Albuquerque Journal

New informatio­n on Russia cheating shared with IOC

Moscow lab exposed doping

- BY DAVID WHARTON

Anti-doping authoritie­s met with officials from around the Olympics world Thursday to share “valuable intelligen­ce” regarding allegation­s of cheating at a Russian testing laboratory.

The World Anti-Doping Agency had acquired the informatio­n from a database at a Moscow lab and expressed confidence in its veracity earlier this year.

WADA’s independen­t McLaren Investigat­ion previously found that the Russians manipulate­d samples during the 2014 Sochi Winter Games to prevent their athletes from testing positive.

Now, the anti-doping agency has given the database informatio­n to the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee and the internatio­nal federation­s that govern each sport.

“It is now over to them to diligently follow up on this new intelligen­ce,” said Gunter Younger, a WADA official. “We will be available to advise and guide each federation in the handling of their respective cases.”

The meeting comes shortly after the IOC banned Russia from competing as a nation at the upcoming 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchan­g, South Korea.

Much of the investigat­ion into sample tampering has hinged on testimony from Grigory Rodchenkov, former director of the Moscow lab.

The whistleblo­wer has been living in the U.S. under witness protection. On Thursday, Russian President Vladimir Putin accused the U.S. of coercing Rodchenkov into making false claims.

“What are they doing with him there?” Putin asked, according to the Associated Press. “Are they giving him some kind of substances so that he says what’s required?”

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