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Investigation alleges doping corruption in weightlifting

In this file photo dated Wednesday, Aug. 1, 2012, Romania's Roxana Cocos competes during the women's 69-kg weightlifting competition at the 2012 Summer Olympics, in London. A culture of alleged corruption among international weightlifting officials has been detailed in a 50-page investigative report released Thursday June 24, 2021, of covered-up doping cases, with Cocos stripped of her medal years later when re-tests revealed her steroid use.(AP Photo/Hassan Ammar, FILE) 
In this file photo dated Wednesday, Aug. 1, 2012, Romania's Roxana Cocos competes during the women's 69-kg weightlifting competition at the 2012 Summer Olympics, in London. A culture of alleged corruption among international weightlifting officials has been detailed in a 50-page investigative report released Thursday June 24, 2021, of covered-up doping cases, with Cocos stripped of her medal years later when re-tests revealed her steroid use.(AP Photo/Hassan Ammar, FILE)
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A culture of alleged corruption among international weightlifting officials was detailed Thursday in an investigative report of covered-up doping cases for athletes who won Olympic and world championship medals.

Three of the sport's longtime leaders - former International Weightlifting Federation president Tamas Ajan, vice president Nicolae Vlad and executive board member Hasan Akkus - were charged with a range of complicity and tampering offenses under the World Anti-Doping Code.

Alleged misconduct for a decade up to 2019, including 146 unresolved doping cases, was laid out in a 50-page document. The investigation was run by the International Testing Agency, which manages anti-doping programs for Olympic sports.

Reasons for the failures to prosecute some doping cases ranged from 鈥渃haotic organizational processes鈥 and errors to 鈥渙utright negligence, complicity, or - at worst - blatant and intentional cover-ups,鈥 ITA investigators wrote. A total of 29 cases cannot be prosecuted due to destroyed evidence or expiring statute of limitations.

Ajan and Vlad were implicated in allowing a woman from Vlad's home country, Romania, whom they knew was implicated in doping offenses, to compete and win a silver medal at the 2012 London Olympics. The lifter, Roxana Cocos, was stripped of her medal years later when retests revealed her steroid use.

The ITA has proposed lifetime bans for Ajan and Vlad, while Akkus has been offered a four-year ban. If they don't accept the bans, the ITA will prosecute the charges at the Court of Arbitration for Sport's anti-doping tribunal.

Vlad was a gold medalist at the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics and longtime ally of Ajan at the IWF.

Ajan was ousted after 20 years as IWF president in the fallout of the allegations first aired by German broadcaster ARD in January 2020.

The ITA report gave 鈥渟ignificant credit鈥 to the German program for its 鈥渞obust investigative journalism.鈥

The documentary 鈥淭he Lord of the Lifters鈥 alleged financial and anti-doping misconduct and led to an initial IWF-appointed investigation last year by Richard McLaren, the Canadian law professor who uncovered much of the Russian state doping scandal.

Now 82, Ajan also resigned his honorary membership of the International Olympic Committee last year. He had been a full member for 10 years until 2010 and took part in choosing Olympic host cities, including Beijing, Sochi and Rio de Janeiro.

Vlad continues to be an IWF vice president and an influential figure as the governing body prepares to elect Ajan's successor. Akkus heads weightlifting's European governing body.

Weightlifting's place at the 2024 Paris Olympics is at risk with the IOC warning it wants to see reforms and the sport cleaned up.

IWF interim president Michael Irani said in a statement that the investigation showed 鈥渏ust how dark the dark days of our sport were.鈥

鈥淭o all those athletes who were cheated of the opportunity to compete fairly, I would like to offer the IWF's unreserved apology,鈥 said Irani, who previously served on Ajan's executive board.

The ITA investigation also detailed how weightlifting officials evaded World Anti-Doping Agency scrutiny over several years.

Under Ajan, the IWF decided it 鈥渃ould simply ignore WADA's repeated requests to be provided with doping sanction information in a timely and accurate manner.鈥

WADA said Thursday it had in the past 鈥渓imited powers to act against international federations that engaged in the sort of behavior that is alleged.鈥

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