LAUSANNE, Switzerland - The International Olympic Committee ended the once stellar Olympic career of U.S. sprinter Marion Jones on Wednesday, taking back her five Sydney 2000 Games medals after she admitted to taking drugs.
American athlete Marion Jones holds up her 5 Olympic medals for track and field events in central Sydney, Australia, in this Oct. 1, 2000 photo. The IOC formally stripped Marion Jones of her five Olympic medals Wednesday Dec. 12, 2007, wiping her name from the record books following her admission that she was a drug cheat. [Agencies]
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"She is disqualified and scrapped from the results," IOC President Jacques Rogge told reporters after an executive board meeting.
"We disqualified Marion Jones from the five events she took part in in Sydney and for one event in Athens (2004 Olympics) which is the long jump where she was fifth," Rogge said.
He added that she was also banned from the 2008 Beijing Olympics in any capacity and said the IOC reserved the right for any further sanction.
Jones, who became the first woman to win five medals in a single Olympics after winning gold in the 100 metres, 200 and 4x400 relay and taking bronze in the long jump and 4x100 relay, could go to jail for lying to federal investigators.
She returned her medals to the United States Olympic Committee (USOC) after telling the court in White Plains, New York in October she had taken the banned substance known as "clear" from September 2000 to July 2001.
Jones accepted a two-year ban from the sport.
She also pleaded guilty to two counts of providing false statements to federal investigators and check fraud and will be sentenced in January.
The International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF), the sport's world governing body, applauded the IOC's decision.
"We welcome this decision on Marion Jones' Olympic medals since it is in line with the recommendation made by the IAAF Council last month," IAAF spokesman Nick Davies told Reuters via e-mail.
USOC PLEASED
The USOC said it also fully supported the IOC's action.
"This decision underscores the commitment we share to protect the integrity and fairness of sport," USOC spokesman Darryl Seibel told Reuters via e-mail.
"It also illustrates the fact that cheating carries with it some very serious consequences," Seibel added.
An attorney for Jones said he would have no comment.
IOC vice president Thomas Bach, a member of the disciplinary commission, urged Jones to give more information about her experiences.
"We are offering Mrs Jones to give her comments. We are very open and encourage her to do so," Bach told reporters.
The upgrading of athletes, though initially expected at this IOC meeting, has been delayed pending legal issues that may involve Greek sprinter Katerina Thanou, the silver medallist in the 100 metres behind Jones.
Rogge said he would contact the U.S Department of Justice for more information regarding an ongoing investigation into the San Francisco-based BALCO laboratory that supplied banned substances to several prominent athletes, before awarding any of Jones' medals to athletes who were runners-up.
RELAY MEDALS
"We will also wait to redistribute the other rankings... because other names may come up (in the BALCO probe)," Rogge said. "We can only redistribute rankings when we are sure that the BALCO case will not reveal further issues."
Thanou was banned for two years after failing to appear at three dope tests, the last on the eve of the 2004 Athens Games.
Former BALCO chief Victor Conte was due to meet World Anti-Doping Agency chief Dick Pound later on Wednesday to provide names of other "Olympic-calibre" athletes involved with the lab.
Rogge said he had also started a process that could lead to the other members of the two U.S. relay teams with whom Jones won medals -- gold in the 4x400 and bronze in the 4x100 -- being stripped of their medals.
Rogge said a decision on those medals could be taken during the IOC's Executive Board meeting in Beijing in April.
"Should the IOC decide to disqualify the teams, it would be a consequence of the doping offence by Mrs Jones and not a consequence of any faults committed by other members of the teams," he said.