Crime & Safety

Cyclist Floyd Landis Applies for Probation

Former professional cyclist Floyd Landis, facing a misdemeanor charge of evading responsibility after a motor vehicle accident (he allegedly hit a city-owned fence) applied for a special form of probation that would result in dismissal of the charge.

Former professional cyclist Floyd Landis spent about 2 1/2 hours of his 36th birthday sitting on a hard bench in state Superior Court in Norwalk where he's facing a misdemeanor charge of evading responsibility for a motor vehicle accident involving his car and a city-owned fence.

Landis applied for the Accelerated Rehabilitation Program, a special form of probation in which he does not need to plead guilty, and the charges will be dismissed if he gets into no further trouble with the law over a specified period of up to two years.

and issued him a summons on Aug. 17, two days after the 6:30 a.m. accident at the intersection of Canfield Avenue and Calf Pasture Beach Road, between and .

Find out what's happening in Norwalkwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

According to Norwalk Police reports, Landis said he had been at the home of a friend on nearby Shorehaven Road and was driving a rented Volkswagen Jetta on Aug. 15, a Monday. As he approached the intersection, he told police, he swerved to avoid another car approaching his lane, then he hit the fence.

Landis told police his rental car company suggested he report the accident, so he called Norwalk police the next day. The day after that, police issued him a traffic ticket.

Find out what's happening in Norwalkwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Landis, a resident of Murrieta, CA, won the Tour de France in 2006. He was later stripped of his title after it was determined he had been taking performance-enhancing drugs.

Once Landis' case was called, he spent only two minutes before Judge Bruce Hudock. As in all such cases, he was quickly sworn in as a witness, declared he previously had not been convicted of any crimes.

Judge Bruce Hudock told Landis to return to court on Dec. 1 for hearing during which the victim—in this case Norwalk city government—may object to granting accelerated rehabilitation. If the judge finds Landis eligible for the program, the Dec. hearing would be his third and last in the Norwalk court.

After the court hearing, Landis declined to comment about the case.

Editor's note: This article was published originally at 4 p.m. Its timestamp was changed for layout purposes on the Norwalk Patch homepage.


Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.

We’ve removed the ability to reply as we work to make improvements. Learn more here

To request removal of your name from an arrest report, submit these required items to arrestreports@patch.com.