In this Monday, April 17, 2006, photo Rita Jeptoo of Kenya holds the trophy after winning the women's division of the 110th running of the Boston Marathon, in Boston. (AP Photo/Elise Amendola) |
Kenyan police
investigating doping searched the hotel rooms of two Italian athlete managers
during the Kenyan Olympic trials, and questioned the two men at police
headquarters on Monday July 4, 2016. The agents, Federico Rosa and his father,
Gabriele, represent a number of top Kenyan athletes and previously represented
marathon runner Rita Jeptoo, one of the highest-profile Kenyans to be banned
for doping.
Police investigating
doping searched the hotel rooms of two Italian athlete managers during the
Kenyan Olympic trials, and questioned the two men at police headquarters on Monday,
one of the managers disclosed.
The
Associated Press report continues:
The
agents, Federico Rosa and his father, Gabriele, represent a number of top
Kenyan athletes and previously represented marathon champion Rita Jeptoo, one
of the highest-profile Kenyans to be banned for doping.
The
police "never found anything" when they searched their hotel rooms on
Friday in Eldoret, where the trials were held, Federico Rosa said in a phone
interview. He said he and his father were never under arrest, and they were
unsure what the investigation was about.
Rosa
said they had been asked to remain in Kenya and would be told on Tuesday if
they were needed for more questioning.
Police
did not immediately comment on the investigation, but the chief executive of
Kenya's anti-doping agency said it had handed over information to Kenya's CID,
a top police investigative unit, which then conducted the room searches on the
final day of Kenya's trials in the remote western town of Eldoret. The CID also
questioned the two men on Monday at its headquarters in the capital, Nairobi.
"When
we have any information, we share with the CID and the matter is now with
them," said Anti-Doping Agency of Kenya chief executive Japhter Rugut. He
said he couldn't comment in detail on the investigation.
Kenya's
national anti-doping body could not handle the investigation itself because it
is currently suspended by the World Anti-Doping Agency.
The
Rosas' agency, Rosa & Associati, was one of two foreign management
companies banned from working in Kenya for six months last year pending an
investigation. Kenyan authorities had said they suspected foreign agents were
responsible for providing banned substances to athletes, but the authorities
didn't present any findings from their investigation.
Federico
Rosa has denied any knowledge of or involvement in doping in Jeptoo's case, or
any other. Jeptoo, the world's top women's marathon runner at the time, tested
positive for the blood-booster EPO in a test in Kenya in 2014. She was banned
for two years.
Dozens
of other Kenyan athletes have also been banned for doping since the last
Olympics in 2012, and Kenya's entire drug-testing program was suspended by WADA
for failing to meet global standards.
At
one point, Kenyan athletes were in danger of missing next month's Rio de
Janeiro Olympics because of the doping problems.
Last
week's Olympic trials featured global stars like 800-meter Olympic champion and
world-record holder David Rudisha, and Asbel Kiprop, the three-time world
champion in the 1,500 meters. Kiprop is one of the athletes currently
represented by the Rosas. He has not been implicated in any doping.
Authorities promised strict doping controls at the trials with the country's reputation as a distance-running powerhouse under scrutiny following years of drug scandals.
No comments:
Post a Comment