Exceptional circumstances beyond International Swimming Federation Doping Control Rules: The Sun Yang case of Court of Arbitration for Sport

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21638/spbu14.2021.109

Abstract

The authors refer to the exceptional circumstances surrounding Sun Yang’s violation. The athlete intervened in the doping control procedure in several ways. First, he questioned the proper accreditation of the IDTM’s (The company “International Doping Tests and Management”) Samples Collection Personnel, one of which photographed him. This officer was suspended from urine sampling, but there was no longer a male specialist on the IDTM’s Samples Collection Personnel. Therefore, the collection of urine samples did not take place due to the athlete’s actions. A general distrust of IDTM’s Samples Collection Personnel due to inappropriate photographing was the catalyst for follow-up action. Secondly, the athlete required IDTM’s Samples Collection Personnel to confirm his credentials (accreditation) from the anti-doping organization, despite the submission of documents by IDTM’s Samples Collection Personnel following the International Standard for Testing and Investigations. Not having received the additional and, in the opinion of the athlete, necessary documents, he refused to participate in the doping control procedure as a whole, tearing up his previously given written consent. Finally, the athlete took part in the destruction of blood samples with a hammer, but his role in this process was controversial. A prerequisite for the destruction process of the samples was the assistance of the IDTM’s Samples Collection Personnel, who handed them over to the athlete in response to insistent demands. The listed circumstances, which are exceptional, however, could not affect the reduction of Sun Yang’s period of ineligibility, since the FINA (International Swimming Federation) Doping Control Rules, based on WADA (World Anti-Doping Agency) Code 2015, do not imply such a basis. The new WADA Code 2021 offers a more flexible concept of liability and takes into account exceptional circumstances that in subsequent disputes about tampering can be established based on the example of the dispute CAS 2019/A/6148.

Keywords:

anti-doping rule violation, World Anti-Doping Agency Code, tampering, Doping Control Official, the doping control process, exceptional circumstances, fault or negligence

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References

References

Anderson, Jack. 2020. “A detailed review of the CAS Panel’s decision in WADA v Sun Yang & FINA”. LawInSport. Accessed August 13, 2020. https://www.lawinsport.com/topics/item/a-detailed-reviewof-the-cas-panel-s-decision-in-wada-v-sun-yang-fina.

Guo, Cai. 2020. “WADA v. Sun Yang & FINA: Reflections of a Chinese lawyer & lessons for sports in China”. LawInSport. Accessed August 13, 2020. https://www.lawinsport.com/blogs/item/wada-v-sun-yangfina-reflections-of-a-chinese-lawyer-lessons-for-sports-in-china?category_id=139.

Pan, Dunmei, Binzi Zhao, Ilya A. Vasiljev. 2019. “Problems of Criminalizing Actions in Chinese Criminal Law”. Russian Journal of Criminology 13 (1): 142–151. https://doi.org/10.17150/2500-4255.2019.13(1).142-151. (In Russian)

Vasilyev, Ilya A., Natalya N. Kisliakova, Sergey A. Yurlov. 2019. “Issues of Using Evidence and the Process of Proof in the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS)”. Pravo. Zhurnal Vysshei shkoly ekonomiki 5: 167–198. https://doi.org/10.17323/2072-8166.2019.5.167.198. (In Russian)

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Published

2021-04-08

How to Cite

Vetrova, E. G., Khalatova, R. I., & Kashaeva, A. A. (2021). Exceptional circumstances beyond International Swimming Federation Doping Control Rules: The Sun Yang case of Court of Arbitration for Sport. Vestnik of Saint Petersburg University. Law, 12(1), 131–143. https://doi.org/10.21638/spbu14.2021.109

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Section

Foreign and International Law