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WADA says fresh court ruling can reopen Russian doping cases

A breakthrough court ruling in the Russian doping saga should lead Olympic sports bodies to revisit evidence for possible disciplinary cases against other athletes, the World Anti-Doping Agency said Saturday.

Three Russian canoeists, including a 2012 Olympic champion, were banned by the Court of Arbitration for Sport on Friday for their part in a state-backed doping program eight years ago.

WADA prosecuted the case using evidence it received from a Moscow laboratory that had been manipulated and withheld by Russian authorities for several years.

WADA has also given Moscow lab data to about 40 other sports bodies since 2019 and now wants some of them to review those cases after the evidence held up in court.

"It creates a precedent. If they have the similar kind of evidence available they should prosecute the cases," WADA director general Olivier Niggli told The Associated Press on Saturday.

WADA has doubted some governing bodies' commitment to investigating the Russian athletes, who have mostly retired from competing.

The latest cases were judged at CAS only after WADA appealed against the International Canoe Federation's refusal to prosecute using the evidence provided.

Niggli suggested "there may be one or two" Olympic sports which should reopen cases against Russian athletes.

The Russian doping program led to widespread cheating at the 2012 London Olympics and a notorious sample-swapping scheme at the 2014 Sochi Winter Games to cover up doping with anabolic steroids.

The years-long program relied on Moscow testing lab staff working with state authorities to hide positive drug tests and manipulate data input to the global anti-doping system.

WADA asked Russia to hand over a clean version of the Moscow database in 2018

Read more on cbc.ca