Palmer
reprimanded for doping test, clear for Rio
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[September 16, 2015]
SYDNEY (Reuters) - Olympic relay
gold medalist Kylie Palmer has been reprimanded for a 2013 doping
violation, Swimming Australia said on Wednesday, clearing the way for
her to compete at next year's Rio Games.
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World governing body FINA had initially cleared Palmer in 2013 after
the "low levels of a prohibited substance" found in her
in-competition sample at the Barcelona world championships did not
show up in other tests conducted around the same time.
In February this year, however, the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA)
obtained details of the case and subsequently asked the Court of
Arbitration of Sport to order FINA to treat the case as an
anti-doping violation.
Palmer then voluntarily withdrew from the Australian team for last
month's world championships in Kazan and accepted a temporary
suspension.
FINA's doping panel ruled on Tuesday she should receive only a
warning and reprimand, with her results and prize money on the date
of the test in 2013 annulled, Swimming Australia said.
The world governing body did not strip her of the 4x200m freestyle
silver medal she won at Barcelona.
"Swimming Australia fully supported the process once the matter came
before the FINA Doping Tribunal and accepts the findings," the
governing body in Australia said in a statement.
"Palmer voluntarily accepted a provisional suspension until the
matter was determined by the FINA Doping Panel.
"As such she is now able to compete whenever she decides to return."
Swimming Australia had previously said it was concerned at the
two-year delay between the test and notification.
Palmer, who strongly denies knowingly ingesting any banned
substances, was a 4x200m freestyle relay champion at the 2008
Beijing Olympics and a silver medalist in the same event four years
later in London.
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"I am very pleased that the decision of the panel means that I can
return to competitive swimming immediately," she said in a
statement.
"My number one goal is to represent Australia at the Rio Olympics in
2016 and I cannot wait to get back on track to achieving that dream.
"I sincerely hope that this process is now over. It has been a
distressing few months since I was first notified of the positive
test back in April 2015," added Palmer.
The case had denied her the chance to swim for Australia at the
world championships in Kazan and that was something she could never
get back.
"I cannot get back that opportunity to represent my country
internationally but I am now looking to the future," she said.
(Reporting by Greg Stutchbury in Wellington; Editing by Peter
Rutherford)
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