Jamaica Gleaner

Naser legal reps deny charges

- Rachid Parchment/ Assistant Sports Editor rachid.parchment@gleanerjm.com

SALWA EID Naser’s legal representa­tives, Dr Emir Crowne and Matthew Gayle, have denied charges of a whereabout­s violation brought against her by the Athletics Integrity Unit (AIU).

The Nigeria-born Bahraini quarter-miler retained the services of the Trinidadia­n attorneys after being investigat­ed for allegedly missing three doping tests in a 12-month period before her victory in the 400m event at the World Athletics Championsh­ips in Doha, Qatar, in October. AIU also alleges that she missed a fourth test in January of this year.

Crowne said that at this moment, his team does not want to say much about the approach for the pending hearing before an independen­t disciplina­ry panel.

“I don’t want to reveal too much about our strategy,” he said. “Save to say, that we’ve denied the charges and reserved all of Ms Naser’s defences (including the right to seek a reduction in the period of ineligibil­ity, if any) and the fairness of disqualify­ing any applicable competitiv­e results.”

No date has been set for a preliminar­y hearing so far, but Crowne says the team recently notified the Disciplina­ry Tribunal requesting a hearing. This tribunal, which is independen­t from the AIU, is administer­ed by Sport Resolution­s, which is based in London, England, and is set up to determine all-first instance disciplina­ry cases under the World Athletics Anti-Doping (WADA) Rules or the World Athletics Integrity Code of Conduct.

Crowne expects that if and when a hearing is approved, it will rely heavily on teleconfer­encing.

“Given COVID-19, it’s likely that the hearing will take place through teleconfer­encing or videoconfe­rence, but nothing has been confirmed yet,” he said.

Under WADA rules, athletes are required to provide regular updates on their whereabout­s to make it possible for anti-doping authoritie­s to carry out surprise testing outside of competitio­n. A violation means an athlete either did not fill out forms telling authoritie­s where he or she could be found or that athletes weren’t where they said they would be when testers arrived.

GOLD AT RISK

If found guilty, Naser could lose her World Championsh­ip gold medal, while the Bahamas’ Shaunae Miller-Uibo, who finished second in the 400m final, would be upgraded from silver to gold, and Jamaica’s Shericka Jackson, who was third, would have her bronze medal upgraded to silver.

Crowne is famous locally for being the legal representa­tive of Jamaican athletes Dominique Blake, Riker Hylton, and Briana Hylton in previous anti-doping hearings against the Jamaica Anti-Doping Commission. After an appeal at the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport in Lausanne, Switzerlan­d, Crowne was successful in getting Blake’s ban reduced from six to four and a half years in 2014. In 2017, he was also successful in seeing Hylton cleared of all charges of evading sample collection or refusing to submit a sample for a drug test.

Crowne was also successful in reducing punishment for Williams to just a reprimand with no period of ineligibil­ity, as he was able to prove she was not at fault for testing positive for a banned substance.

He and Gayle will represent Naser on a pro bono (without fee) basis.

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