Actor Sylvester Stallone was formally convicted Monday of importing restricted muscle-building hormones into Australia and ordered to pay $10,651 in fines and court costs.

New South Wales state Deputy Chief Magistrate Paul Cloran said the “Rocky” and “Rambo” star failed to show he had a valid prescription for dozens of vials of human growth hormone found in his luggage when he arrived in Sydney for a promotional tour in February.

Stallone had also failed to declare the male hormone testosterone on a customs entry form, although prosecutors said he had legitimate medical reasons for carrying the drug.

Cloran fined Stallone, who was not present in court and had previously pleaded guilty, a total of $2,451 on both charges and ordered him to pay prosecution costs of $8,200.

Calls to Stallone’s publicist were not immediately returned.

The magistrate said that because of the negative publicity surrounding the case, the penalty was enough to send a clear message that such behavior would not be tolerated.

“I don’t think there is anything further the court could or should do in order to deter Mr. Stallone from committing these offenses again,” Cloran said.

He said he was satisfied the human growth hormone and testosterone were for Stallone’s personal use, and that “there is no suggestion that the substances were being used for anything other than cosmetic or therapeutic purposes.”

Stallone was charged after a customs search of his luggage at the start of a three-day visit to Sydney in February revealed 48 vials of the human growth hormone drug, Jintropin.

The actor told customs officers he had purchased the drugs at a Los Angeles pharmacy, but did not have the prescription with him.

Three days later, Stallone threw four vials of the male hormone testosterone from his Sydney hotel room when customs officials arrived to search it.

Cloran said Jintropin is not legally available for sale in the United States, and found that Stallone had been “untruthful about the existence of a prescription.”

However, citing testimony from Stallone’s Beverly Hills-based doctor, Robert Huizenga, Cloran found that Stallone had been using the testosterone legally under medical supervision, although he had failed to declare it to customs officials.

In a letter to the court in which he apologized for a “terrible mistake,” Stallone, 60, said he had taken the drugs for years to treat a medical condition that he didn’t disclose.

In an interview with customs officials after the growth hormone was discovered in his bags, Stallone said he was carrying such a large amount of the drug because he was about to go on location in Thailand and Myanmar – formerly known as Burma – for three months to shoot the latest installment of the “Rambo” series.

“As you get older, the pituitary gland slows and you feel older, your bones narrow. This stuff gives your body a boost and you feel and look good,” court documents quoted him as saying. “Doing ‘Rambo’ is hard work … Where do you think I am going to get this stuff in Burma?”

Human growth hormone is a naturally occuring substance produced by the pituitary gland. It can be replicated synthetically and is often used to build muscle mass.

It is considered a performance-enhancing drug in Australia and cannot be imported without a permit.

The maximum penalty for bringing Jintropin into Australia without a license is a fine of $91,500 and five years in prison.

But Stallone faced a maximum penalty of $18,000 on each of the two charges and no prison time because the matter was heard in a local, not federal, court.

A senior official with the Australian Customs Service, Robert Janeczko, welcomed the decision.

“I think it’s a good outcome. The two criminal convictions show that whether your name is Smith or Stallone you can’t bring prohibited imports into this country,” he said.

Stallone’s lawyers did not comment on the decision.

 

Actor Sylvester Stallone pleaded guilty Tuesday to bringing vials of restricted muscle-building hormones into Australia and faces sentencing next week.

Lawyers for the 60-year-old star of the “Rocky” and “Rambo” movies entered the guilty pleas on behalf of the actor, who did not appear before Sydney’s Downing Center Local Court.

“I made a terrible mistake, not because I was attempting to deceive anyone but I was simply ignorant to your official rules,” Stallone said in a letter to Sydney’s Local Court. “I feel terrible that my breach of the rules has set a poor example to members of the public, whose opinion I cherish dearly.”

Stallone was accused of bringing banned substances into Australia after a customs search of his luggage during a Feb. 16 visit to Sydney revealed 48 vials of the human growth hormone product, Jintropin.

Three days later, Stallone threw four vials of the male hormone testosterone from his Sydney hotel room when customs officials arrived to search it, prosecutor David Agius told the court.

Human growth hormone, a naturally occurring substance that can be replicated synthetically and is used to build muscle mass, is considered a performance enhancing drug in Australia and it cannot be imported without a permit from the national drug regulator, the Therapeutic Goods Administration.

The maximum penalty for bringing Jintropin into Australia illegally is a fine of $91,500 and five years in prison, but Stallone faces a maximum penalty of just $18,000 on each of the two charges because the matter is being heard by a local, not federal, court.

Deputy Chief Magistrate Paul Cloran said Stallone would be sentenced on Monday next week.

Stallone’s lawyer Phillip Boulten said the actor should be spared a criminal conviction, saying Stallone took the hormones for medical reasons that he did not specify.

“The defendant, Sylvester Stallone, is extremely mortified about having been involved in this incident,” Boulten told the court. “Had he known that what he was doing was contrary to Australian law, he almost certainly would not have done it.”

But Agius said Stallone had demonstrated a “consciousness of guilt” by throwing the testosterone from the hotel.

Boulten said Stallone was taking both substances under medical supervision.

“This is not some back-alley body builder dealing covertly with some banned substance in some sort of secret way,” he said. “This was a legitimate medical condition being treated by doctors of the top ranking order in the west coast of the United States.”

Agius told Cloran that Stallone was to have appeared in the court through a video link but that that plan had been abandoned. Agius did not elaborate.

Prosecution documents handed to the court in March said Stallone had marked “No” on a customs declaration card that asked if he was bringing into Australia restricted or prohibited goods “such as medicines, steroids, firearms, weapons, or any kind of illicit drugs.”

During his visit to Australia, Stallone shrugged off the airport incident.

“It was just a minor misunderstanding,” Stallone told reporters “They were just doing their jobs. I just didn’t understand some of the rules here.”

He came to Australia on a three-day tour to promote the latest movie in the “Rocky” series, “Rocky Balboa.” A media throng was kept waiting for hours outside Sydney International Airport for the actor and his entourage.

When a tightlipped Stallone emerged, he signed his autograph for several fans but avoided media questions about the delay.

 

Just moments ago, Sylvester Stallone was officially charged with illegally importing performance and image enhancing drugs in a Sydney courtroom, according to the Sydney Morning Herald.

According to Australian authorities, the 60-year-old action star, who did not appear in court, was caught at Sydney Airport with several vials of a steroid known as hGH (human growth hormone), during a random baggage check. Customs officials claim they found a total of 48 vials of the steroid after they raided Stallone’s Sydney hotel room, limousine and private jet.

Stallone will be required to enter a plea on April 24. If found guilty, he faces a maximum fine of $22,000 American.

According to steroid.com, “Bodybuilders may illicitly self-administer hGH to improve size and strength, usually by subcutaneous injection into the lower abdomen.” HGH has also “become a popular but expensive medication prescribed in anti-aging therapies.”

Stallone was visiting Australia in February to promote his latest film “Rocky Balboa. Calls to Sly’s rep were not immediately returned.

Reps for Stallone had no comment.

(via TMZ)

 

Rocky Balboa earned $6.2 million during its Wednesday opening night, according to the Hollywood Reporter. The sixth film in Sylvester Stallone’s Rocky franchise expands to 3,017 theaters today.

“Rocky Balboa” will compete with three new releases: the Ben Stiller comedy Night at the Museum, the Matthew McConaughey sports drama We Are Marshall, and the Matt Damon spy thriller The Good Shepherd.

 

Hollywood filmmaker SYLVESTER STALLONE created the character of boxer ROCKY BALBOA to reflect JESUS CHRIST. Stallone was an unknown actor when he wrote and starred in the Oscar-winning 1976 movie ROCKY. And he has now revealed the reasoning behind the film’s opening shot of a painting of Jesus Christ looking down at Rocky fighting in a gym. The 60-year-old says, “It’s like he was being chosen. “If you look to God, you can overcome your past.”

 

Sylvester Stallone realized old age is catching up with him when he struggled to get fit for upcoming movie Rocky Balboa. The 60-year-old decided to take on the role in the fifth Rocky sequel to make up for the critically-mauled Rocky 5, even though his body often felt like it was breaking down during training.

He says, “I know a lot of actors say they train for 12 hours a day for parts like this, but the truth is I did about three-and-a-half to four because that’s all the body can take. Anything more than that and you start to break down and actually end up performing worse. Things just wear out. All those years of heavy leg lifting and running up steps now mean when I try to run, everything hurts – my knees, hips and even my neck. There’s nothing plastic in there yet, but we are getting close to it.”

 

Think he could pass a drug test for steriods?

 

Sylvester Stallone has definitely had a brow lift!!!!! No man’s eyebrows are arched like that at his age!!!!! Maybe Jennifer Flavin is going to try to convince us that the skincare line she sells on HSN is responsible….but I don’t think so!



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