Disgraced American Olympic hero Marion Jones said she hasn’t told her young son that she is going to jail for lying to law-enforcement officials about using steroids and a check-fraud scheme.
Jones was speaking on The Oprah Winfrey Show on Wednesday, less than two months before she is expected to begin serving a six-month prison sentence.
”I put myself in a position to have somebody else determine my immediate future,” said Jones, who also has a younger son and spoke via a satellite link.
”I made that decision. I have to live with it, my family has to live with it. With the grace of God we will get through it and come out even better at the other end.”
Jones and her lawyers had hoped she would receive a probation-only sentence.
”I made a mistake,” she told American talk show host Winfrey. ”I made a choice, at the time, to protect myself, to protect my family. And now I’ve paid the consequences dearly.”
Jones (32) pleaded guilty in October to lying to federal agents over a steroid-distribution scandal involving California laboratory Balco and her role in a check-fraud scam.
Jones was also sentenced to two years’ supervised release and 400 hours of community service.
Jones must submit herself into custody by March 11 to begin serving the sentence.
Jones said she hopes others will learn from her mistakes.
”I want people to understand that, you know, everybody makes mistakes. … I truly think that a person’s character is determined by their admission of their mistakes and then beyond that, what do I do about it?” Jones said.
”How can I change the lives of people? How can I use my story to change the life of a young person?”
Jones’s tearful confession to doping after years of denials was followed by Jones returning the three gold medals and two bronze medals she won at the 2000 Sydney Olympics.
Jones captured gold in the 100m and 200m at Sydney and helped the 4x100m relay to gold as well. She was also a five-time world champion.
But now Jones has had all results since September 1 2000 stricken from the records and has been banned by the International Association of Athletics Federations, although she has retired from competition.
Jones lied to federal agents three times, starting in November of 2003 when asked about her connections to the Balco steroid scandal.
In August and September of 2006, Jones was questioned about a check-fraud scheme involving sprinter Tim Montgomery, who himself was banned and stripped of a 100m world-record run based on evidence collected in the Balco probe. — Sapa-AFP