Russia's Stepanova: 'No accident' if something happens to me

Bill

Malarkeyville
So which American presidential candidate will help the KBG the most??



By Jack Stubbs | RIO DE JANEIRO

The Russian runner who helped expose a system of state-backed doping in her country says she fears for her life and has been forced to move after hackers tried to find her location.

The World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) said on Saturday Yulia Stepanova's online doping management account had been illegally accessed. The doping scandal she lifted the lid on has rocked sport and cost over 100 Russians their place at the Rio Games.

Stepanova has been in hiding in the United States with her husband Vitaly, a former Russian anti-doping official, after giving evidence that the Russian government for years facilitated widespread cheating across nearly all Olympic sports.

Speaking to journalists on a video conference call just days before the 800 meters final in Rio, which she has been barred from running in following the suspension of Russian track-and-field from international competition, Stepanova said she had moved her family to another location after the hack.

"The only reason somebody would hack an ADAMS account is to find out your exact location," she said. "We decided it was safer to relocate.

"If something happens to us then you should know that it is not an accident."

All athletes have to enter their details into WADA's Anti-Doping Administration and Management System (ADAMS) and register a time and location each day where they can be reached by doping testers for an out-of-competition test.

Stepanova and her husband have repeatedly raised concerns about their safety in light of the doping scandal they helped ignite and criticized the International Olympic Committee for not doing more to support whistleblowers.

Vitaly Stepanov said he did not know who had hacked his wife's account but said the couple were being watched by Russian authorities.

After she initially fled Russia for Germany, Russian sports officials said they did not know about any threats against Stepanova or her husband that could have compelled them to seek refuge abroad.

Stepanova said attending the Games - she and her husband declined an invitation from Olympic bosses to visit as spectators - would have left her particularly vulnerable.

General worries about safety and violent crime have cast a pall over the Rio Olympics. Most recently, U.S. gold medalist swimmer Ryan Lochte was robbed at gunpoint by men posing as police officers.

"Watching the Olympic Games and reading the news about what is happening there, on some level I'm glad that I didn't go," she said. "If someone wanted to hurt us, it would be very easy to do it there."

(Story corrects date of 800m final in paragraph 4.)

(Reporting by Jack Stubbs; Editing by Alison Williams)
 
putin-basement-server-1024x788.jpg
 
what's the US election connection? Putin routinely kills Russian journalists, etc.

Vladimir Putin's Dead Enemies
http://www1.cbn.com/hurdontheweb/archive/2016/02/15/vladimir-putins-dead-enemies
The former executive director of the disgraced Russian Anti-Doping Agency died of a massive heart attack Sunday after skiing. Fifty-two-year-old Nikita Kamaev's death comes two months after resigning amidst a doping scandal that had engulfed Russia's track and field program.

His friends say Kamaev never complained of heart problems. Photos of him show a man that looked very healthy. Kamaev expired less than two weeks after another former Russian anti-doping figure, Vyacheslav Sinev, died suddenly.
 
Nobody suggested it had anything to do with the US election, telemarketer...until you opened that door.

Originally Posted by Bill
So which American presidential candidate will help the KBG the most??

Putin couldn't expect to do as well as he did under Obama, or Clinton's silly Russian reset.
But as long as everything is looked at as an east/west zero sum game nobody really wins
 
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