In response to NASCAR’s claim that Mayfield again tested positive for methamphetamines on July 6, Mayfield submitted an affidavit to the U.S. District Court that said he traveled to Frye Regional Medical Center in Hickory, N.C., right after NASCAR collected a sample at his Catawba County home.
In a room he described as “very sterile,” Mayfield said he emptied his pockets, washed his hands and was ushered into a bathroom, where he provided another urine sample.
Mayfield said in the court filing he received confirmation from Laboratory Corporation of America in Raleigh, N.C., that his sample was negative on July 10 — the same day NASCAR informed his counsel that its sample was positive.
“It is impossible for methamphetamine to be in my body as I have never consumed that substance.”
Dr. Harold Schueler of the Broward County (Fla.) Medical Examiner’s Office, filed an affidavit on behalf of Mayfield that claimed the levels of methamphetamine in NASCAR’s test are “astronomical” and “could be remotely accurate, unless Mr. Mayfield was deceased or a chronic abuser.”
The filing also denied accusations made last week by his estranged former stepmother, who said in her own affidavit she witnessed Mayfield use methamphetamines at least 30 times and that the driver cooked it himself until the ingredients became too hard to obtain.
“I deny Lisa Mayfield’s allegation that I used, cooked or purchased methamphetamines,” Mayfield wrote. “Lisa Mayfield’s assertion that I used methamphetamine just prior to the 1999 Darlington race is a lie. I finished second in the 1999 Darlington race.”
There were two races at Darlington in 1999, and Mayfield finished second and third. Lisa Mayfield’s affidavit, submitted last week by NASCAR, did not specify before which race she witnessed him using drugs.

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