After being accused of “doping 150 elite athletes,” as it, British physician has denied the claims. Not only are the “allegations false,” Bonar writes, they are also “very misleading.” (False allegations, it must be said, almost always are “very misleading.”) in the UK broke the story of Dr. Boner’s alleged illicit prescription practices, which reportedly extended to athletes from world class cricketers to Premier League players.
After being accused of “doping 150 elite athletes,” as CNN describes it, British physician Mark Bonar has denied the claims. Not only are the “allegations false,” Bonar writes, they are also “very misleading.” (False allegations, it must be said, almost always are “very misleading.”) The Sunday Times in the UK broke the story of Dr. Boner’s alleged illicit prescription practices, which reportedly extended to athletes from world class cricketers to Premier League players.
Bonar, who lists himself as a “Concierge Doctor & Entrepreneur” tweets from the handle Zengrifter. Zengrifter is the nickname of a blackjack card counter and telemarketing scammer named Marcus Dalton who spent time in prison. A site that appears to be Bonar’s blog describes him as “Extremely ambitious! Always willing to gamble and take calculated risks for a large pay off! An entrepreneur (Whatever that means!). Purveyor of ‘Black Swan’ theory. Destined to be a millionaire in the very near future!”
I have never prescribed Androgen therapy for the purpose of performance enhancement.. I treat symptomatic men with low Test levels
— Dr Mark S. Bonar (@ZenGrifter) April 3, 2016
The @SundayTimesNews allegations are false and very misleading. I have never had a relationship with any premier football club or player.
— Dr Mark S. Bonar (@ZenGrifter) April 3, 2016