Bookmark Jamaica-Gleaner.com
Go-Jamaica Gleaner Classifieds Discover Jamaica Youth Link Jamaica
Business Directory Go Shopping inns of jamaica Local Communities

Home
Lead Stories
News
Business
Sport
Commentary
Letters
Entertainment
Lifestyle
International
The Star
E-Financial Gleaner
Overseas News
The Voice
Communities
Hospitality Jamaica
Google
Web
Jamaica- gleaner.com

Archives
1998 - Now (HTML)
1834 - Now (PDF)
Services
Find a Jamaican
Library
Live Radio
Weather
Subscriptions
News by E-mail
Newsletter
Print Subscriptions
Interactive
Chat
Dating & Love
Free Email
Guestbook
ScreenSavers
Submit a Letter
WebCam
Weekly Poll
About Us
Advertising
Gleaner Company
Contact Us
Other News
Stabroek News

Justin Gatlin arbitration hearing unlikely this year
published: Tuesday | September 12, 2006


Gatlin

RALEIGH, North Carolina (Reuters):

Justin Gatlin's lawyer said yesterday she did not expect the Olympic champion's arbitration hearing on doping charges to be held this year.

"I don't think so," Cameron Myler told Reuters in a telephone interview from her New York office.

"One of the benefits that we get from the (August) stipulation with the United States Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) is more time to collect evidence to support our defences," she added.

"So I think the time frame (for the hearing) will be a little longer than you usually see."

Gatlin, who shares the 100 metres world record with Jamaican Asafa Powell, tested positive for the male sex hormone testosterone and its precursors at a Kansas relay meeting in April.

USADA announced last month that the 24-year-old American had accepted the accuracy of the laboratory results from the test and agreed his positive test constituted a doping violation.

JUST OUTCOME

An arbitration hearing will determine what ban, if any, Gatlin faces.

The maximum suspension would be eight years, USADA has agreed.

Gatlin could have faced a lifetime ban under anti-doping rules for second offences.

But USADA said his 2001 positive test for an amphetamine contained in a medication he had been taking for 10 years for Attention Deficit Disorder was a unique case and determined that an eight-year ban would be a just outcome.

Gatlin's lawyers are hoping an arbitration panel will either clear him or provide a much shorter suspension.

He has denied knowingly using any banned substance and predicted in an August statement that he would be cleared and allowed to compete again.

Myler said Gatlin's legal team had yet to file for an arbitration hearing.

"But we definitely will be," she added. "It's just an issue of timing."

Evidence that will assist Gatlin in the hearing is still being gathered, Myler said.

"We are trying to uncover all of the stones and look at all of the possibilities," she said.

More Sport



Print this Page

Letters to the Editor

Most Popular Stories





© Copyright 1997-2006 Gleaner Company Ltd.
Contact Us | Privacy Policy | Disclaimer | Letters to the Editor | Suggestions | Add our RSS feed
Home - Jamaica Gleaner