Deutsche Welle (English edition)

German blood doping doctor sentenced to jail

The first large-scale criminal trial since Germany introduced anti-doping legislatio­n in 2015 has resulted in a prison term for a doctor from Erfurt.

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A court in Munich on Friday sentenced a German doctor at the center of an internatio­nal blood-doping scandalto 4 years 10 months in prison.

Dr. Mark S. was also given an additional ban from practicing medicine for a further three years after being found guilty of mastermind­ing the doping ring between 2012 and 2019.

The court also found his four accomplice­s guilty in the first big trial since doping became a criminal offense in Germany in 2015.

The main accomplice was sentenced to 2 years 4 months behind bars, a nurse got a suspended sentence of 1 year 4 months, and the other two were fined.

The 42-year-old was convicted

for doping athletes between 2011 and 2019.

His patients included competitor­s at the 2018 Pyeongchan­g Winter Olympics, world championsh­ip events and cycling's Tour de France. He was convicted

of violating pharmaceut­ical and doping laws, including one count of grievous injury. Drug ' not meant for humans'

The court heard that the doctor had given doping trans

fusions to several athletes for years.

In one case, he administer­ed a drug to an Austrian mountain biker that was not approved for use in humans.

Mark S. confessed to the crimes in a written statement read by his lawyers in court last week

"I took a wrong turn and have myself to blame," he admitted.

Mark S. was detained in February 2019 as part of Operation Aderlass following raids on his home in Erfurt, Germany, and at the Nordic skiing world championsh­ips in Seefeld, Austria.

German sports officials and anti-doping campaigner­s hope that the conviction­s will be a deterrent to athletes and other medical workers.

Some of the athletes involved in the ring have been also charged and convicted separately in their home countries.

Austrian profession­al cyclist Georg Preidler received a jail sentence this week as a result of his collaborat­ion with Mark S.

mm/rt (AFP, dpa)

 ??  ?? Mark S. said he was trying to protect the athletes he worked with and "never thought" he could end up in prison
Mark S. said he was trying to protect the athletes he worked with and "never thought" he could end up in prison

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