The 32-year-old flyweight had tested positive
for two substances banned by the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA)
in an out-of-competition urine test on Feb. 13, the USADA said
in a statement.
"The low amounts of letrozole metabolite and GW1516 metabolites
detected in her sample were consistent with recent exposure to
the substances via sexual transmission," the USADA said it had
determined in its investigation.
The anti-doping body said Fuchs's partner had been using
therapeutic doses of the two substances and that Fuchs bore no
fault or negligence for the adverse finding and would therefore
not be banned.
"We strongly believe this case and others like it, including
meat contamination and prescription medication contamination
cases should be considered no violation," USADA chief Travis
Tygart said.
Fuchs narrowly missed out on qualifying for the Rio Olympics in
2016 and has now set her sights on next year's delayed Tokyo
Games.
"This has been a huge lesson for me and now that is over, I'm
fully focused on preparing for Tokyo," she wrote on Twitter.
The usual punishment for the use of banned substances is a
four-year ban from all WADA-compliant sports.
In 2017, USADA allowed middle-distance runner Ajee Wilson off
without a suspension, concluding that traces of an anabolic
agent in her sample had come from contaminated beef.
(Reporting by Arvind Sriram in Bengaluru; Editing by Robert
Birsel)
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