The seven-time Tour de France champion 'did not respect the obligation to stay under (the) direct and permanent observation' of the tester, the AFLD said in a statement.
The 37-year-old American, who returned to the sport in January after three 1/2 years retirement, denied any wrongdoing on Tuesday according to Reuters.
Armstrong was asked to provide urine, blood and hair samples when returning from a training ride around Beaulieu-sur-Mer last month.
'In a letter sent to the Agency on April 8,
'The AFLD is competent to impose disciplinary sanctions to people who do not hold a French licence but train on the national territory.'
Any sanction imposed on Armstrong would be valid on French territory only.
Armstrong is set to ride the Tour de France, which starts in
In a statement on Tuesday, Armstrong explained 'We told the tester we wanted to check with the
'Johan (Bruyneel, Astana team manager) stayed with him and in his presence called the
'We asked if it was OK for me to run inside and shower while they made their calls and the tester said that was fine.'
Armstrong has had a difficult relationship with Tour organisers, the Amaury Sport Organisation (
In 2005, French sports daily L'Equipe, owned by
However, Armstrong never tested positive and was cleared by a Dutch investigator appointed by
AFLD president Pierre Bordry last year invited Armstrong to have his 1999 samples re-tested but the Texan declined, arguing they could have been compromised.




























