Cycling: Operation Puerto’s Dr Fuentes goes on trial

The high-profile and much-delayed trial of a Spanish doctor accused of masterminding a doping ring in cycling got off to an anti-climactic start yesterday when his testimony was postponed until today.

Doctor Eufemiano Fuentes and four other defendants are appearing in a Madrid court almost seven years after police seized anabolic steroids, transfusion equipment and blood bags as part of a probe code-named “Operation Puerto”.

The blood bags were linked to a host of professional cyclists including German Jan Ullrich and Italian Ivan Basso, who were both excluded from the 2006 Tour de France.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Basso, a double Giro d’Italia champion, is due to give evidence next month along with Alberto Contador, the Spaniard stripped of one of his three Tour titles after testing positive for a banned substance.

Amid farcical scenes outside the court house yesterday, Fuentes was mobbed by camera crews and photographers as he arrived around 9am local time.

The dozens of Spanish and international journalists covering the trial were then made to wait for around two hours before being granted access to court.

Judge Julia Santamaria met the defendants and their lawyers for an initial discussion before calling a halt to proceedings at 2pm and rescheduling Fuentes’s testimony for this morning.

Fuentes left without speaking to the reporters thronging the court entrance, but the lawyer for former cyclist Jesus Manzano, who is to give evidence in the case, did. “Manzano pulled out of professional cycling as a consequence of these practices,” Carlos Suarez told reporters.

“Under examination is the raising of hematocrit levels in blood, and in particular the conservation, extraction, transfusion and the transport of the plasma and the blood. All this carries a risk for the athlete.”

The trial has attracted such attention because anti-doping authorities are hopeful that it will finally lead to evidence of wrongdoing in sports other than cycling being made available.

The World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA), who are taking an active part in the trial, were informed that some bags seized contained the blood of athletes from other sports.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Reports have suggested some of the bags contained blood from football and tennis players but requests for access to the evidence were repeatedly denied by the Spanish authorities.

“The Operation Puerto case is the most significant public criminal trial that will address doping issues, which previously were largely handled by WADA arbitrations,” said Maurice M. Suh, a former prosecutor and partner with Gibson Dunn’s White Collar Defense and Investigations practice, who has advised professional athletes in doping cases.

“Both the breadth of the allegations, and the implications for athletes in other sports besides cycling, signal a significant change in the way doping matters may be handled in the criminal justice systems of various countries,” he added.

As Spain’s current anti-doping legislation was not in force in 2006 when the police raids took place, Fuentes and his fellow accused, including his sister Yolanda, are being tried for violating public health regulations and the prosecutor has asked for prison sentences of two years.

Related topics: