The Court of
Arbitration for Sport (CAS) has issued its decision in the appeal arbitration
procedure between the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA), the Australian
professional motorcycle rider Anthony West and the Fédération Internationale de
Motocyclisme (FIM). The appeal filed by WADA has been partially upheld, the FIM
decision to suspend the rider for one month has been set aside and a period of
ineligibility of 18 months has been imposed on the rider.
WADA appealed to the
CAS against the decision issued on 2
October 2012 by the FIM
International Disciplinary Court (FIM IDC) in which the rider was sanctioned
with a one-month ban following a positive anti-doping control for methylhexaneamine,a stimulant which is prohibited in competition.
In its appeal, WADA requested that the FIM IDC’s decision be annulled and that
a two-year period of ineligibility be imposed on the rider. For his defence,
the rider admitted that he had been slightly careless and argued that he committed
a minor doping violation and that a three month period of ineligibility should
be the maximum proportional sanction. He also added that in motorcycling,
cheating involves the equipment rather than the rider.
The case was referred to a panel of CAS
arbitrators (Prof. Jan Paulsson, Bahrain (President), Prof. Richard H. McLaren,
Canada, and Mr Efraim Barak, Israel), who heard the parties, their witnesses
and their legal representatives at a hearing held in Lausanne on 21 August
2013.
The rider explained that the prohibited
substance had entered his system through an energy drink (“Mesomorph”) that he
had purchased, prepared, and consumed on the assumption that it did not contain
any prohibited substances since it was purchased in a nutritional shop.
The CAS Panel found that an anti-doping
rule violation had occurred and that, according to the applicable regulations,
a maximum of two-year suspension could be imposed, unless there were grounds
for it to be eliminated or shortened. In light of the circumstances of the case
and the degree of fault of the athlete, as well as the fact that
methylhexaneamine is a stimulant with short term effects which are not
insignificant in competition, the Panel considered it appropriate to impose an
eighteen-month period of ineligibility, less the one month provisional
suspension already served. The start date of the ban was set back to the date
of sample collection, 20 May 2012, and all sporting results obtained by the
athlete from 20 May 2012 to the end of the sanction are invalidated.
The arbitral award will be published on the
CAS website in the next few days.
Source: Press release TAS/CAS
Geen opmerkingen:
Een reactie posten