bewildered said:I don't buy that excuse for a second.
Why are people talking about 'reasonable doubt'? Reasonable doubt has nothing to do with this case. It is more like the balance of probabilities, ie Impey has to show his story is more likely to have happened than not once a positive is found, surely? The positive test shifts the onus of proof onto the rider.
Did the doping authority seek their own expert evidence to check on Impey's experts' claims of plausibility? Or did they just swallow it whole? He can hire all the experts he wants to show that contamination is possible, but even still that doesn't make his story more probable than not imo.
What are the chances for a normal person with no incentive to dope to have this happen to them innocently in this manner(hypothetically)? The chances for a pro-cyclist should be lower imo.
Impey's evidence was obviously enough in the doping authority's eyes to make an easy decision that caused no grief but on the balance of probabilities that decision is perverse imo.
Not to mention the dangerous precedent this sets. It could make anti-doping even more ineffective.
Edit: I see they apparently 'vigorously' investigated the experts' claims. No further detail given tho
bewildered said:I don't buy that excuse for a second.
Why are people talking about 'reasonable doubt'? Reasonable doubt has nothing to do with this case. It is more like the balance of probabilities, ie Impey has to show his story is more likely to have happened than not once a positive is found, surely? The positive test shifts the onus of proof onto the rider.
Did the doping authority seek their own expert evidence to check on Impey's experts' claims of plausibility? Or did they just swallow it whole? He can hire all the experts he wants to show that contamination is possible, but even still that doesn't make his story more probable than not imo.
What are the chances for a normal person with no incentive to dope to have this happen to them innocently in this manner(hypothetically)? The chances for a pro-cyclist should be lower imo.
Impey's evidence was obviously enough in the doping authority's eyes to make an easy decision that caused no grief but on the balance of probabilities that decision is perverse imo.
Not to mention the dangerous precedent this sets. It could make anti-doping even more ineffective.
Edit: I see they apparently 'vigorously' investigated the experts' claims. No further detail given tho
Tonton said:Just imagine getting random drug tested at work and come back positive for marijuana. Your defense? I roll my cigarettes, someone in the tobacco factory must have had weed on his hands while packing the tobacco. And sure, the odds are that you can find one pot-head working in the factory. It makes the excuse plausible. Not sure that you'd be off the hook tho...
Your point about setting a precedent is huge IMO: from now on, all it takes is send an accomplice to fill a prescription just before yours to establish a paper trail and if caught claim cross-contamination.
Almeisan said:So did Impey hire an independent scientist to confirm this story would indeed result in the said contamination and then the said positive?
Or are they just taking his world alongside the report that indeed the customer before him bought probenecid?
Tonton said:Questions: who is that pharmacist? Who are his other customers? Any name that we know? Who is the client who ordered the previous order, the one who contaminated Impey's capsules? Any possibility that he was a decoy, hired to serve as the alibi in case things go wrong? Any links, money trail? It will take a lot to convince me. I hope that all the details come out.
rsergio007 said:So, Impey testified that he prepares his own drug cocktails at home and got away with it… omg.
fmk_RoI said:In the Clinic, all that's needed is to say he's a cyclist.
mrhender said:It is pretty clear that SAIDS are not very experienced in these matters.
ciranda said:Why would the pharmacist get his hands on the substance in the first place? I don't think I can buy anything in a pharmacy that is not packed in capsules and boxes. For obvious reasons. I guess in South Africa pharmacies are maybe like frontier grocery stores where they keep stuff in barrels and sacks.
Benotti69 said:this contamination from the pharmacists hands is as ridiculous as any excuses we have heard.
TailWindHome said:Those details won't and shouldn't come out.
Rollthedice said:"Fatima Yvelain is a regional-level distance runner in France. I suspect you had not heard of her until now but she enters history with one of the best ever excuses for a positive doping test.
Following a positive test for EPO after a half-marathon, she claimed heavy rainfall on the day of race had caused water to stream over hidden medical waste somewhere near the course. As she ran, the EPO-laced rainwater splashed onto her shorts, thus contaminating her urine when she later provided a sample at the doping control.
Needless athletics website VO2.fr reports the French Athletics Federation didn’t believe a word. She is banned for two years."
- See more at: http://inrng.tumblr.com/post/29472905178/itsrainingepo#sthash.20UtvrFN.dpuf
This must be one of the best explanations of doping. Impey's is definitely in all time top 5.
Tonton said:Yes they should come out. It is called transparency. And it is lack of transparency that makes the sport a joke in the eyes of many. Until there's transparency, the cloud of suspicion will never go away. And if Impey is innocent, I bet that he wants transparency and clear his name. But I agree with you: the details won't come out.
rsergio007 said:So, Impey testified that he prepares his own drug cocktails at home and got away with it… omg.
TailWindHome said:So you believe that the name/ medical details of the person to whom the Probenecid was prescribed should be made public?
The name of the pharmacists other customers should be made public?
The name of the pharmacist should be made public?
That you're entitled to see the pharmacy records?
For reals?
Energy Starr said:Hopefully they could just report that they confirmed that it was prescribed to someone other than Impey.
TailWindHome said:So you believe that the name/ medical details of the person to whom the Probenecid was prescribed should be made public?
The name of the pharmacists other customers should be made public?
The name of the pharmacist should be made public?
That you're entitled to see the pharmacy records?
For reals?