Following the corruption allegations made in December 1998 against the Bid Committee for the XIX Olympic Winter Games in Salt Lake City in 2002, IOC President Samaranch immediately appointed a Commission to gather evidence. Six weeks later, the IOC published the results of its inquiry and recommended to the Session that the members involved be punished. The crisis resulted in four resignations, six expulsions and ten official warnings.
This crisis showed the IOC members how much they needed to modernise their institution. This was undertaken in a very short space of time, with radical decisions taken during 1999:
-- Procedure for electing candidate cities for 2006 amended and visits by IOC members to candidate cities abolished.
-- 15 active Olympic athletes, elected by their peers at the Olympic Games.
-- Creation of a Nominations Commission for IOC membership.
-- Mandate of IOC Members to last eight years, renewable through re-election.
-- IOC to have a maximum of 115 members.
-- Presidential mandate limited to eight years, renewable once for four years.
-- 15 members to come from IFs, 15 from the NOCs and 70 other as individual members.
-- Age limit lowered to 70.
-- Creation of the IOC Ethics Commission.
-- Creation of the World Anti-Doping Agency.
-- Greater financial transparency through the publication of financial reports on the sources and use of the Olympic Movement's income.
-- IOC Session opened to the media for the first time.