Weekend Herald

Swimmer charged with false complaint after robbery claim

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Brazilian police charged American swimmer Ryan Lochte yesterday with filing a false robbery report over an incident during the Rio Olympics.

A police statement said Lochte would be informed in the United States so he could decide whether to introduce a defence in Brazil.

The indictment will also be sent to the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee’s ethics commission, the statement said.

The swimmer’s spokeswoma­n, Melissa Nathan, said Lochte had no comment.

During the Games, Lochte initially said that he and fellow swimmers Jack Conger, Gunnar Bentz and Jimmy Feigen were robbed at gunpoint in a taxi by men with a police badge as they returned to the Olympic Village from a party on August 15. However, security video suggested the four in fact faced security guards after vandalisin­g a service station.

Lochte left Brazil shortly after the incident. Three days later, local authoritie­s took Conger and Bentz off an airliner heading to the US so they could be questioned about the robbery claim. They were later allowed to leave Brazil, as was Feigen, after he gave testimony. Feigen, who initially stood by Lochte’s testimony, was not charged.

Lochte has since acknowledg­ed that he was highly intoxicate­d and that his behaviour led to the confrontat­ion. It is not clear from the video whether a gun was ever pointed at the athletes.

Under Brazilian law, the penalty for falsely filing a crime report carries a maximum penalty of 18 months in prison. Lochte could be tried in absentia if he didn’t return to face the charge.

The US and Brazil have an extraditio­n treaty dating back to the 1960s, but Brazil has a long history of not extraditin­g its own citizens to other nations and American authoritie­s could take the same stance if Lochte is found guilty.

That is currently the case of the head of Brazil’s football confederat­ion, Marco Polo del Nero, who faces charges in the wide- ranging scandal entangling internatio­nal football’s ruling body, Fifa. He has not travelled outside Brazil for more than a year to avoid being arrested by US authoritie­s elsewhere.

The charges in Brazil raise questions about the future for Lochte, who is planning to take time off from swimming but wants to return to compete in the 2020 Tokyo Olympics. He has 12 Olympic medals, second only to Michael Phelps among US male Olympians.

Lochte lost four major sponsors early this week over the controvers­y, including Speedo USA and Ralph Lauren. But yesterday, he picked up a new sponsor — Pine Bros Softish Throat Drops. Pine Bros said people should be more understand­ing of the swimmer and said he will appear in ads that say the company’s product is “Forgiving on your throat”.

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