Disgraced
cyclist Lance Armstrong hit two parked cars with an SUV after a night of
partying in Colorado but agreed to let his longtime girlfriend take the blame
to avoid national attention, police reports show.
Aspen
police cited Armstrong with failing to report an accident and speeding weeks
after the Dec. 28 accident, but only after his girlfriend, Anna Hansen,
acknowledged lying for him.
Armstrong
declined immediate comment on Tuesday. His attorney, Pamela Mackey, didn't
immediately return a call.
Hansen
initially told police she had been driving home from an Aspen Art Museum party
when she lost control of Armstrong's GMC Yukon on icy roads, hitting the cars.
She said she drove because "Lance had a little bit to drink,"
according to the reports.
A man who
had been renting one of the damaged cars told a police detective that Hansen
came running up to his house in high heels, apologizing and promising to pay
for the repairs.
"She
said, `I'm Anna, we're the Armstrongs, my husband's Lance, he was just driving
maybe too fast around the corner or something,'" the man, Thomas Van
Allen, told police, according to the reports.
Police say
Hansen and Armstrong left the scene before police arrived.
Detectives
later interviewed Hansen, who eventually told them Armstrong was driving, but
the couple had decided to let her take the blame.
"We've
had our family name smeared over every paper in the world in the last couple of
years and honestly, I've got teenagers, I just wanted to protect my
family," Hansen told police, the reports state. "I thought, gosh,
Anna Hansen hit some cars, it's not going to show up in the papers, but Lance
Armstrong hit some cars, it's going to be a national story."
Failure to
report an accident is a misdemeanour punishable by up to 90 days in jail and a
fine of between $150 and $300. Driving too fast for conditions is punishable by
a fine between $15 and $100.
Hansen is
not charged with a crime.
The Aspen
Daily News first reported the citation. Armstrong is scheduled to appear in
court March 17.
Armstrong
won the Tour de France every year from 1999 to 2005. Those titles were stripped
after a massive report by the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency detailed the use of
performance enhancing drugs by Armstrong and his U.S. Postal Service teammates.
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