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Jessica Eye sent letter to Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation following failed UFC 166 drug test
Feb 22, 2014 - 3:15:52 PM
Jessica Eye sent letter to Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation following failed UFC 166 drug test
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By: Jamie Penick, MMATorch Editor-in-Chief

UFC women's bantamweight Jessica Eye fights in her second Octagon appearance tonight at UFC 170, and she's going to attempt to move on from what has become the debacle of her first UFC fight.

After edging past Sarah Kaufman in a controversial split decision, Eye tested positive for a miniscule amount of marijuana, and it's placed her on a probationary suspension that's allowed her to fight this weekend against Alexis Davis.

The test failure by itself isn't much of an issue, as in any other commission outside of Texas the levels in which she tested wouldn't have constituted a positive test. However, her blatant lies regarding what happened since the news of her failed test turned fan sentiment against her.

The most egregious of them came in lying about when she found out about the test, and then railing publicly against reports that it was for marijuana. She was brought down by Texas' commission releasing information as requested, which showed that it was indeed marijuana, and that Eye knew about her failed test back in November.

She even wrote a letter to the commission attempting to explain why marijuana was in her system, but even that explanation doesn't hold up to scrutiny. Here's the letter she sent to the Texas commission after her failed drug test, as obtained by MixedMartialArts.com following a Freedom of Information Act request.

"Dear Mrs. Winston,

I am writing you today in regards to my recent test results from UFC 166 in Houston. I first wanted to thank you in advance for your time and for allowing me the opportunity to explain my position. As one of the few professional female athletes currently competing in the UFC, I can't express you how upset and more than disappointed I am in myself for even being in this situation. I have worked extremely hard at my craft over the last 6 plus years to put myself in a position of influence where I really feel I can make a difference in not only our sport but beyond. I consider myself a role model and understand that as a professional athlete who is competing at the highest level of his or her sport, that I also have an obligation to be a leader and positive role model. The reason I tell you this is so you can understand how crushing this has been for me. Beyond the opportunity to make a living doing something I love to do, to me its more important to have the opportunity to continue to be a role model and affective people in a positive way.

Mrs. Winston, I assure you that I am not nor have I ever been the type of person to put anything unhealthy in body, let alone and illegal narcotic. In addition, I am well aware of the other athletes who have thrown away their careers over substance abuse issues and I could never understand how someone in that position would risk jeopardizing their career over drugs or alcohol.

I am not the type of person who makes excuses and can admit Im wring when Ive made a mistake. In this case, the mistake I made was trusting my family and not trusting my instincts sooner. From the time I was a teenager, my father and I have not been on the best of terms due to his own substance abuse issues which I was forced to move out of his home when I was a 18. As a young girl I saw the damage and destruction drugs and alcohol can cause and how it can tear a family apart. Well my family was not immune and unfortunately it took a very ugly incident recently to finally allow me to move forward with my life without my father.

Approximately 4 weeks or so prior to my UFC debut in Houston, I had decided to give my father another chance to get back into my life. As you can understand, I was very emotional leading up to my fight and was eager for any support I could get from family, friends and especially my father. After numerous apologies and attempts to make amends with me, I finally decided to give my father another chance and attend a family get together in my honor which he hosted at his residence, The get together involved mostly family members form his side along with many of my friends and even a few of my sponsors who had all come together to watch the fight the evening. What transpired that night , will be with me for my entire life and is what I feel may have led to the traces of marijuana that were found to be in my system.

Upon arrival at my fathers house, I noticed immediately that they had been drinking. Against my better judgment, I decided to stay and avoid another confrontation with my father especially with anyone else in attendance. As the evening progressed, the alcohol would eventually turn into marijuana. As my father and several of his friends began to smoke in the living room where we were watching the UFC, I politely asked him to stop smoking or id be forced to leave. Not only did he refuse, but he became irate and began to physically attack me in front of all of our guests. Luckily my friends and brother were able to separate us and get m out of there relative unharmed, but this would surely be one of the darkest and most humiliating moments of my life. Needless to say, I did not call the police in order to avoid this getting out in public as I knew I need to be distraction free heading into the biggest fight of my career. Looking back, I truly wish I would have filed a report not my benefit, but to share my story with others in hopers of stopping this from happening to even one other person. I sincerely feel this is what led to my test results as I have been around any other smokers for years prior to or since that night.

Mrs. Winston, I am not claiming to be completely innocent and realize I am in this position because of my actions. But I will tell you with all sincerity that I would never, ever gamble with my career or take for granted the opportunities I have in front of me. I would even ask you to contact Ohio Athletic Commission Executive Director Bernie Profato who Im confident will validate what I am writing you as far as my family history and this particular incident. Since then, ive actually gone public with my story and did an in depth interview with a reporter who went ahead and published an article about my relations with my father. Id be happy to forward this article to you upon request.

In closing, id like to thank you again for your time and consideration with this matter. Please get back to me or my manager Greg and let us know what the next step in the process will be. I am eager to put this behind me and start the next positive chapter of my life and what I hope will be a long career with the UFC.

Sincerely,

Jessica Eye


===

Eye has since reconciled with her father after he was diagnosed with cancer, but she hinted at this incident in her comments about her father to the UFC. That said, the story also doesn't necessarily hold up to the science.

According to a study conducted about cannabinoid concentrations via second hand exposure, it was found after three hours of heavy exposure that participants in the study only reached levels half of which Eye tested positive with a test taken just hours after exposure. By several hours later, the concentration contained in blood tests were even smaller.

So Eye's claim that a few hours of simple exposure to marijuana four weeks prior to the event caused the failed test doesn't add up.

Regardless, she'll try to get back in the win column against Davis, and hopefully she'll have learned from this situation.

Penick's Analysis: The most maddening issue here with Eye is the fact that it was completely unnecessary. She comes off as a very nice person, and she's easy to like in conversation, so why she'd have felt the need to lie, and do so continuously regarding something so benign as a marijuana test failure at 16ng/ML is beyond most. It just doesn't make sense. Had she come out and said she smoked marijuana, or that she ingested it in some other fashion a week or two before the fight, as that level could have suggested, no one would have held it against her. She would have had her punishment, sure, but it was so far below the levels most commissions - and the UFC themselves - test for that it didn't need to be a big deal. Compounding falsehoods took her down, though, and she's going to have some work to do to build back up goodwill with the fanbase.


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