Toronto Star

Hidden trove of Russian doping data leaked

Whistleblo­wer provides new evidence that might show scope of Olympic cheating

- REBECCA R. RUIZ THE NEW YORK TIMES

The World Anti-Doping Agency, the global regulator of drugs in sports, has obtained a digital trove of data that holds the results of drug tests run on Russian athletes dating back several years, according to two people with direct knowledge who requested anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly.

The database, fiercely protected by Russian authoritie­s who have been unwilling to share the informatio­n with anti-doping investigat­ors, did not arrive through official channels but rather from a whistleblo­wer, according to a person with direct knowledge of the situation. It is considered a final piece of the puzzle revealing the contours of a doping scheme that Russia conducted across multiple Olympics.

Informatio­n in the database is believed to include thousands of drug tests, drasticall­y expanding the scope of the Russian doping scandal and providing a new level of evidence just as the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee weighs how to penalize Russia before the 2018 Winter Games in Pyeongchan­g, South Korea. New evi- dence contained in the database could compel Olympic officials to issue stiffer penalties.

It is unclear exactly what time period the database covers. The elaborate cheating that investigat­ors have previously detailed extended from 2011 to 2015.

Aspokesper­son for the World AntiDoping Agency did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment. The agency planned on Friday to announce a new approach to handling disciplina­ry cases “in light of new evidence,” according to a draft news release shared with The New York Times.

Russian officials did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment submitted to the government’s sports ministry.

Through an independen­t investigat­ion conducted last year by the Canadian lawyer Richard McLaren, the anti-doping watchdog deconstruc­ted Russia’s cheating schemes and determined that some 1,000 athletes had been tied up in them over 31⁄

2 years. Still, officials determined that many individual cases would be hard or impossible to prosecute, in part because of Russia’s lack of co-operation in providing certain evidence, including stored urine samples and the electronic lab records on past tests.

Anti-doping officials from several countries who have urged Olympic leaders to take a harder stance against Russia in the wake of McLaren’s investigat­ion — even calling for the nation to be barred from the Pyeongchan­g Games — have pointed to Russia’s refusal to turn over the electronic data.

The World Anti-Doping Agency had ordered Russia to share the database before the watchdog would agree to restore Russia to good standing and certify its compliance with the global anti-doping code. The agency is due to evaluate Russia’s co-operation and decide whether to recertify the nation at a meeting next week in Seoul, South Korea.

Investigat­ors who have studied how Russia corrupted several Olympics — most notably the 2014 Sochi Games, where the country controlled the anti-doping laboratory and dominated the medal standings — have coveted the electronic files from Moscow.

Known as laboratory informatio­n management system data, the records reflect the results of lab tests run on the machines in Russia’s national anti-doping lab, a nondescrip­t five-story building a few miles from the Kremlin. They also reveal the identity of the athlete to whom each lab analysis correspond­ed.

Without a positive drug test, it can be challengin­g to build a case against an athlete that will withstand a legal challenge. To date, Olympic officials have issued sanctions against six Russian Olympians who competed in Sochi and exonerated another; investigat­ions into scores of others are continuing.

Global officials from each sport have separately been asked to review allegation­s against hundreds of athletes. The anti-doping regulator itself has agreed to close at least 95 such suspicious cases identified by McLaren based on a lack of evidence.

Olympic officials are currently deliberati­ng how to punish Russia for its state-sponsored schemes, for which no Russian government official was allowed to attend the 2016 Rio Games. The Internatio­nal Olympic Committee is expected to announced its decision regarding Russia’s participat­ion in the 2018 Winter Games in early December.

The issue has escalated far beyond the sports world, stirring geopolitic­al rhetoric. President Vladimir Putin this week criticized the recent disciplina­ry decisions against Russian Olympians as a U.S. attempt to undermine Russia and affect his nation’s presidenti­al election in March.

 ?? MATTHIAS SCHRADER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? The World Anti-Doping Agency obtained a database believed to include thousands of drug tests run on Russian athletes dating back several years.
MATTHIAS SCHRADER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO The World Anti-Doping Agency obtained a database believed to include thousands of drug tests run on Russian athletes dating back several years.

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