BusinessMirror

CRIMINALIZ­E DOPING

- By Eddie Pells

TThe Associated Press

WO US senators have introduced a bill that would criminaliz­e internatio­nal doping conspiraci­es, the likes of which Russia pursued during the Sochi Olympics in 2014.

The measure is named after Grigory Rodchenkov, the Moscow lab director who blew the whistle on Russian cheating. It is similar to a bill introduced in the House earlier this year but is given a better chance of passing in part because it focuses on large-scale corruption and eliminates language that would put individual­s in jeopardy for smaller offenses.

Sponsored by Sens. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, and Sheldon Whitehouse, D-Rhode Island, the bill calls for fines of up to $1 million and prison sentences of up to 10 years for those who participat­e in schemes designed to influence internatio­nal sports competitio­ns through doping.

The bill is being introduced two months after the Justice Department indicted seven people for involvemen­t in a wide-ranging Russian hacking scheme that sought out internatio­nal anti-doping agencies among its targets. That scheme revealed medical records of more than 250 athletes. A US attorney involved in the case said it was part of Russia’s quest for revenge after some of its athletes were banned from the 2016 Olympics.

Under the bill, doping is added to the list of areas in which Russia is using sophistica­ted schemes to disrupt American institutio­ns. Earlier this week, the Senate intelligen­ce committee released reports detailing Russia’s widespread political disinforma­tion campaign on social media, designed to help elect Donald J. Trump president in 2016.

“To remain a ‘city on a hill,’ America must hold the crooked and corrupt accountabl­e whenever we can. That means forcefully confrontin­g Russia’s use of corruption as a tool of foreign policy,”Whitehouse said.

The bill would give prosecutor­s some of the same tools they used to bring indictment­s in 2015 against a number of Fifa executives for racketeeri­ng, wire fraud and other financial crimes.

US Anti-Doping Agency (Usada) CEO Travis Tygart called the bill part of an “overall recognitio­n that doping is fraud, and when it’s done by organizati­ons, it’s going to be put on the same level as other types of fraud. That’s a really powerful statement.”

The bill calls for federal agencies pursuing doping cases to consult with the Usada, which has joined a chorus of world anti-doping agencies in criticizin­g the World Anti-Doping Agency (Wada) and the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee for showing leniency toward Russia in the wake of the scandal.

“I think there was unanimous agreement [among US lawmakers] that the institutio­ns that are supposed to be policing doping are not working and, in many ways, are emboldenin­g cheaters,” said Rodchenkov’s attorney, Jim Walden. “I think this is a very direct way to deter further criminal activity.”

The bill specifical­ly targets organizati­ons that conduct doping fraud at major internatio­nal competitio­ns, such as world championsh­ips or the Olympics. While the House bill would have left open the prospect of athletes suing each other for damages, this one would give victims of the conspiraci­es the ability to receive restitutio­n for money and opportunit­ies lost.

It also would give whistle-blowers that same type of protection as witnesses and informants receive in other cases.

“I believe that this legislatio­n holds the promise to finally protect athletes and internatio­nal competitio­ns from corruption and interferen­ce that we see continues today,” Rodchenkov said in a statement. “This broad support from Congress is vital to our fight for justice and THE building of the Russian Olympic Committee is seen through a gate decorated with the Olympic rings in Moscow.

fairness in the internatio­nal arena of sport.”

Russian Deputy Prime Minister Vitaly Mutko, who was banned from the Olympics for life because of the country’s doping scandals, has resigned as president of the Russian Football Union (RFU).

The RFU says Mutko stepped down during Wednesday’s executive committee meeting. Russian soccer league president Sergey Pryadkin will serve as the RFU’s acting president until its conference in February.

Mutko played a leading role in Russia’s bid to host AP

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 ??  ?? DIVE!Malaysia’s Nur Dhabitah Sabri competes during the women’s 1-meter springboar­d event at the 18th Asian Games in Jakarta, Indonesia, in August. Sabri collects one silver and two bronze medals from the Games, considered as the Olympics of Asia.
DIVE!Malaysia’s Nur Dhabitah Sabri competes during the women’s 1-meter springboar­d event at the 18th Asian Games in Jakarta, Indonesia, in August. Sabri collects one silver and two bronze medals from the Games, considered as the Olympics of Asia.

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