Moses asks for thorough review of WADA culture
Olympic champion Edwin Moses sent a tersely worded letter to leaders of the World Anti-Doping Agency, asking for an investigation into the culture at WADA that would expand beyond athletes’ representative Beckie Scott’s claim that she was bullied at a recent meeting.
The Associated Press obtained the letter that Moses, who serves as chair of the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency, emailed to WADA president Craig Reedie and director general Olivier Niggli as they prepared for their executive meetings Wednesday in Baku, Azerbaijan.
Moses is asking for an independent investigation into whether “WADA management has fostered and facilitated an open environment where the best interests of clean sport and the well-being of athletes may be freely discussed.”
Scott, a Canadian Olympic gold medallist in cross-country skiing, described being bullied at a WADA meeting in September at which executives reinstated Russia’s suspended anti-doping agency. Scott had resigned from the committee that initially approved the recommendation against her wishes.