CAS 2017_A_5438 Julia Ivanova vs IOC

CAS 2017/A/5438 Julia Ivanova v. International Olympic Committee (IOC)

Related cases:

CAS 2017_A_4998 Julia Ivanova vs FIS
August 31, 2017

IOC 2017 IOC vs Yuliia Ivanova - Operative Part
November 9, 2017

  • Skiing (cross-country skiing)
  • Doping (use of a prohibited substance or method; tampering with doping control; cover-up of and complicity in the commission of an ADRV)
  • Standard of proof in general
  • Standard of proof with regard to the alleged doping scheme
  • Means of proof
  • Liability of the athlete in case of substitution of the content of his/her sample
  • Elevated urinary sodium concentrations
  • Use of a prohibited method
  • Use of a prohibited substance
  • Tampering with any part of doping control
  • Administration of a prohibited method or substance to an athlete
  • Cover-up of or complicity in the commission of an ADRV
  • Appropriate length of the Olympic ineligibility


Two reports commissioned by WADA, published by Prof. Richard McLaren as Independent Person (IP) on 18 July 2016 and 9 December 2016, showed detailed evidences of organised manipulation of some Russian samples collected during the Sochi 2014 Olympic Winter Games. The IP reports describe how urine bottles were opened and urine was switched with clean modified urine coming from a “biobank”, and how urine density had to be adjusted to match that recorded on the doping control form (if different at the time of collection) by adding salt to the sample.

As a result of the McLaren Reports the IOC Oswald Commission started investigations in order to establish the possible liability of individual athletes and to issue any sanctions so that decisions could be taken as far in advance of the 2018 Winter Games as possible. At the same time the IOC Schmid Commission started their investigations to establish the facts on the basis of documented, independent and impartial evidence.

All the samples of all Russian athletes who participated in Sochi were re-analysed. The re-analysis establish whether there was doping or whether the samples themselves were manipulated. The findings in the IP Reports were considered in detail and both Commissions conclude that samples or urine collected from Russian Athletes were tampered with in Sochi in a systematic manner and as part of an organized scheme. The Commissions further conclude that it was not possible that the athletes were not fully implicated. They were also the main beneficiaries of the scheme.

The IOC Commissions find that Prof. McLaren’s findings are not only based on the evidence provided by Dr Rodchenkov in his interviews, but on a wealth of other corroborating evidence, including other witnesses, the forensic examination of the sample bottles, the evidence showing abnormal salt results and the additional elements coming from DNA analysis. The corroborating evidence considered by Prof. McLaren included further objective elements, such as e-mails confirming that athletes were protected through different methods.



Yuliia / Julia Ivanova is a Russian Athlete competing in the Women's Classic Cross Country Skiing Events at the Sochi 2014 Olympic Winter Games. In December 2016 the IOC Disciplinary Commission has reported multiple anti-doping rule violations against the Athlete for tampering, conspiracy and use of prohibited substances.

Consequently the IOC Disciplinary Commission decided on 9 November 2017 to declare Julia Ivanova ineligible to be accredited in any capacity for all editions of the Games of the Olympiad and the Olympic Winter Games subsequent to the Sochi Olympic Winter Games. Further the Commission disqualified the Athlete and her Team from the events at the 2014 Sochi Olympic Winter Games including forfeiture of any medal, diploma, medallist pin, points and prizes.



In December 2017 the Athlete Julia Ivanova appealed the IOC decision with the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS). A total of 42 cases were filed with CAS by Russian athletes (the Sochi Appellants) against the decisions taken by the IOC Disciplinary Commission in relation to the 2014 Sochi Olympic Winter Games.

The Athlete and other Sochi Appellants submitted that the IOC Disciplinary Commission fundamentally erred in its application of the relevant legal framework to the facts of the Sochi Appellants’ cases. In particular, rather than seeking to determine whether the specific requirements set out in the relevant provisions of the WADC have been made out in individual cases, the IOC Commission took a generic and “broad brush approach” to its assessment of the evidence. It proceeded from a foregone conclusion and applied assumptions and circular inferential reasoning to reach its ultimate conclusion that the Sochi Appellants were each guilty of ADRVs. The Sochi Appellants disputed the reliability of the filed evidence provided by the IOC, Prof. McLaren and Dr. Rodchenko and pointed to various inconsistencies in this evidence.

The IOC, in its written submissions, provided a detailed description of the doping and cover-up scheme that allegedly operated in Russia from 2011 to 2015.
The IOC contended that the McLaren Reports and the Schmid Report both identified the Disappearing Positive Methodology as the origin of the institutionalised doping and cover-up scheme while Dr. Rodchenkov identified the main aspects to the Disappearing Positive Methodology in his affidavits.

With regard to the Athlete’s implication in this scheme, the IOC asserted that:
- The Athlete’s name appears on the Duchess List. This fact is sufficient in itself to establish that she was a participant in the doping scheme.
- One of the Athlete’s B sample bottles from the Sochi Games was found to contain multiple T marks, which provided strong evidence that the bottle was surreptitiously opened and that the content of the urine sample was swapped. At the same time, the fact that the other B sample bottle did not contain any T marks does not undermine this conclusion; instead, it merely reflects the fact that bottles could be opened without leaving significant marks.
- Further, the sample that was found to contain multiple T marks was also found to contain abnormally high levels of sodium. These urinary sodium concentrations were well beyond the range of physiological possibilities and were therefore per se sufficient evidence of tampering.
- The Athlete’s implication in the doping scheme was also demonstrated by the evidence of Dr. Rodchenkov.

Having thoroughly considered the submissions of the Parties, the written evidence as well as the oral evidence and testimonies provided at the six-day hearing, the Panel finds that the Athlete committed ADRVs in the form of the use of a prohibited method, i.e. urine substitution, pursuant to Article 2.2 of the WADC in connection with M2.1 of the 2014 WADA Prohibited List, and in the form of use of a prohibited substance under Article 2.2 of the WADC. The Panel was unable to find the commission of either an ADRV in the form of tampering with doping control in accordance with Article 2.5 of the WADC or an ADRV in the form of cover-up of or complicity in an ADRV under Article 2.8 of the WADC.

In reaching these conclusions, the Panel wishes to underscore what it has not decided in this appeal. The Panel has not made a ruling on whether and to what extent the alleged doping scheme during the Sochi Games existed and how it operated even though it recognizes that there is significant evidence that it was in place and worked. Moreover, the Panel did not consider it possible to conclude that the mere existence of a general doping and cover-up scheme, even if established, would inexorably lead to a conclusion that the Athlete committed the ADRVs alleged by the IOC.

What the Panel, in the appeal of an individual Athlete against the findings of various ADRVs by inference from the alleged doping and cover-up scheme, did decide is simply that for all of the reasons set out in this award, the evidence presented before the Panel only justified the conclusion to the comfortable satisfaction of the Panel that the Athlete individually committed ADRVs in violation of Article 2.2 of the WADC.

Based on the finding of two individual ADRVs committed by the Athlete, the Panel concludes that the imposition of a lifetime ineligibility to participate in whatever capacity in Olympic Winter Games as well as in Games of the Olympiad is not appropriate in relation to the seriousness of the individual ADRVs and, therefore, declares the Athlete ineligible to participate in any capacity for the next edition of the Olympic Winter Games, i.e. the Winter Games in PyeongChang 2018.

Therefore the Court of Arbitration for Sport decides on 5 October 2018 that:

1.) The Appeal filed by Julia Ivanova on 1 December 2017 against the Decision of the International Olympic Committee Disciplinary Commission dated 9 November 2017 is partially upheld.

2.) Paragraph I(a) of the Decision rendered by the International Olympic Committee Disciplinary Commission dated 9 November 2017 is modified as follows:

I. The Athlete, Julia IVANOVA:
a) is found to have committed an anti-doping rule violation pursuant to the International Olympic Committee Anti-Doping Rules applicable to the XXII Olympic Winter Games in Sochi, Russia, in connection with the World Anti-Doping Code.

3.) Paragraph V of the Decision rendered by the International Olympic Committee Disciplinary Commission dated 9 November 2017 is annulled and replaced as follows:

V. Julia IVANOVA is declared ineligible to be accredited in any capacity for the next edition of the Olympic Winter Games subsequent to the Sochi Olympic Winter Games (i.e. PyeongChang 2018).

4.) All other rulings contained in the Decision rendered by the International Olympic Committee Disciplinary Commission dated 9 November 2017 are maintained.

5.) This Award is pronounced without costs, except for the Court Office fee of CHF 1,000 (one thousand Swiss Francs) paid by Julia Ivanova, which is retained by the CAS.

6.) Each party shall bear their own costs and other expenses incurred in connection with this arbitration.

7.) All other motions or prayers for relief are dismissed.

Original document

Parameters

Legal Source
CAS Appeal Awards
Date
5 October 2018
Arbitrator
Gharavi, Hamid G.
Martens, Dirk-Rainer
Vedder, Christophe
Original Source
Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS)
Country
Russian Federation
Language
English
ADRV
Complicity
Tampering / attempted tampering
Use / attempted use
Legal Terms
Affidavit
Burdens and standards of proof
Case law / jurisprudence
Circumstantial evidence
Consequences to athletes / teams
Digital evidence / information
Multiple violations
Period of ineligibility
Provisional suspension
Removal of accreditation for the Olympic Games
Rules & regulations IOC
WADA Code, Guidelines, Protocols, Rules & Regulations
Sport/IFs
Ski (FIS) - International Ski Federation
Other organisations
Center of Sports Preparation of National Teams of Russia (CSP)
Government of the Russian Federation
International Olympic Committee (IOC)
L'Ecole des Sciences Criminelles (ESC)
Lausanne Laboratory for doping analysis
Olympiyskiy Komitet Rossii (OKR) - Russian Olympic Committee (ROC)
Russian Federal Security Service (FSB)
Université de Lausanne (UNIL) - University of Lausanne
World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA)
Российское антидопинговое агентство (РУСАДА) - Russian Anti-Doping Agency (RUSADA)
Laboratories
Lausanne, Switzerland: Laboratoire Suisse d’Analyse du Dopage
Moscow, Russia: Antidoping Centre Moscow [*]
[Satellite laboratory] Sochi (RUS)
Analytical aspects
B sample analysis
DNA analysis
Forensic investigation
Reanalysis
Satellite Laboratory
Various
Disappearing positive methodology
Disqualified competition results
Doping culture
McLaren reports
Oswald Commission
Publicity / public disclosure
Schmid Commission
Tip-off / whistleblower
Washout schedule
Document type
Pdf file
Date generated
5 March 2019
Date of last modification
2 September 2020
Category
  • Legal Source
  • Education
  • Science
  • Statistics
  • History
Country & language
  • Country
  • Language
Other filters
  • ADRV
  • Legal Terms
  • Sport/IFs
  • Other organisations
  • Laboratories
  • Analytical aspects
  • Doping classes
  • Substances
  • Medical terms
  • Various
  • Version
  • Document category
  • Document type
Publication period
Origin