Alena Kosinova was hunched over a fan waiting for her spray tan to dry when she realized
she couldn’t move. It was hours before the 2021 Europa Pro contest and the Czech
bodybuilder was cramping again — just like she had at a contest in Portugal weeks earlier.
Kosinova was known by friends and competitors for embracing the extremes of bodybuilding
— the training, the dieting, the drugs. But on that steamy August morning, her voice quivered
as she whispered to another Czech athlete, Ivana Dvorakova, “I won’t be able to do it. I feel
really ill.”
Dvorakova helped lay her down on the concrete floor as others gathered and gave Kosinova
water, packets of salt and sugar. Kosinova answered questions about the diuretics she had
taken before convulsing and losing consciousness.
It took nearly an hour for the ambulance to arrive at the venue in Alicante, Spain, according
to four people who witnessed or were briefed on what happened. Kosinova, a 46-year-old
mother who dreamed of winning the prestigious Olympia, died before the competition was
over.
Czech bodybuilder Alena Kosinova, far right, at a 2021 competition in Portugal. Weeks later, in Spain
for the Europa Pro contest, the 46-year-old mother started cramping severely before losing
consciousness the morning of the show. (Obtained by The Washington Post)
Her American coach, Shelby Starnes, wasn’t there — he rarely attended shows. But shortly
after Kosinova died, Starnes received an alarming email from another client, Jodie Engle.
The 30-year-old single mother wrote that she had been hospitalized and might need open-
heart surgery. Doctors blamed the diuretics she saidshe’d been advised to use for more than a
week leading into the NPC National Championships in Florida.
Engle won first place in her divisionand earned a “pro card,” allowing her to compete
professionally. But the price she paid was steep: tens of thousands of dollars in medical bills
and, doctors told her, she would eventually need a kidney transplant.
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Starnes, one of the most popular coaches for female bodybuilders, did not respond to
messages seeking comment.
Engle takes responsibility for what happened — no one forced the drugs down her throat.
“I was stupid because I turned over the reins to somebody that was more reckless than
myself,” she said.
Bodybuilders around the world are risking their lives and sometimes dying for the sport they
love because of extreme measures that are encouraged by coaches, rewarded by judges and
ignored by leaders of the industry, according to interviews with dozens of bodybuilders,
coaches, judges, promoters, medical professionals and relatives of deceased athletes.
The Washington Post investigated the deaths of more than two dozen bodybuilders, focusing
mostly on those who died leading up to or in the aftermath of competitions. A review of
hundreds of documents including medical and autopsy records, police reports, 911 calls,
emails and text messages, along with interviews with more than70 people, reveals the
devastating consequences of a sport that for years has operated under the halo of health and
fitness.
Several of the industry’s top coaches, without formal training or medical licenses, supplied
their clients with illegal steroids or other illicit substances; instructed them on dosages for
using performance-enhancing drugs; or advised athletes not to seek medical care
beforecompetitions, The Post found.
Unlike other professional sports, the IFBB Pro League, the largest professional bodybuilding
federation in the United States, does not routinely test athletes for steroids or other
performance-enhancing drugs.There’s no health insurance or union to protect athletes.
Nearly allsteroids are illegal without a prescription in the United States, but bodybuilders say
they are easily obtained and widely used by competitors.
Jim Manion, who runs the IFBB Pro and an amateur organization, the National Physique
Committee (NPC), declined to answer specific questions and issued a company statement:
“The health, safety and welfare of all our competitors has, and always will be, of utmost
importance to us.”
But bodybuilders and coaches say the risks have intensified in recent years as contest judges
increasingly reward athletes with nearly impossible-to-achieve physiques. Those who’ve
warned against the dangers say they have faced pressure to stay silent and suffered backlash
from federation officials and coachesafter speaking out.
Bodybuilders typically spend months preparing for competitions with strict diets and hours
of workouts often fueled by stimulants. Many add to that a cocktail of performance-
enhancing drugs to build muscle and fat burners to get lean.
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The grueling days before contests are known as “peak week” — when bodybuilders are at
their leanest, most dehydrated state after taking diuretics to removewater so muscles are
“dry” and defined.
In the fall of 2021, the coach of 37-year-old George Peterson found his client dead in an
Orlando hotel room two days before the Olympia contest.
Police discovered hundreds of pills without prescription labels, including steroids, thyroid
medication to speed up metabolism and clenbuterol, a drug that is approved only for horses
in the United States but is used by bodybuilders as a fat burner.
George Peterson celebrates a win at the 2019 Arnold Classic in Columbus, Ohio. Two years later, the
37-year-old was found dead in a hotel room full of performance-enhancing drugs days before the
prestigious Olympia competition. (Frank Jansky/Icon Sportswire/AP)
Peterson’s coach, Justin Miller, declined to answer questions about his athlete’s use of
performance-enhancing drugs.
The lack of safeguards has led to sick and dead bodybuilders in different federations around
the world, said Georgina Dunnington, who was involved in the bodybuilding industry for 30
years and judged top competitions such as the Arnold Classic in Columbus, Ohio.
She said the federations and a constellation of businesses around them are profiting off
vulnerable athletes who rarely earn enough contest money to cover the thousands of dollars
they spend to compete.
“You need to put the athletes before the money,” said Dunnington, who served as the
chairperson of the Canadian Bodybuilding Federation until 2020. “We fail the athletes 110
percent on every aspect of the sport. We validated so many wrong things and made them
acceptable.”
Those who survived the bodybuilding lifestyle described the lasting impact: kidney failure,
stomach ulcers, high blood pressure, thyroid dysfunction, enlarged hearts, hormonal
imbalances, hair loss, infertility, eating disorders, muscle dysmorphia and depression, along
with various orthopedic injuries.
Sally Sandoe, whose 31-year-old son Luke died in the United Kingdom in 2020, said it’s
inexplicable that so many bodybuilders are getting sick and dying and no one is confronting
the problem.
“It is an absolute free-for-all,” Sandoe said. “There’s just real destruction and devastation and
destroyed lives. How is that fair? How can that carry on? It can’t. It has to stop.”
Dead at 30
Daniel Alexander
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Daniel Alexander stood with his hands on his hips as he gazed into the mirror at Crunch
Fitness in Northridge, Calif., where he worked as a manager. “It’s almost that time of year I
start growing and get to looking freaky,” Alexander posted on Instagram in March 2019.
He’d been training for months with his coach to add muscle after getting feedback from
judges that his upper body thickness needed to match his massive 30-inch thighs.
Alexander was planning to compete at Legion Sports Fest that November. But by September,
the contest prep was taking a toll on the 30-year-old. He messaged his coach, Dave Kalick,
about “lots of frequently long cramps” after using fat burners and taking steroids.
Daniel Alexander, left, with his coach Dave Kalick, who advised the 30-year-old on steroids and other
performance-enhancing drugs as Alexander prepared for a competition in 2019, according to text
messages reviewed by The Post. “Just please use what im giving you because i know whats in there,”
Kalick texted. (Family photo)
His coach, a former bodybuilder who described himself as a nutritionist,instructed Alexander
to take magnesium for the cramps and detailed six steroid dosages, according to text
messages reviewed by The Post. Kalick does not have any medical or pharmacy licenses in
California, where he lives. But he does have multiple felony convictions, including for
methamphetamine possession.
Alexander was known for being fiercely loyal — to his friends, to his family and to his coach.
In a podcast recorded with Kalick in mid-October, Alexander offered advice to other
bodybuilders: “Trust the process. If you’re willing to let someone do your stuff for you, you
need to trust everything that they’re doing for you. And it’ll work. Every time.”
On Oct. 15, Alexander messaged his coach about the plan to increase his dosages and asked
for more steroids and clenbuterol.
“Yes got it,” Kalick texted.
When Alexander’s parents visited from out of town three days later, their son had trouble
catching his breath while they walked around a mall. Alexander blamed his intense cardio
workouts for heart palpitations and an upset stomach.
His parents had never seen their son so close to a competition, but he assured them it was
normal to feel this way before a show.
Alexander consulted his coach and then told his parents the plan: drink a lot of water and
kombucha to flush his system and ease his stomach. They stopped at a store to pick up
supplies before dropping Alexander at his apartment.
Text exchange between Daniel Alexander and Dave Kalick
Daniel Alexander
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Friday, Sept. 13, 2019
Got liquid and oral clen winny also in the last package
Clen is going good. Body adjusting to it. Very crampy the last 3 days. Lots of cramps. Lots of
frequently long cramps.
Dave Kalick
Saturday, Sept. 14, 2019
Take 500mg magnesium with last meal for cramps
start 200mg inj win 2 days week
keep primo at 200mg 2 days a week
mast enanth 200mg 2 days a week
Start tren ace 100mg eod
mast prop 100mg eod
start oral win 50mg with meal 1, 50mg with meal 5
Daniel Alexander
Tuesday, Oct. 15, 2019
Need mast prop, tren Ace and clen
Test will be good through the show
Might need more anavar and winny if we are upping those doses
Dave Kalick
yes got it
here
Daniel Alexander
Thursday, Oct. 17, 2019
We upping winny to 2 tabs 2x a day
Dave Kalick
yes
Texts edited for length
9/28
The bodybuilder also texted a friend who worked as a nurse practitioner: “5% body fat rn.
Lots of stims. I have had a very irregular heart beat for over an hour. Becoming painful. Still
hard to breathe. Worry?”
She told him to go to urgent care and repeated the advice when he reached out later that
evening. “I’m pretty sure I got winstrol in my blood during my shot today. It’s better. Just not
gone,” texted Alexander, referring to a steroid injection he’d given himself. “I will go if I feel
like I’m dying. But being 23 days away from my show I don’t want to get pumped with fluids
and ruin my physique for not a heart attack.”
The next morning, his coach messaged at 5:45 a.m.: “How is your heart rate?”
Alexander never responded. His friends Aaron and Robyn Wyner said they were on the
phone with Kalick when the couple found Alexander in the shower with the water running.
They performed CPR until paramedics arrived.
Drugs were everywhere, Aaron Wyner said, and Kalick told him to hide anything out in the
open and delete Kalick’s messages from Alexander’s phone. Wyner said that without
thinking, he brushed some pills off a desk into a drawer before someone told him this was a
crime scene.
Police recovered more than a dozen different drugs, and an autopsy concluded Alexander
died of steroid-induced cardiomyopathy.
Kalick wanted to hold a memorial at Legion Sports Fest, and he paid for the Wyners and
Alexander’s parents, Janine and Michael, to attend. But when they arrived, they said, they
were told show organizers wouldn’t let them do anything official. Instead, there was a casual
discussion encouraging bodybuilders to get bloodwork done before Kalick spoke briefly about
Alexander.
“It felt like we were holding up the show,” Janine Alexander said. “It was more hurtful than it
was helpful.”
Kalick did not respond to messages seeking comment. He still features a photo of Alexander
on a coaching website under “Transformations & Testimonials.” Alexander is quoted as
saying, “Since working with Dave, my body has grown correctly, safely and I have seen
nothing but success in the shows I have done. By far the best decision I made in my
bodybuilding career.”
But his parents see it very differently. They only learned later, after going through their son’s
phone, about the details of Kalick’s prep for Alexander.
“My son paid for his own death, literally,” his mother said.
Dead at 23
10/28
Brandon Char-Lee
A year earlier in 2018, police found Brandon Char-Lee dead in his Livermore, Calif.,
apartment four days before a show. They counted more than 100 needles and multiple vials
of steroids.
A friend said Char-Lee was on a strict diet for an upcoming bodybuilding show and “was not
allowed to consume water during this time,” the police report stated.
At her son’s apartment, Carolyn Char Lunger took photos of the drugs she found, including
five types of steroids, clenbuterol, diuretics and a bottle with the label T3 — a thyroid
hormone— marked “NOT FOR HUMAN USE.”
A coroner never asked for a full toxicology analysis, according to police records, but
concluded the 23-year-old died of cardiac failure and noted a history of using anabolic
steroids.
Many coroners and medical examiners do not routinely test for the battery of substances that
bodybuilders use, and some don’t request toxicology reports at all.
Brandon Char-Lee was found dead in his apartment, where his mother discovered an array of
steroids and other performance-enhancing drugs, including a thyroid hormone marked “NOT FOR
HUMAN USE.” (Courtesy of Carolyn Char Lunger)
There is little medical research on bodybuilders, and in particular, the stacking of so many
different drugs along with months of intense workouts and severe dieting. So when searching
for causes of death, medical examiners say they typically look for well-studied links to cardiac
arrest or heart failure, such as the use of anabolic steroids.
Char-Lee’s mother knew that her son was supposed to compete in a bodybuilding contest in
Fresno, Calif., and sent photos of the drugs to the show’s promoter. She said she wanted
answers but instead got an invite to “complete his journey” and attend the bodybuilding
competition.
The promoter, Steve O’Brien, had served for many years as a vice president of the NPC and a
contest judge. Problems with drug use were obvious, he told The Post, and he had warned his
own children not to compete in the sport.
But testing athletesrarely came up during meetings with federation officials. Instead, O’Brien
said, promoters were advised to be prepared at shows with medical personnel.
Carolyn Char Lunger, center, visits the gravesite of her son, Brandon Char-Lee, with family last
month at Lone Tree Cemetery in Hayward, Calif. The 23-year-old died days before a 2018
bodybuilding competition. (Jungho Kim for The Washington Post)
Bodybuilding has always been a sport of extremes, and the deaths of several high-profile
athletes shortly after competing exposed the hazards of diuretics and steroids in the 1990s.
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At the time, the IFBB was lobbying to make bodybuilding an Olympic sport. The organization
began testing for steroids at certain competitions and taking away prize money from those
who failed.
“It’s not only the image of the sport we’re concerned with, it’s the health of the athletes,” Ben
Weider, then president of the federation, told the Los Angeles Times in 1990. “Bodybuilding
is not body destruction.”
Manion, who has led the NPC for decades, talked in the 1990s about the importance of
testing in a story that appeared for years on its website: “In a sense, because some of them
won’t protect themselves, we have to be protectors of their health and protectors of the sports
we love.”
But that story eventually disappeared from the website, and the movement for widespread
testing dissipated. The International Olympic Committee’s provisional recognition of the
IFBB lapsed in 2001.
Dead at 49
Terri Harris
In 2013, Terri Harris went into cardiac arrest on a stair machine in the gym two days after
making her professional debut at the IFBB Tampa Pro.
Her partner, Hal Swaney, said she spent 16 weeks preparing with hours of daily training, a
severely restricted diet and a mix of steroids and clenbuterol. Working with her coach, Harris
was the leanest she’d ever been — about 10 pounds less than her typical stage weight.
The night before the show, Swaney said, she was cramping badly, likely because of diuretics.
“I tried to shove Pedialyte in her and she was afraid she was going to spill over ... come into
the show with too much water,” Swaney said.
An autopsy report concluded the 49-year-old suffered “sudden cardiac death” during
exercising and that an “electrolyte disturbance could not be ruled out.”
Terri Harris, center, died days after making her professional debut in 2013. She had severe cramps
the night before the competition, likely from diuretics, and was the leanest she'd ever been for a
bodybuilding competition. (Courtesy of Hal Swaney)
Today, there is no widespread drug testing at hundreds of NPC and IFBB Pro shows around
the world. These are the most popular federations in the United States and are run by
Manion as for-profit businesses. Some select shows, branded as “natural,” claim to test
athletes for banned substances by a polygraph test or urine sample.
Since 2017, Manion has been included on the World Anti-Doping Agency’s Prohibited
Association List aimed at those found to be afoul of the agency’s anti-doping code.
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The International Fitness and Bodybuilding Federation, a separate organization based in
Spain that says it does drug testing, was sanctioned this fall by the World Anti-Doping
Agency for failing to implement an effective testing program and devote sufficient resources
to testing. A federation official said “the non-compliant situation is a regular procedure
among signatories and it is a temporary situation which will be resolved soon.”
The failure to create or enforce protocols has essentially given the green light for
bodybuilders, some in their teens, to experiment with a growing number of unregulated
substances to achieve the sculpted physiques that are plastered all over social media. Many
athletes say they are tracking down performance-enhancing drugs from underground labs on
the internet, sourcing them from as far away as China.
Dead at 29
Bostin Loyd
Marie Raia spent more than a decade trying to get her son, Bostin Loyd, off steroids after he
started competing in bodybuilding contests as a teen. She even sought the help of high-
profile health professionals to confront him and expose the industry.
“Today he had surgery to remove water blisters in his arm from injecting too many needles,”
she wrote in 2013 to the “Dr. Phil” television show in an email reviewed by The Post. “His
doctor warned me that his liver and kidney will fail if he keeps this up ... please take another
look at this, the public needs to see what is going on with young kids.”
But they never got the chance to go on the show. Raia knew the sport better than most moms:
She was a “natural” bodybuilder who enjoyed competing in drug-tested federations. These
are smaller and typically offer less prize money.
Bostin Loyd, second from right, began competing as a teen and used steroids and other performance-
enhancing drugs to help sculpt his physique. (Family photo)
When Loyd came home at age 21with a tattoo that read “Get big or die trying,” Raia
wondered how long he would last.
Loyd had suffered for years from kidney problems, and in 2020 he was diagnosed with Stage
5 kidney failure after injecting himself with large doses of a peptide that caused weight loss in
monkeys, according to medical records. When he shared the news publicly on Facebook, he
said: “I did this to myself with a idiotic experiment and it finally all caught up to me. Do I
regret anything? Absolutely not.”
Raia said her son struggled with anxiety and depression after realizing he probably would
never compete again. This past February, he collapsed at his home and died at age 29, leaving
behind a 3-year-old son. Raia said she found syringes on Loyd’s kitchen counter that day.
13/28
A private autopsy determined he died of a “dissecting aneurysm of ascending aorta,” and also
had a severely thickened heart muscle, a “massively enlarged” liver and significant kidney
damage that could have been caused by steroids.
Marie Raia, a “natural” bodybuilder who mostly competed in drug-tested federations, with a photo of
son Bostin Loyd as a child. This past February, he collapsed at his home and died at age 29, leaving
behind a 3-year-old son. (Marvin Joseph/The Washington Post)
“They’ll lose money. It’s the whole thing of bodybuilding — it’s a freak show. They want
freaks out there. The freakier you are, the more money you make.”— Marie Raia, bodybuilder
and mother of Bostin Loyd
Raia still competes at age 63, but she doesn’t believe the industry will ever put safeguards in
place.
“They’ll lose money. It’s the whole thing of bodybuilding — it’s a freak show,” she said. “They
want freaks out there. The freakier you are, the more money you make.”
Dead at 43
Mariola Sabanovic-Suarez
Anita Suarez had a pit in her stomach when the phone rang and her son-in-law was on the
other line: “Please don’t tell me that something’s happened with Mariola.”
It was just days after her daughter, Mariola Sabanovic-Suarez, competed in her first
professional bodybuilding contest in the United States. The Dutch athlete had spent about 18
weeks preparing under the guidance of Starnes, the same coach who ended up working with
Kosinova and Engle. Starnes was based in Michigan and told clients in emails that he did all
of his consulting online.
Suarez knew about the long nights when her daughter stayed awake with hunger pains from
her restrictive diet and the hours after hours she trained in the gym. But there were other
parts of the contest prep that the 43-year-old kept hidden from her mother.
Three days after the Tampa Pro show in 2019, Sabanovic-Suarez was having trouble
breathing in the middle of the night. Hours later, her teenage daughter found her dead in the
hotel bed, according to law enforcement records.
Mariola Sabanovic-Suarez was found dead in her hotel bed by her teenage daughter days after
competing at a bodybuilding contest in Florida in 2019.
Her husband told police that Sabanovic-Suarez had “no existing health concerns”but had
been using clenbuterol, along with the steroids Winstrol and Anavar, for the bodybuilding
contest. Officers found caffeine pills, and a toxicology analysis alsorevealed the presence of
testosterone and boldenone, a horse steroid that bodybuilders use to build muscle and speed
up their metabolism.
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The medical examiner’s office concluded that she died of myocarditis, an inflammation of the
heart that “may be related to anabolic steroid use.”
A few days later, Starnes posted a tribute to his client on Instagram: “Rest in peace, Mariola.
A mother, wife, and sweet soul that passed away far, far too soon. Life is truly fragile and can
be taken from us in an instant.”
Starnes, a former bodybuilder and self-described hermit, has coached hundreds of athletes
around the world. He boasted on Instagram about his clients’ transformations, calling them
“freak,” “Freak show,” “freakazoid” and “Team Tapeworm.”
Starnes studied psychology in college and has talked repeatedly in interviews about why he
almost exclusively coaches women.
“I find that females are a little bit more trusting and just have less of an ego about
everything,” Starnes explained in a 2019 interview on the “Revive Stronger” podcast.
Jodie Engle
Jodie Engle trusted Starnes completely andwas pretty much willing to do anything to get that
pro card — extreme is how she approached most things in life.
When Engle reached out to Starnes for help in August 2020, she was about11 weeks away
from competition. Her previous coach had gotten sick and a friend had recommended
Starnes.
“I’m sure we can get you that pro card

” Starnes wrote to Engle.
His emails always included a disclaimer that he wasn’t a doctor or registered dietitian.
Starnes had learned coaching simply by doing it. “You’re not going to learn this stuff in books
or courses,” he said in a 2020 podcast that aired a few months after he started working with
Engle.
She said she had taken performance-enhancing drugs for several years after a judge
recommended them as a way to build up her physique more quickly. But Engle had never
seen such a detailed and aggressive plan as the one Starnes emailed her after she paid him
$900.
Jodie Engle's skin was gray under her spray tan and she was severely cramping from the diuretics she
said she had been advised to take before her competition in 2020. (Courtesy of Jodie Engle)
Starnes instructed her to stay on clenbuterol and T3for her entire prep, and added estrogen
blockers to her list, according to emails reviewed by The Post. Her coach advised her to keep
taking fourdifferent steroids, and to layer on three other steroids, including 50 milligrams of
Winstrol daily for the last six weeks.
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Engle, who worked as a finance manager in Louisville, thought it seemed early for some of
the steroids and wondered why Starnes didn’t have her cycling on and off clenbuterol the way
she normally had.
“I didn’t question it. I was just like, ‘Okay, Shelby makes freaks.’ This is what we do,” Engle
said.
She fell off a stair machineand cut her ankle the first week because her blood glucose was too
low after her coach slashed carbohydrates. Her cardio doubled from 45 to 90 minutes on
some days.
Starnes seemed proud of his new client and posted photos of Engle’s progress almost every
week on Instagram.
“Have a very good feeling about this one!” he wrote in September 2020.
Email exchange between Jodie Engle and Shelby Starnes
From: Shelby Starnes To: Jodie Engle August 31, 2020 Sounds good Get Dyazide- I
don’t think the others have Triamterene, just HCTZ From: Jodie Engle To: Shelby
Starnes Ok ill get some! I’ll be 100% ready and on plan tomorrow! Let’s go get a f---ing pro
card!!!!
Emails edited for length
That same day, Starnes was bragging online about another client, the Czech athlete Kosinova,
and posted a video of her flexing her biceps: “Would look great on the Olympia stage.”
About halfway through Engle’s training, she started getting fevers and her stomach was
bloated. She didn’t worry too much until she got the diuretic protocol that she said started 10
days before the competition. It ramped up to 200 mg of Aldactone, she said, and added
Dyazide starting the night before prejudging.
Engle lost more than six pounds in a week from the diuretics and was cramping on the plane
as she headed to the show.
At the competition, her skin was gray under her spray tan, and she had to sit on the floor
backstage at one point because it was too difficult to stand. Someone was walking around
with cups of Pedialyte for competitors. Engle hadn’t drunk for hours — it wasn’t on the plan.
When she finally made it onstage, Engle said she almost fell over because she was cramping
so badly. But she kept her feet planted and smiled at the judges.
Dead at 37
Ashley Gearhart
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Ashley Gearhart was in tears, crying on her hotel bed after she accidentally missed thecall to
the stageforher division at the Pittsburgh Pro Masters in July 2021.
“This is the worst feeling to put in all this hard work and time, effort and money and to put
your body through crazy emotions and symptoms,” Gearhart said in a video she posted on
Facebook. “You guys have no idea how hungry you can get and how weak you get, how sore
your body is and you still have to push through.”
She had been working for years with one of the industry’s top coaches, Shane Heugly, and
earned her pro card under him. Turning pro helped her attract sponsors and build her own
business as a personal trainer.
A few days after the Pittsburgh Pro, Gearhart traveled to Mexico for several surgeries to fix
her breast implants and remove back skin from a tummy tuck she had done earlier. She
hoped the operationswould ease some pain and improve her physique for the ever-critical
judges.
And when Gearhart visited her family in California this past January, she bragged about how
she had lost 10 pounds in a week.
The morning after she flew home,the 37-year-old mother of two was found dead in the
basement of her new house in Colorado. Her boyfriend told police that Gearhart was a
bodybuilder and had started seriously dieting to prepare for a competition in July, according
to law enforcement records.
“It wasn’t unusual for Ashley to wake up in the middle of the night to get something to eat
because she was starving,” he told officers.
Heugly, who is listed in the bio on Gearhart’s Instagram profile, said through an attorney that
Gearhart “was not a client” at the time of her death.
Ashley Gearhart died in January as she was dieting intensively ahead of a July competition. During a
contest she attended last year, she posted a video saying, “You guys have no idea how hungry you can
get and how weak you get, how sore your body is and you still have to push through.” (Family photo)
Renae Wegner, a former bodybuilder who got a stomach ulcer after taking the toxic chemical
DNP to lose weight, said judges are fully aware of concerns in the sport about competitors
with extremely low body fat. Since Wegner began judging several years ago, she said, officials
have talked about rewarding a softer look, but she’s never seen it in practice.
“They do the complete opposite,” Wegner said. “If they didn’t reward it, bodybuilders
wouldn’t be doing it. Bottom line.”
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Gearhart’s death records reveal just how far she was willing to go. Atoxicology analysis
turned up positive for the diuretic spironolactone — commonly known by its brand name,
Aldactone — and metformin, a diabetes medication that bodybuilders use for weight loss. She
had other pills at home, including Bronkaid, an asthma medication, and caffeine pills —
which coaches have recommended mixing together for weight loss.
Gearhart had prescriptions for metformin, spironolactone and a thyroid medication from
Randolph Whipps, the founding physician of LifeMed Institute in Maryland, which bills itself
as the largest concierge wellness facility on the East Coast.
But Gearhart did not have any apparentmedical conditions that required the use of those
prescription drugs, according to Leon Kelly, the El Paso County coroner whose office
reviewed her medical records and interviewed family members.
Whipps declined to comment, citing “privacy concerns.”
The coroner’s office concluded that Gearhart died of cardiac arrest with a number of
contributing factors, including caloric restriction, a thickened heart muscle, the use of
steroids, diuretics and metformin, along with covid-19.
“You could see clearly the role that the bodybuilding played in all of it,” Kelly said. “It was
very clear the impact the training regimen and all the medications had on her death.”
Dead at 26
Dallas McCarver
If anyone saw the warning signs of where the industry was headed, it was Guillermo
Escalante. He loved bodybuilding and competed at shows in Southern California, not far
from Muscle Beach Venice, the place that Arnold Schwarzenegger and other popular
bodybuilders had called home.
As an athletic trainer and a professor of kinesiology, Escalante also recognized the dangers.
Bodybuilders routinely showed up to contests in distress — cramping, fainting, hearts racing.
He offered to provide basic care for athletes after a competitor collapsed at a 2011 show in
Culver City and then died at a hospital.
For years, he spent weekends trekking to contests with his black medical bag. In 2015, at the
California State Championships, Escalante said he came across 24-year-old Dallas McCarver
struggling with dizziness and cramps — signs of too many diuretics. After checking his vital
signs and offering Pedialyte, Escalante said McCarver managed to get back onstage and take
first place.
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But Escalante was worried again when the young bodybuilder collapsed onstage at the
Arnold Classic Australia two years later. After withdrawing from the show in March 2017,
McCarver posted on Instagram about a respiratory infection he was fighting along with
“being in a depleted/dehydrated state for the past three weeks straight.”
Cedric McMillan, left, and Dallas McCarver compete at the Arnold Sports Festival in Columbus, Ohio,
in March 2017. McCarver died several months later at 26. McMillan died this past April at 44. (Cal
Sport Media/AP)
McCarver said in his post that he had discussed pulling out of the competition earlier with his
coach, Chad Nicholls.But the two of them decided to press on. Nicholls, who did not respond
to messages seeking comment, was a former bodybuilder. He had worked for years in the
industry and knew how despondent athletes felt leading up to shows. A bodybuilding client’s
friend once called Nicholls because he was worried that the athlete — who was training for
the Olympia — was sick and asked if he should take him to the hospital.
“No you shouldn’t take him to thef---ing hospital,” Nicholls recounted in a 2020 interview
with the “Real Bodybuilding Podcast.” “I go, ‘This is what he’s supposed to feel like.’ ... At that
lowest point you feel like you’re dying, like you feel like your body is just shutting down.”
The fragile state of bodybuilders before contests is a stark contrast to the condition of most
elite athletes before competing — at the peak of fitness.
Rumors swirled about McCarver’s health after he was carried offstage. So the bodybuilder
posted a video with one of his supplement sponsors, Aaron Singerman of Redcon1.
BUILT&BROKEN
A Washington Post investigation into the world of bodybuilding. This multipart series
explores the exploitation of women, the health risks to athletes and the man who runsthe
largest federations in the United States.
Have a tip on the bodybuilding world? Email the reporters at
[email protected].
The Women: Female bodybuilders say they were pressured to pose for sexual photos by the
son of the man in charge of the amateur and professional bodybuilding federations.
The Reporter: How a Post reporter whose father brought bodybuilding into the
mainstream ended up investigating the sport.
The Extremes: Bodybuilders are risking their lives and sometimes dying for the sport they
love because of measures encouraged by coaches, rewarded by judges and ignored by
industry leaders.
19/28
The Ideal Body (coming soon): An immersive look at how bodybuilders transform their
physiques in ways that experts say are not achievable without steroids and other drugs.
The Family (coming soon): American bodybuilding is led by three generations of men
who have created an environment where they rule unchallenged. The main rule is simple –
never cross them.
“I’m not dying. My kidneys ain’t failing. My heart’s not shutting down,” McCarver said,
having trouble catching his breath.
But a doctor’s visit shortly after did confirm he had heart problems, according to autopsy
records.
He continued training and posted frequently with Redcon1 about adding more muscle, fueled
by the company’s line of supplements.
Most professional bodybuilders can’t earn a living on the limited prize money from contests,
so they rely on contracts with companies like Redcon1 to help pay for coaches and travel.
In August 2017, months after collapsing onstage, McCarver was found unresponsive on his
living room floor. Police collected pills by the couch, vials of drugs in the refrigerator. They
identified steroids, growth hormones, peptides and estrogen blockers, according to law
enforcement records.
An autopsy found the 26-year-old had a massively enlarged heart, kidneys and liver. The
medical examiner noted that “chronic use of exogenous steroid and non-steroid hormones”
contributed to McCarver’s “premature death.”
Dead at 31
Luke Sandoe
Just months after McCarver died, Escalante came across a seriously ill Luke Sandoe at a
competition in California.
The British bodybuilder had recently competed at the Arnold Classic Australia. His coach,
Chris Aceto, proposed Sandoe start using diuretics about a week before the show. The
bodybuilder seemed a little nervous.
“That is early lol I’m sure you’ve done it a couple times this way before

” Sandoe emailed in
March 2018, according to messages reviewed by The Post.
“I do everything different,” Aceto responded.
Several days before the Arnold Classic, Aceto emailed Sandoe to take the diuretic Aldactone
every 12 hours and discussed adding a second diuretic.
20/28
Sandoe made it through that competition in Australia, but he vomited twice during
prejudging at the show in California a few months later, according to an email Sandoe sent to
contest organizers. Escalante said he saw Sandoe having labored breathing and trouble
holding his poses. After taking his vital signs, Escalante told him to go straight to the
hospital.
When he followed up with Sandoe a few days later, the bodybuilder messaged back:
“Honestly. If I didn’t go in, I would’ve died. My potassium was sky high, so dehydrated my
kidneys all but shut down.”
On May 31, Aceto checked in with his client: “Really sorry for way everything went down this
last week.”
“We play with fire in this game and sometimes things get burned

” Sandoe responded.
Luke Sandoe was advised by his coach to take diuretics days before the 2018 Arnold Classic Australia,
according to emails reviewed by The Post, and then got sick at a competition several months later. He
died in May 2020 at 31. (Family photo)
He was a little more blunt about what happened when he got back home to the United
Kingdom. Sandoe said the vomiting, combined with the diuretics he was advised to use by
Aceto, put him in a life-threatening situation.
“I think Chris also forgot how much diuretics he was giving me to use. I didn’t use all of what
he told me because I just didn’t have them with me,” Sandoe said during a June 2018 episode
of “The Size Game”podcast he co-hosted. “I don’t know whether he just forgot what he was
doing with me or whether he had too many other clients.”
Sandoe immediately faced a wave of backlash for speaking out and blaming Aceto, one of the
top coaches for male bodybuilders. Sandoe emailed an apology to Aceto that August “for the
way things spiralled out of control.”
They made amends, and shortly after, Sandoe signed on with Redcon1. As part of the
sponsorship contract, Redcon1 agreed to pay Aceto’s coaching fee, which was $3,500 in
2020, according to an email exchange between Sandoe and a company official.
The agreement, which paid Sandoe $12,000 a month, had a lot of stipulations: Sandoe was
expected to post at least once a day on Instagram and any other social platforms as directed
by the company; be filmed daily for advertising and marketing; and make up to 24
appearances a year, among other requirements.
Email exchange between Luke Sandoe and Chris Aceto