did you miss the bit about Cubans churning out doctors?
Sorry must have misread.
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did you miss the bit about Cubans churning out doctors?
Imo I don't think that harper and trigg had this clause as it may be a restraint of trade just as hird didn't have this clause. I do however think it was a verbal agreement of which Adelaide(and the persons concerned) agreed to ad maybe the dons people did too. I don't know wether it was agreed to or not by hird but it seems it was implied and maybe because there is no legal reason not too and the dons used this loop hole.
A Spanish doctor accused of running one of the world's largest sports doping rings has received a one-year suspended sentence for endangering public health.
Eufemiano Fuentes was convicted over his role in supplying blood transfusions to professional cyclists.
He was charged under public health laws because doping was not illegal in Spain at the time.
A former cycle team official was sentenced to four months in jail, while three other defendants were cleared.
Police found some 200 bags of frozen blood and plasma when they raided Fuentes' offices in 2006.
The World Anti-Doping Agency (Wada) and Spain's domestic authorities had wanted access to the blood, to test whether athletes from other sports were involved in the doping ring.
But Judge Julia Patricia Santamaria on Tuesday declined to grant them access and ordered that the bags be destroyed.
As well as handing Fuentes the one year suspended sentence, the court in Madrid struck him off as a medical doctor for four years and fined 4,650 euros ($6,000: £3,940).
<snip>
During the trial, Fuentes said he had worked with athletes, footballers and boxers, as well as cyclists, though he did not say whether he had helped them dope.
The bags of blood found in Fuentes' offices were labelled with codenames, which were believed to relate to well-known cyclists and possibly other athletes. But the judge's ruling means authorities will not be able to establish this.
Matt SlaterBBC sports news reporter
"Late, disappointing and not even very conclusive: everything about the verdicts in the Operation Puerto case was in keeping with its seedy seven-year history. All that effort for two suspended prison sentences, a four-year ban from medicine and a bizarre fine - hardly what the doctor ordered to heal the effects of Europe's most talked-about doping scandal. It is a good thing Fuentes was not in court to hear his fate, pictures of him smirking would not have done Spain's tattered reputation on doping matters any good at all."
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How is it any different to the IOC or different sporting federations keeping blood and urine samples for years and then going back years later to apply the new tests to the samples? The 2012 London Olympians can still have their samples tested and bans impossed until August 2020.
Don Catlin who ran the UCLA Olympic Lab for the 1984 Olympics still has hundreds of piss samples in his refridgerator at work. Well he did in 2012 when he was interviewed in a doco before London. I reckon he might have retired in the last 6 months..
Those athletes went to Fuentes for one reason. He been involved in dodgey sports medical practices since the late 70's.
And usually the courts will defer to the agreements made between two parties, especially if the pre-established procedures have been followed unless one party can show why those agreements were not legal.
Honestly, it annoys the hell out of me when people threaten court action when they've been caught out doing the wrong thing.
I suppose the difference would be that the athletes provided consent for those samples to be stored for testing, while the samples given to dr fuentes were for "medical treatment" and they haven't consented to them being used for any other purpose.
More dribble, S0 is there to first ensure the new drug is "safe" to use hence being passed for therapeutic use anywhere in the world. WADA does not care which country accepts it.
Once it's been deemed as safe, then it's determined if it fits within S0-S9. If it doesn't fit any of those categories then as far as WADA is concerned you can jam as much into your body as you want even though local authorities in different countries may even deem the drug illegal or set out specific dosage levels as a maximum. WADA is not a medical fraternity, it's a doping agency.
S0 is so black and white I have no idea why people are trying to argue differently.
Well if WADA who is supposed to run an anti-doping code to keep illegal drugs out of sport, as well as stopping athletes taking substances that don't have theraupetic approval, are willing to accept a substance as safe because it has approval from a third world country, then I wonder if they are filling their charter.
And this is not considering that if the substance is approved in one country as an example, then an athlete not from that country, can't legally access that substance. So much for an even playing field.
Well it is in their eyes. If 1 government approves it then it is in all countries.
Im on my phone and not my computer so i am restricted what i can search but i reckon the blood bags for cyclists were examined but not the ones for other athletes.
blackcat can you confirm this one way or the other?
That's not a good argument, and makes the point I do about s0 not being overly restrictive in that its a bare minimum approach. The drugs you take only need to be approved in an obscure foreign land its not exactly a highly set bar.
I think WADA should safely assume people would only use drugs that are available in their own country for therapeutic use.
It most certainly was in their Deed. I was flabbergasted that it wasn't in Hirds.
But it should be a highly set bar.
You could be right on the above, but if the court took a few samples and published the results to prove the case against the doctor, in that he was doping people then it is still the case against the doctor. WADA are probably allowed to use the findings to issue the punishment but unless as part of the case they examined every bag and name and published the results then...how are WADA going to get that blood?
Im on my phone and not my computer so i am restricted what i can search but i reckon the blood bags for cyclists were examined but not the ones for other athletes.
blackcat can you confirm this one way or the other?
This I can't accept - Especially if health and welfare is an issue.
I guess it depends how important the Spanish believes the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the true is compared to legal technicalties and protecting the system is.
Or Corcoran's deed.
Corcoran must be loving this - I suggest that he was the key driver of the substance program.
It most certainly was in their Deed. I was flabbergasted that it wasn't in Hirds.
If it was then I stand corrected. Then the issue is interesting. I assumed that it wasn't in the Hird decision because it may be a restraint of trade however that would also apply to the crow gents. Is it a case that while it may be a ROT it still has to be tabled in court in which the participants didn't do? There must be a reason as to why in wasn't in the Hird deed. It cant be that they(the lawyers) forgot it.