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IOC forms panel to investigate drug drama

Process involving Austrian athletes, coach could take months

IOC medical commission chairman Arne Ljungqvist reported no evidence of doping was detected in samples from 10 Austrian skiers targeted in late-night raids and subjected to surprise tests.
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updated 5:08 a.m. ET Feb. 26, 2006

TURIN, Italy - The IOC formed a special panel Saturday to investigate the doping scandal surrounding Austria’s cross-country and biathlon teams at the Turin Olympics.

International Olympic Committee president Jacques Rogge appointed a three-man disciplinary commission to look into all the elements of banned coach Walter Mayer’s involvement with the team.

Mayer’s presence in Italy triggered a police raid on the Austrians’ private lodgings and no-notice doping tests by the IOC on six cross-country skiers and four biathletes. The tests came back negative Friday, but the IOC and Italian police are pressing ahead with the case.

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The disciplinary panel is made up of German IOC vice president and lawyer Thomas Bach, Ukranian member and former pole vaulter Sergei Bubka and Swiss IOC executive Denis Oswald.

The IOC had indicated the panel would be formed sometime after the close of the games on Sunday, but Rogge decided to set up the group after briefing the IOC executive board Saturday morning.

IOC spokeswoman Giselle Davies said the commission will begin working “from next week onwards,” in a process that could go on for weeks or months.

The panel will investigate “the whole Mayer affair, the big picture,” she said.

Davies said the IOC had not yet received any official information from the Italian authorities on the raid, which will be a key element in the Olympic body’s inquiry.

The IOC can punish athletes, coaches and teams without positive tests, relying instead on police evidence or proof of possession of doping substances.

The IOC said Friday that the 10 negative drug tests were “only one element in what is undoubtedly an affair which goes far wider.”

In addition, the IOC is doing follow-up blood tests on the athletes to look for evidence of possible blood transfusions. The 10 negative tests involved only urine samples.

Under the IOC investigation, athletes could be disqualified retroactively and have their Olympic results annulled. Austrian team officials and coaches also could be sanctioned.

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The IOC and police targeted the Austrians last Saturday at their rented accommodations in the mountain villages of Pragelato and San Sicario. Police seized what they described as blood equipment, syringes and other materials.

Mayer, who was implicated in a blood doping case at the 2002 Salt Lake City Games, was banned by the IOC from the Turin Olympics and 2010 Vancouver Games.

He fled Italy in the wake of the raids, only to crash his car into a police blockade just over the Austrian border and ending up in a psychiatric hospital.

Italy’s top anti-doping prosecutor, Raffaele Guariniello, said Saturday that materials seized in the raid were still being analyzed. Once the results came through, authorities would offer “full collaboration” with the IOC, he said.

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In Sestriere, a top Austrian Olympic official also promised full cooperation with the IOC investigations.

“Austria has great relations with the IOC,” said Heinz Jungwirth, general secretary of the Austrian Olympic Committee. said. “We don’t want to put anything under the table.”

Jungwirth defended Mayer’s right to be at the games.

“He’s a free person,” Jungwirth said. “We have no moral obligation to keep him away from here. As far as we’re concerned, he’s a tourist.”

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