IOC Publishes Olympic Code To Govern Cheating, Beginning In Rio

The International Olympic Committee (IOC) has published a new document it’s calling the Olympic Movement Code to help prevent “competition manipulation” or cheating, beginning with this summer’s Rio Olympic Games.

The code should mostly serve as a framework for various National Olympic Committees and sporting federations to organize their own regulations defining cheating and setting up punishments for differing infractions.

“This does not prevent sports organisations from having more stringent regulations in place,” the IOC noted in its press release on the code, which calls on National Olympic Committees and sporting federations to build their own rules within the boundaries of the IOC code.

You can view the full IOC code here.

The bulk of the code spells out various violations, before then laying a spectrum of possible punishments. Included in the list of violations are:

  • Betting on your own competition or a competition within your sport
  • Manipulating a competition to benefit a certain team or competitor
  • Accepting bribes connected to “competition manipulation”
  • Using inside information on a competition to place a bet or help someone else place a bet
  • Not reporting the incident to authorities if you are approached to participate in one of these violations

The IOC code also lays out an investigative process, ending with a range of punishments as light as a warning and as severe as a lifetime ban.

The IOC considers the code “unprecedented” as a document governing the Olympics as a whole (though most individual sporting federations have their own codes already established), and the code will officially take effect for this summer’s 2016 Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

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Tom from Chicago
8 years ago

Attention: Jessica Hardy and Cesar Cielo

Positive drug test – Jessica Hardy
At the 2008 U.S. Olympic Team Trials, Hardy qualified for the USA Olympic Team.[22][23][24] A few weeks later, on July 23, 2008, Hardy was notified that the second of her three tests from the Trials came back as positive for low levels of clenbuterol; this notification subsequently leaked to the media.[25] Her attorney confirmed on July 24, 2008, that Hardy’s “A” and “B” samples from a test administered on July 4 were positive for clenbuterol, a banned thermogenic weight-loss aid and partial stimulant.

Postive Drug Test – Cesar Cielo
Brazil’s swimming federation says Olympic champion Cesar Cielo tested positive for a banned substance in May and… Read more »

M Palota
Reply to  Tom from Chicago
8 years ago

I’m assuming it’s a rhetorical question… Let’s Sun Yang to the list, don’t forget Yulia Effimova, a whole bunch of other Russian swimmers, a couple Chinese athletes, Park Tae Hwan and Alec Page and some few others that I’ve missed.

I will say, though, that Jessica Hardy did serve a suspension after she was caught.

Gina Rhinestone
8 years ago

For 2 weeks Rio will be the Xanadu of non cheating.

Elsewhere life goes on …

“You’ve painted up your lips & rolled & curled your tinted hair ,
Ruby are you contemplating going out somewhere?
The shadows on the wall tell me the sun is going down,
Oh Ruuuuuby don’t take your love to town “.

And we love it . It’s not even Orwellian but Oliver Cromwell with his bible .

About Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson swam for nearly twenty years. Then, Jared Anderson stopped swimming and started writing about swimming. He's not sick of swimming yet. Swimming might be sick of him, though. Jared was a YMCA and high school swimmer in northern Minnesota, and spent his college years swimming breaststroke and occasionally pretending …

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