ATHLETICS/GATLIN-IAAF
FEBRUARY 29 2008 15:57h
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Gatlin has appealed to CAS and in a statement on Thursday his attorney Maurice Suh said he wanted a ruling by the end of May.
"We will be part of the defence in the Court of Arbitration for Sport," IAAF spokesman Nick Davies said on Friday. "We are going to support USADA."
A U.S. arbitration panel suspended Gatlin for four years after a positive test for the male sex hormone testosterone in 2006.
The panel ruled that the positive was a second offence after Gatlin tested positive in 2001 for medication to treat Attention Deficit Disorder. He was reinstated by the IAAF in 2002.
Gatlin has appealed to CAS and in a statement on Thursday his attorney Maurice Suh said he wanted a ruling by the end of May.
Gatlin's lawyers argue that if the panel had not considered the 2001 test in its verdict he would probably have received a two-year suspension as a first-time offender.
A two-year ban would have made eligible to return to competition in May, allowing him to run in June in the U.S. trials for the Beijing Olympics.



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