…In September 2006,
more than 300 people in
Olympic Hopeful
Refutes Positive Drug Test
CBS News
(CBS/ AP) The hopes and dreams of Olympic glory for
"I have no idea how it happened," Hardy told CBS'
The Early Show Friday.
The 21-year-old from
"In my heart I know I'm 100 percent clean," Hardy
said.
Hardy's case involves Clenbuterol,
banned nearly two years ago by the International Olympic Committee. It is one
of five anabolic agents on the World Anti-Doping Agency's prohibited list.
Although it has anabolic properties, it is not an anabolic steroid.
Hardy said she had never heard of the drug and was in
"complete shock" when officials phoned her Monday of the positive
drug test. "I was devastated," she told The Early Show.
Clenbuterol is not approved for
use in the
Hardy was tested three times between July 1 and July 6, but
only tested positive once during the trials, on July 4, the date of her second
test, the swimmer's attorney, Howard Jacobs, told CBS News.
Clenbuterol is approved in some
countries by prescription to help asthma patients breathe easier.
"It's a complex drug," said Dr. Don Catlin, who
oversaw testing for anabolic agents at the 1996 Atlanta Olympics and who ran
the country's first anti-doping lab at UCLA for 25 years. "We know very
little about it."
In September 2006, more than 300 people in
"It can be pretty toxic," Catlin said. "There
have been some epidemics where human beings have ingested it by ingesting meat
and that has given them some pretty bad reactions.
That's surely one of the reasons it doesn't get into the
With the games just two weeks away, the chances Hardy's
tests will be overturned appear increasingly slim. If upheld, Hardy will be
banned from the 2008 Olympics, which would have been her first, and could also
prohibited from competition for two years.
"I know that I am innocent," Hardy said, "we just have to prove it."
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