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Lance Armstrong asks for suit dismissal

DALLAS, April 7 (UPI) -- Lance Armstrong's lawyers asked to have SCA Promotions' lawsuit thrown out, saying the Dallas firm signed a forever binding deal to pay the disgraced cyclist.

SCA filed a $12 million lawsuit against Armstrong for bonuses it paid for the cyclist's Tour de France wins in 2002-04, the Austin (Texas) American-Statesman reported.

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The company insures prize money paid in sports promotions like holes-in-one in golf, and in this case, the bonuses Tailwind Sports promised to pay Armstrong for his fourth, fifth and sixth Tour wins. Tailwind Sports -- which ceased to exist in 2007 -- managed the U.S. Postal Cycling team for which Armstrong rode.

SCA initially sued Armstrong in 2004, accusing him of using performance-enhancing drugs to achieve his wins. The two parties settled the suit in February 2006, with SCA paying Armstrong $5 million plus $2.5 million in damages.

SCA filed a second suit in February after Armstrong confessed to doping in January.

"By now everyone knows that Lance Armstrong perpetrated what may well be the most outrageous, cold-blooded and elaborate lie in the history of sports. Plaintiff SCA is one of the most significant victims of Mr. Armstrong's deceit," the February suit read.

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Armstrong's legal team said Friday the suit has no "supportable basis in law" because SCA signed a "forever binding" agreement in the settlement, stating the company wouldn't "challenge, appeal or attempt to set aside the arbitration award."

SCA representative Jeffrey Tillotson, upon learning Armstrong's team requested a Texas state district judge in Dallas dismiss the suit, said "Lance sure has a funny way of apologizing for lying under oath."

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