Jamaica's Olympic runner Asafa Powell, who tested positive for doping at the Jamaican Championships in 2013, returns to the conference room after being asked to step out during a presentation by attorneys on the first day of his hearing before the country's anti-doping commission in Kingston January 14, 2014. [Photo/Agencies] |
Jamaican sprint star Asafa Powell must wait until April 10 to learn if he can resume his career this year after submissions were completed on Wednesday in a doping hearing.
The three-member Jamaica Anti-Doping Disciplinary Panel heard final arguments from attorneys representing Powell and the Jamaica Anti-Doping Commission.
Powell, a former world 100m champion, and training partner Sherone Simpson tested positive for the banned stimulant oxilofrine after the 100m final at the Jamaican national championships last June 21.
Powell, who set a world record in the 100m in 2008 with a time of 9.74 sec, blames Canadian physical therapist Chris Xuereb for the positive test, saying he provided the nutritional supplement, Epiphany D1, that resulted in the positive test.
JADCO lawyer Lackston Robinson pushed for a two-year competition ban for Powell, whose attorney, Kwame Gordon, asked for leniency.
Robinson said Powell's blind trust of Xuereb, whom he had known for less than two months, was "not only significant negligence but gross negligence" and cited discrepancies in testimony by Powell, Simpson and their manager, Paul Doyle.
A bottle of Epiphany D1 submitted for testing to a US lab by Doyle showed traces of oxilofrine while one bought by the lab from the Epiphany D1 website did not test positive for the same substance.
"The one that Mr Doyle submitted had a rock-like substance this one didn't have," Robinson said.
"Mr Doyle's bottle was sealed by just the cap. This one, the entire bottle was sealed and then the cotton ball placement was different with this sample and was on the top of the capsules."
Robinson said JADCO does not accept Epiphany D1 contained the substance oxilofrine found in Powell's sample last June.
"In his evidence Mr Powell suggested he took very little care in ensuring what he was taking was not contaminated," Robinson said.
Gordon says JADCO has no scientific evidence to suggest the banned substance was not in the bottles used by Powell and Simpson, who learns her fate on April 8.
Robinson argued that given the information from the base sample tested in the US lab, JADCO does not need more evidence.