Prosecutor: Thanou and Kenteris guilty
KOSTAS Kenteris and Katerina Thanou and their coach Christos Tzekos should be found guilty of giving false statements to authorities before the 2004 Athens Olympics in a doping probe, the Athens prosecutor told a court yesterday.
The two Sydney 2000 Olympic sprint medallists and their coach are accused of staging a motorcycle crash on the eve of their home Games to avoid a drugs test.
In his summary, Athens public prosecutor Giorgos Petros told a court that "there is no evidence that there was an accident."
"The police found no trace of an accident at the scene where the two athletes claimed it took place," he said yesterday.
The pair were taken to hospital after the accident where they stayed several days but the prosecutor added that there was no evidence that they had suffered head injuries as claimed.
He also stated that the banned stimulant ephedrine and androgen steroids were found in a warehouse of Tzekos.
The prosecutor requested that the doctors involved be found guilty of misconduct although acknowledging that they made decisions in difficult circumstances with two huge figures in Greek sport in front of them.
Kenteris, who won the 200m gold medal at the Sydney Olympics, and 100m silver medallist Thanou, were regarded as Greece's best hopes of success in track and field at their home Olympics.
The episode cast a pall over the entire Games and was regarded by Olympic watchers as the biggest scandal to hit the event since the 1988 Ben Johnson affair when the 100m sprint champion gave a positive doping test after winning gold.
The trial of Kenteris and Thanou, which took years to start after frequent postponements, began in January and has already been held up due to the absence of witnesses.
If convicted, the sprinters could face up to a five-year suspended jail sentence.
The two Sydney 2000 Olympic sprint medallists and their coach are accused of staging a motorcycle crash on the eve of their home Games to avoid a drugs test.
In his summary, Athens public prosecutor Giorgos Petros told a court that "there is no evidence that there was an accident."
"The police found no trace of an accident at the scene where the two athletes claimed it took place," he said yesterday.
The pair were taken to hospital after the accident where they stayed several days but the prosecutor added that there was no evidence that they had suffered head injuries as claimed.
He also stated that the banned stimulant ephedrine and androgen steroids were found in a warehouse of Tzekos.
The prosecutor requested that the doctors involved be found guilty of misconduct although acknowledging that they made decisions in difficult circumstances with two huge figures in Greek sport in front of them.
Kenteris, who won the 200m gold medal at the Sydney Olympics, and 100m silver medallist Thanou, were regarded as Greece's best hopes of success in track and field at their home Olympics.
The episode cast a pall over the entire Games and was regarded by Olympic watchers as the biggest scandal to hit the event since the 1988 Ben Johnson affair when the 100m sprint champion gave a positive doping test after winning gold.
The trial of Kenteris and Thanou, which took years to start after frequent postponements, began in January and has already been held up due to the absence of witnesses.
If convicted, the sprinters could face up to a five-year suspended jail sentence.
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