Ethics Board extends IAAF officials' suspension
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[December 07, 2016]
By Mitch Phillips
LONDON (Reuters) - Three senior
athletics officials have had their provisional suspension from the
sport extended by the IAAF's Ethics Board as it continues its
investigation into their alleged involvement in a suspected cover-up
of Russian doping cases.
Nick Davies, who was chief-of-staff to International Association of
Athletics Federations president Seb Coe, was initially suspended
along with his wife Jane Boulter-Davies and IAAF medical manager
Pierre-Yves Garnier in June.
On Wednesday the Ethics Board issued a statement saying the
suspensions had been extended until Jan. 31 2017 "to allow for the
conclusion of the disciplinary investigative process, including any
hearing ensuing from the investigations."
Davies stood down from his role last December pending the
investigation into a "potential breach of the IAAF's code of
ethics".
The Ethics Board statement on Wednesday added: "Each of the three
individuals continue to enjoy the presumption of innocence and the
extension of the orders for provisional suspension should not be
interpreted as any departure from the principle that each individual
is to be considered innocent until the conclusion of the
disciplinary investigative process."
The investigations relate to an email reportedly sent by former IAAF
consultant Papa Massata Diack to his father, the then-IAAF president
Lamine Diack, in July 2013 that allegedly showed the three suspended
IAAF officials were in receipt of, or had knowledge of, a cash
payment to withhold details of attempted cover-ups of Russian doping
cases.
Other emails leaked earlier this year showed Davies had discussed
with Papa Diack developing a media strategy to limit the news impact
of a series of positive tests by Russian athletes ahead of the 2013
Moscow world athletics championships.
MEDIA STRATEGY
Davies said that the mail was merely "brainstorming for a media
strategy" and that he had done nothing wrong.
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Journalists are seen near a logo of the International Association of
Athletics Federations (IAAF) at a hotel where the IAAF council holds
a meeting in Vienna, Austria, June 17, 2016. REUTERS/Leonhard Foeger
Last month he told the Daily Mail: "I was conned and never for a
second was I told, or thought, this money was to ensure cover-ups of
doping in Russia. That would have been abhorrent to me.
"I thought I could trust Lamine Diack and it was my job to promote
and protect the image of the IAAF and the World Championships. I was
never mixed up or aware of the criminal activities which are now in
the public domain."
French authorities are investigating Lamine Diack and Papa Diack on
charges of corruption and money laundering. Papa Diack has denied
any involvement in bribery or corruption and says his father Lamine
is also innocent.
At the time of the initial suspensions in June, the Ethics Board
said that Davies, a former IAAF general secretary and head of
communications, received an undisclosed cash payment in 2013 from
Papa Massata Diack, "the circumstances and concealment of which call
into question whether the payment was intended to have and/or in
fact produced any manipulative effect."
Boulter-Davies allegedly received, or knew about, a payment to
Davies. Garnier allegedly received an undisclosed cash payment at
the direction of Lamine Diack and "retained some part of the sum
even when aware of its apparent impropriety".
(Editing by Ken Ferris)
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