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French Prosecutors Request Four-Year Jail Sentence For Ex-IAAF Chief Lamine Diack

2 Min Read

French financial prosecutors on Wednesday sought a four-year jail sentence for Lamine Diack, the former head of IAAF, the athletics’ governing body now renamed IAAF.

SEE ALSO: Drug Trafficking: Dutch Olympic Athlete, Madiea Ghafoor Jailed

Diack is on trial for corruption and money-laundering linked to a Russian doping scandal.

The prosecutors told the three judges that Diack and his son, Papa Massata Diack, were at the heart of a scheme that solicited bribes worth millions of euros from Russian athletes.

The bribes were for them to cover up failed doping tests and allow the athletes to continue competing.

“It was corruption at all levels,” public prosecutor Arnaud de Laguiche said in closing remarks.

The prosecutors also said Diack obtained 1.5 million dollars of Russian funds while negotiating sponsorship and television rights to help finance Macky Sall’s campaign for the 2012 Senegal presidential election.

This was in exchange for slowing down anti-doping procedures.

The maximum sentence the prosecution could have sought was 10 years.

In his testimony, 87-year-old Diack said he had not sought to protect the athletes, some of whom later participated in the London 2012 Olympics.

He said he wanted to ensure the cases did not come to public attention at once and cause a scandal.

The finances of World Athletics, then called the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF), were at the time in bad shape.

“Slowing down the doping cases helped save a sponsorship deal with Russian bank VTB, Diack said.

The prosecutors said Diack became used to “living like an emperor”.

The prosecution sought a five-year prison sentence for Papa Massata Diack, who fled France for his native Senegal after the French investigation began and was tried in absentia.

A lawyer for World Athletics told the court the body sought 41.2 million euros in damages.

“They destroyed athletics’ honour. The big-time sponsors have gone. We had to jettison the IAAF brand.”

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