Source: Los Angeles Times (CA) Contact: 213-237-4712 Website: http://www.latimes.com/ Pubdate: September 14, 1998 Author: Stephen Wilson, AP Sports Writer IOC: NO JAIL FOR SUSPECT ATHLETES SEOUL, South Korea--The International Olympic Committee declared its opposition Monday to the possibility of athletes being jailed for taking banned performance-enhancing drugs. The Australian Olympic Committee last month said the penalty for possession, manufacturing, trafficking and use of steroids and other banned substances should be the same as those for illicit narcotics. Under the proposal, anyone importing large amounts of performance-enhancers into Australia could be jailed for life. An athlete caught using doping substances could also face criminal charges. There has been speculation the proposal could raise the prospect of an athlete being put in prison for failing a drug test during the 2000 Sydney Games. But AOC president John Coates said Monday he never proposed that athletes should be jailed for a positive test, only if they were caught trafficking in large amounts of drugs. But the IOC executive board, which opened a four-day meeting Monday, apparently was under the impression that Australia was proposing jail terms for athletes caught using drugs. While drug traffickers should face criminal prosecution, athletes should be sanctioned by sports bodies, IOC leaders said. "There is quite a bit of consensus that jail should be reserved for the traffickers, dealers, suppliers and true criminals," IOC director general Francois Carrard said. "The athletes should be subjected to the sanctions of the world of sports." Carrard said the IOC would be put in a difficult position if athletes faced the possibility of jail sentences. "The IOC has to comply with the law in every country," he said. "If the prospect of having athletes threatened with spending time in jail becomes a full reality, this would create some discomforts." However, Carrard expressed confidence that some compromise will be reached and said there was no reason to speculate about moving the games out of Australia. "I cannot imagine the IOC moving the games out of Sydney," he said. "But I cannot imagine athletes in jail either. We are confident there will be very reasonable solutions for all the parties." Jacques Rogge, an executive board member from Belgium and head of the IOC's oversight panel for the Sydney Games, said Australia would face serious repercussions if it imposed jail terms on athletes. "Australia would isolate itself from the rest of the world of international sport," he said. "I doubt any big international competitions would be awarded to Australia in the future. "I understand the emotion, but we hope Australia would go along with what other countries are doing. We need governments to track down and imprison the dealers and traffickers. Let the sports movements take care of the athletes." IOC vice president Dick Pound of Canada said governments can help by listing steroids as controlled substances and prosecuting traffickers. But he said athletes caught using drugs should be limited to suspensions or fines by sporting bodies. "Athletes should not be jailed for non-criminal offenses," he said. Drugs was the main topic at Monday's executive board meeting as officials discussed preparations for a world anti-drug conference to be held at Lausanne, Switzerland, Feb. 2/4. The conference, which was called in the wake of the drug scandals which marred the Tour de France, will finalize plans for the creation of a special Olympic agency to coordinate drug-testing throughout the world. - --- Checked-by: Patrick Henry