long and difficult chapter in my life, and I look forward to moving beyond it once I have fulfilled the penalties ordered by the court,” he said.

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Twitter: @mauradolan

maura.dolan@latimes.com

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