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Lance Armstrong cited with hit-and-run after trying to pin it on his girlfriend Lance Armstrong cited in hit-and-run, accused of trying to pin it on his girlfriend
(35 minutes later)
Lance Armstrong doesn’t exactly have a strong record when it comes to telling the truth, so perhaps it should come as no big surprise that the disgraced Tour de France cyclist lied to police about his involvement in a hit-and-run. Lance Armstrong doesn’t exactly have a strong record when it comes to telling the truth, so perhaps it should come as no big surprise that the disgraced Tour de France cyclist is now accused of lying to police about his involvement in a hit-and-run.
After a night out partying in Aspen, Colo. on Dec. 28, Armstrong got into his SUV and hit two parked cars before fleeing the scene, the Associated Press reports. But that’s not what he originally told authorities.After a night out partying in Aspen, Colo. on Dec. 28, Armstrong got into his SUV and hit two parked cars before fleeing the scene, the Associated Press reports. But that’s not what he originally told authorities.
Armstrong first attempted to collude with his girlfriend Anna Hansen and the two agreed she would take the blame for his actions with the goal of avoiding national attention. The plan may have worked, but Hansen later admitted to police that she lied to protect Armstrong. Police later cited Armstrong for the hit-and-run. Armstrong first attempted to collude with his girlfriend Anna Hansen, police say, and the two agreed she would take the blame for his actions with the goal of avoiding national attention. The plan may have worked, but Hansen later admitted to police that she lied to protect Armstrong. Police later cited Armstrong for the hit-and-run.
Neither Armstrong’s attorneys nor Armstrong, who was stripped of his seven Tour de France wins after admitting in an interview with Oprah Winfrey in 2013 that he used performance-enhancing drugs during all seven wins, has commented on the incident. Neither Armstrong’s attorneys nor Armstrong, who was stripped of his seven Tour de France wins after admitting in an interview with Oprah Winfrey in 2013 that he used performance-enhancing drugs during all seven wins, have commented on the incident.