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The president of the Association of Italian Professional Cyclists (ACCPI) has described the Europol-coordinated investigation into Bahrain Victorious as a “witch hunt” and decried police searches of the riders’ homes and hotel rooms as “barbaric”.
Bahrain Victorious have been under investigation by the public prosecutor’s office in Marseille since last year, when their hotel was raided during the Tour de France.
Ahead of this year’s race, law enforcement carried out simultaneous searches on team riders and staff in Belgium, Spain, Croatia, Italy, Poland and Slovenia. On the day before the Tour began, the Bahrain Victorious team hotel was searched by police in Denmark.
In a statement on Friday, Europol confirmed that the investigation into Bahrain Victorious centred on the “the use of prohibited substances in cycling races,” while Eurojust revealed that “412 capsules with undetermined brown content and 67 capsules with undetermined white content” were found during the search in Slovenia.
Cristian Salvato, the president of the ACCPI, has since issued a statement criticising the police investigation into Bahrain Victorious and claiming that “today cycling is beautiful and clean”.
“We don’t approve of the methods, the timing or the spectacle of the incident, which we read about in all the newspapers and heard about from our lads,” Salvato said. “For an inquiry to bear fruit, it should be carried out discreetly throughout the year, not simply like clockwork in the days of the Tour.”
Damiano Caruso, the one Italian rider in the Bahrain Victorious squad at the Tour, confirmed to Cyclingnews that his home had been searched by police in Sicily shortly before his departure for the race. Europol confirmed that the NAS unit in Ragusa, as well as those in Rome and Brescia, was part of the coordinated inquiry.
“We don’t dispute the desire to fight doping by every means,” Salvato said.
“Indeed, I would like to remind you that cyclists are the only athletes in the world who invest a percentage of their prize money in the fight against the doping and that with the whereabouts system, they accept limits on their own privacy and that of their families in order to ensure out of competition tests can be carried out.
“But we can’t accept that they come to be treated like this.”
Neither the UCI nor Tour organiser ASO issued any statement on the matter before the race began, though UCI president David Lappartient later told reporters in…
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