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  • Sydney: D-Day for accused Olympic athletes

    Sydney Morning Herald, Australia
    The Age, Australia
    July 15 2004

    D-Day for accused Olympic athletes


    Friday is D-Day for two Australian Olympic athletes accused of drug
    offences.

    Weightlifter Caroline Pileggi will learn whether her appeal against
    being dumped from the Athens Games is successful, and cyclist Jobie
    Dajka is expecting to learn the outcome of police investigations into
    him.

    Accused cyclist Sean Eadie, meanwhile, will have a nervous weekend.

    His appeal against a drugs infraction notice for allegedly importing
    banned human growth hormones will be heard in the Court of
    Arbitration for Sport in Sydney on Monday evening.

    Pileggi, who was to have been Australia's first Olympic female
    weightlifter, was dropped from the Athens team after refusing a drugs
    test in Fiji in June.

    But she told the Administrative Appeals Tribunal in Melbourne that
    she fled from two drug testing officials in Sigatoka, Fiji, because
    she did not know who they were.

    "I didn't feel safe," she told the tribunal.

    One of the New Zealand testing officials, acting on behalf of the
    Australian Sports Drug Agency (ASDA), later admitted that he was not
    familiar with the regulations and had not correctly identified
    himself at their first meeting.

    He also said he had not followed the correct procedure for signing
    the form.

    "The circumstances were less than ideal," Vaughan Jones told senior
    Tribunal member Narelle Bell.

    Dajka expects to know the outcome of police investigations into his
    case, including possible links with an Adelaide veterinarian.

    Dajka, 22, has had his nomination for the Athens team suspended
    pending police inquiries and continuing investigations by former WA
    Supreme Court judge Robert Anderson, QC.

    The clock is ticking on a number of other matters which need to be
    resolved before the July 21 deadline for finalising Australia's
    Athens team, expected to number 475.

    These include:

    + A Customs check on all potential Athens team members to determine
    whether any of them may have been involved in importing banned
    substances. The Australian Sports Commission expects results on
    Friday. These will be forwarded to the Australian Olympic Committee,
    which is waiting to finalise the team.

    + The result of a drugs test on former Armenian weightlifter Sergo
    Chakhoyan. Chakhoyan, who served a two-year suspension after testing
    positive at the Goodwill Games in Brisbane in 2001, was recently
    tested in Armenia. A spokesman for the ASDA said the outcome was
    expected in the next few days.

    + The outcome of four appeals by track and field athletes who missed
    out on selection - Patrick Johnson (100m, 200m), Tim Williams (4x100m
    relay), Annabelle Smith (400m), and Paul Pearce (4x400m relay). The
    appeal will be heard in Sydney on Friday and the results are expected
    on the day.

    Mountain biker Josh Fleming was added to the Athens team after
    successfully appealing his original non-selection.

    Cycling Australia's appeals tribunal found that the selection
    criteria had been incorrectly applied.

    Fleming, 28, replaces South Australian Chris Jongewaard, 24.
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