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Victor Conte, 75, the founder of BALCO, the lab at the centre of an steroid scandal has died.

Victor Conte has died aged 75. He was the owner of BALCO, a now defunct laboratory, and a pivotal figure in the global steroid scandal, which involved high-profile athletes like baseball's home run king Barry Bonds.

Conte died on Monday. He spent four months in jail and four months at home after pleading guilt in 2005 for distributing steroids among professional and Olympic athletes. His sports nutrition company announced his death in a post to social media.

In a post to Instagram, SNAC System said that it was "heartbroken" by the death of Conte. The system called Conte a "anti-doping activist."

"We will respect his wishes." SNAC will live on forever, and so will his legacy. "We LOVE you, Conte!"

On the SNAC website, it said that Conte's BALCO days "forever changed" him and that he became an antidoping activist later. However, his commitment to "guiding athlete to become their best ever never wavered."

Conte began his career as a musician. He played with the funk group "Tower of Power" at one time, but he entered the nutrition industry in the early 80s.

Conte was the owner of BALCO, a small Bay Area lab on the outskirts San Francisco. The laboratory began to thrive in the late 1990s. It became the center of a massive doping controversy early 2000s.

He used a gregarious personality and self-taught knowledge of nutrition to gain access to some of the top names in sport, including disgraced sprinter Marion Jones and baseball sluggers Bonds and Jason Giambi, supplying them with the latest in performance-enhancing drugs.

Bonds was never formally found guilty of using performance-enhancing drugs in a court of law and has always denied any wrongdoing but overwhelming evidence and extensive documentation link him to the use of steroids.

Conte, who was sentenced to federal prison in 2005 for his involvement in the steroid scam, said that he had never snitched or rolled or informed on anyone.

"I was always a man of full disclosure. I explained to all the athletes that I worked with, as best I could, the risks and rewards of our association and how we approach performance enhancement. (Reporting from Frank Pingue, Toronto; Additional reporting and editing by Rory Carroll)

(source: Reuters)