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Brazil is a notoriously dangerous country period. It was one of the many reasons people were wary of having the games their in the first place. Not to mention the Zika out break. Its like having the games in Somalian and being surprised someone got into some shit.
OK I'm exaggerating a bit but still. Fuck them for being mediocre and thinking they could get away with this shit. If Michael Phelps can't smoke pot, they don't get to pretend to be fake robbed when they were being jerks and brought this upon themselves. Lochte ain't shit and this proves it.
If I still have to fight my sons battles at 32 years old I clearly have not done my job as a parent.
 
http://sports.yahoo.com/news/report...pay-11000-to-avoid-prosecution-093424879.html
[....]
Jimmy Feigen, the only swimmer involved in the alleged Rio robbery earlier in the week who has not returned to the United States, has agreed to contribute $11,000 to a Brazilian charity in an attempt to resolve the ongoing international incident, according to an ABC News report early Friday morning.

Feigen’s lawyer in Rio announced the agreement after meeting with a judge and officials from Brazil’s prosecuting ministry for four hours Thursday. The swimmer’s passport will be returned after the payment is made and he will be free to leave the country.

Police said Thursday that – if found guilty of providing false testimony – the swimmers would likely be required to pay a fine but would not face prison time.

As the controversy was brewing, Ryan Lochte returned to the U.S., leaving the other three to deal with an increasingly complex situation. Fellow swimmers Gunnar Bentz and Jack Conger left Brazil Thursday night after meeting with police, according to a statement from the U.S. Olympic Committee.

Feigen will reportedly donate 35,000 Reals to Reaction Institute, a non-governmental sporting program created by Olympic medalist Flavio Canto in 2003 that touts itself as an organization that uses judo to promote development and social inclusion.
[....]
 
RIO DE JANEIRO — Ryan Lochte is the dumbest bell that ever rang. The 32-year-old swimmer is so landlocked in juvenility that he pulled an all-nighter with guys young enough to call him uncle. His story to NBC’s Billy “what-are-you-wearing” Bush had the quality of a kid exaggerating the size of a fish, and notice how he was the hero of every detail. That was always the most dubious, implausible part.

There is a special category of obnoxious American “bro” that Lochte represents, in his T-shirt and jeans and expensive suede footwear, which he showed off on social media that night at the party along with the price tag. “We’re 6k deep here,” he captioned it. Is there anything worse, in any country, than a bunch of entitled young drunks who break the furniture and pee on a wall? There is no translator needed for that one, no cultural norm that excuses it. If I had been working at that Brazilian gas station, I might have pulled a gun on them, too.

Jack Conger is 21. Gunnar Bentz is 20. James Feigen is 26. What a leader of young men Lochte is. You can see the bathroom door appear to burst out of its wooden frame on the security video, presumably when one of those oafs couldn’t open it and decided to kick it.

Look, having a gun drawn on you in the small hours was no doubt unnerving and an overreaction by the security guard. It’s even remotely possible that Lochte really did interpret the demand for cash as a “robbery” of sorts. But to do so, he had to be so impervious to his own odious punk behavior — and his view of that gas station had to be so low — that he didn’t think the vandalizing was worth anything. He must have thought Ryan Lochte’s pee was gold dust.

Inherent in all of Lochte’s statements in this controversy is a lack of respect. You suspect that is what drew such ire from Brazilian authorities, who made a massive public display out of jerking Conger and Bentz off a plane and detaining them for questioning and recommended charges against Lochte and Feigen. Lochte has played a trivial, frivolous game with the issue of Brazilian police ineffectualness and corruption. Two things are going on here: Lochte’s self-promoting prevarications and the sensitivity of Rio authorities, who have been portrayed as incapable of keeping athletes safe amid other Olympic breakdowns.

There have been a lot of genuine robberies of Olympic athletes and officials. A New Zealand athlete was kidnapped by fake police and driven to ATMs. Two Australian coaches were robbed at knifepoint on Ipanema Beach. After one of their athletes was robbed Tuesday morning, British track and field officials warned athletes that it is not worth the risk of going out, “given the current climate in Rio.”

The police need to show that fears are overstated and these Games are secure — though they are not, particularly — and the stupid Americans offered them something with which to save face. Fernando Veloso, the Civil Police chief, said that Lochte had “stained” the city by inventing a crime that didn’t happen.

Lochte’s conceit intersected with a delicate political issue, and it made a perfect storm. His claim to NBC that men posing as police pulled over the taxi and he heroically resisted the robbers with a gun pressed to his forehead was an especially ludicrous detail — and the very thing that drew the attention of authorities, who know full well that anyone who defies a bandit in Rio gets shot on the spot, and they don’t leave you with your cellphone.

Equal to his disrespect of the gas station owner and the police is Lochte’s disrespect to his fellow swimmers. First he portrayed his U.S. teammates as dropping to the ground while “I refused,” as if he alone had the temerity to remain standing. Yeah, right. This is a guy who apparently lied to his own mother. Then he flew home, leaving the younger swimmers to deal with the fallout. And when back in the United States, he made moronic postings on social media, deaf to the tension they were undergoing while detained in Rio, their passports seized.

The main quality Lochte has shown in all of this, apart from asininity, is obliviousness. First he tweeted about his hair, which he had dyed a silvery-white before the Games. Then on Thursday morning, even as Conger and Bentz were in a police station and authorities were mulling potential charges, he posted an idiotic video of himself. It was a distortion-lensed, cartoonish video of him babbling at his friend and fellow American swimmer Elizabeth Beisel. Lochte eventually deleted it. Which was too bad because it was a perfect portrait of a halfwit.

Equal to his disrespect of the gas station owner and the police is Lochte’s disrespect to his fellow swimmers. First he portrayed his U.S. teammates as dropping to the ground while “I refused,” as if he alone had the temerity to remain standing. Yeah, right. This is a guy who apparently lied to his own mother. Then he flew home, leaving the younger swimmers to deal with the fallout. And when back in the United States, he made moronic postings on social media, deaf to the tension they were undergoing while detained in Rio, their passports seized.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/spor...3d9bdc-6540-11e6-96c0-37533479f3f5_story.html

images


The gold in the medal he bites down on is genuine. Too bad the same can't be said of Lochte.
 
Lawyer: Ryan Lochte did not lie about robbery at gunpoint

RIO DE JANEIRO – Ryan Lochte is more victim than villain and he did not lie about being robbed at gunpoint, the American swimmer’s attorney told USA TODAY Sports.

Jeffrey M. Ostrow, a Fort Lauderdale-based lawyer representing Lochte, said Lochte's apology on Friday should not be viewed as a full mea culpa. Authorities in Rio should be investigating the two security guards who pulled weapons on the U.S. swimmers and demanded payment for damage to a bathroom door handle, he said.

“I don’t consider things done. I know that investigation is still going. I hope that there is more that comes out of it, find out a little bit more about the security guard or the military police or whoever it was specifically that extorted the money from (the swimmers)," Ostrow said.
http://www.usatoday.com/story/sport...9/ryan-lochte-lawyer-robbery-brazil/88995100/
 
An asshole who doesn't have any friends his own age, he has to drag adoring fanboys thru the mud and mire and then skip out leaving them to take the brunt of the charges. We all know someone like this and we all hate them. I hope these younger swimmers learned their lessons about hanging around with assholes, who care nothing for them. He's more concerned about scuffing up his $6000 shoes than allowing these guys to go to jail and handle this alone.
 
Seems the truth may be somewhere in the middle
Or is this the Justin Bieber PR team effect?
.
USA TODAY Sports investigation raises questions about Rio cops, Lochte incident
But a narrative of the night’s events – constructed by USA TODAY Sports from witness statements, official investigations, surveillance videos and media reports – supports Lochte’s later account in which he said he thought the swimmers were being robbed when they were approached at a gas station by armed men who flashed badges, pointed guns at them and demanded money.
extensive review of surveillance footage by a USA TODAY Sports videographer who also visited the gas station supports swimmer Gunnar Bentz’s claim that he did not see anyone vandalize the restroom, an allegation that in particular heightened media portrayals of the four as obnoxious Americans behaving recklessly in a foreign country. Meanwhile, Rio authorities have declined to identify the guards or offer any details beyond confirming they are members of law enforcement who were working a private security detail.
http://www.usatoday.com/story/sport...yan-lochte-rio-olympics-authorities/89082232/
 
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http://www.abc.net.au/news/2016-08-...h-lauren-and-speedo-drop-us-swim-star/7775854
Rio 2016: Ryan Lochte loses all four major sponsors in wake of Olympic scandal

Within hours of the Games coming to a close, Speedo USA issued a statement saying it would drop Lochte and donate $50,000 of his fee to Save The Children, a global charity partner of Speedo.

"Speedo USA today announces the decision to end its sponsorship of Ryan Lochte," the company said in a statement.

"While we have enjoyed a winning relationship with Ryan for over a decade and he has been an important member of the Speedo team, we cannot condone behaviour that is counter to the values this brand has long stood for," it said.

Ralph Lauren, which outfitted Team USA for the Olympic opening and closing ceremonies in Rio, had taken down references to the gold medallist from its website last week, and on Monday said it would not renew the Olympic-specific deal, which featured Lochte and other athletes wearing Ralph Lauren-branded Olympic merchandise.

US retail giant Macy's also said it was finishing its Rio Games marketing, which had included the swim star.

"We are transitioning out all Olympic visual as the games ended yesterday, and we are moving into our fall fashion message," Macy's spokeswoman Holly Thomas said in an e-mail.

Andhair removal brand Syneron Candela ended its partnership with Lochte just four months after naming him its global brand ambassador for one of its products.

"We hold our employees to high standards, and we expect the same of our business partners," Syneron Candela said in a statement to ESPN.

"We wish Ryan well on his future endeavours and thank him for the time he spent supporting our brand."

Japanese mattress maker Airweave, which last week had said it would stand by Lochte, on Monday said it had decided it would not renew the endorsement, which had been made for the Rio 2016 Olympic games.

Sponsorship and endorsement deals typically include "morals clauses" that allow sponsors to terminate deals early if they feel the athlete has behaved poorly in public.

Lochte said in an email he respected Speedo's decision.

"I was immature and I made a stupid mistake. I'm human. I made a mistake and I definitely learned from this," Lochte said in an interview on the Today show.

"They [the people of Rio] put on a great Games ... and my immature, intoxicated behaviour tarnished that a little," Lochte said.
[....]
 
http://www.nbcnewyork.com/news/nati...acts-in-Rio-Robbery-Apologizes-391113601.html
U.S. Olympic swimmer Jimmy Feigen on Tuesday made his first public comments about the incident in Rio de Janeiro last week that involved Feigen, Ryan Lochte and two of their teammates.

In a written statement provided to NBC News, Feigen admitted to initially leaving out details of an early morning incident at a Rio gas station, saying he omitted the facts to police in an attempt to help Lochte.
[....]
By the time a judge ordered Lochte and Feigen to remain in Brazil, Lochte had already left. Feigen eventually paid almost $11,000 to a sports foundation and was allowed to leave Brazil.

Feigen also said he was given an option to pay a fine rather than wait the month in Brazil for the investigation to conclude, but the amount first suggested was the equivalent of $31,250 and 15 days of community service.

When Feigen and his attorneys rejected that offer as unreasonable, the prosecutor increased the proposed fine to the equivalent of $46,875, he said. The smaller agreement was eventually reached.
 
Ryan Lochte has been charged with filing a false report.

RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) — Brazilian police charged American swimmer Ryan Lochte on Thursday with filing a false robbery report over an incident during the Olympics in Rio de Janeiro.

A police statement said Lochte would be informed in the United States so he could decide whether to introduce a defense in Brazil.

The indictment will also be sent to the International Olympic Committee's ethics commission, the statement said.

Lochte initially said that he and fellow swimmers Jack Conger, Gunnar Bentz and Jimmy Feigen were robbed at gunpoint in a taxi by men with a police badge as they returned to the Olympic Village from a party Aug. 15. However, security video suggested the four actually faced security guards after vandalizing a gas station restroom.

Lochte left Brazil shortly after the incident. Three days later, local authorities took Conger and Bentz off an airliner heading to the United States so they could be questioned about the robbery claim. They were later allowed to leave Brazil, as was Feigen, after he gave testimony. Feigen, who initially stood by Lochte's testimony, was not charged.

Lochte has since acknowledged that he was highly intoxicated and that his behavior led to the confrontation. It is not clear from the video whether a gun was ever pointed to the athletes.

Under Brazilian law, the penalty for falsely filing a crime report carries a maximum penalty of 18 months in prison. Lochte could be tried in absentia if he didn't return to face the charge.

The United States and Brazil have an extradition treaty dating back to the 1960s, but Brazil has a long history of not extraditing its own citizens to other nations and U.S. authorities could take the same stance if Lochte is found guilty.

That is currently the case of the head of Brazil's football confederation, Marco Polo del Nero, who faces charges in the wide-ranging scandal entangling international soccer's ruling body, FIFA. He has not travelled outside Brazil for more than a year to avoid being arrested by U.S. authorities somewhere else.

The charges in Brazil raise questions about the future for Lochte, who is planning to take time off from swimming but wants to return to compete in the 2020 Tokyo Olympics. He has 12 Olympic medals, second only to Michael Phelps among U.S. male Olympians.

Lochte lost four major sponsors early this week over the controversy, including Speedo USA and Ralph Lauren. But on Thursday he picked up a new sponsor — Pine Bros. Softish Throat Drops. Pine Bros. said people should be more understanding of the swimmer and said he will appear in ads that say the company's product is "Forgiving On Your Throat."
http://www.thedenverchannel.com/spo...ryan-lochte-for-filing-a-false-robbery-report
 
Lyin' Ryan Lochte is suspended for 10 months by the International Olympic Committee over Rio 'robbery' claims
  • Ryan Lochte suspended from competitive swimming for 10 months
  • The twelve-time Olympic medalist also has to obey additional sanctions, though it is not clear what these are
  • Lochte's ban is four months longer than the one Phelps got for DUI
  • It comes after he lost four sponsorship contracts worth millions of dollars
  • Lochte admits fabricating a story about being robbed at gunpoint during the Rio Olympics, when in fact he drunkenly vandalized a gas station
By Chris Pleasance For Dailymail.com

Published: 18:01 EST, 7 September 2016 | Updated: 19:29 EST, 7 September 2016

Ryan Lochte has been suspended for 10 months after he falsified claims of being robbed at gunpoint during the Rio Olympics.

The disgraced Team USA swimmer was handed the suspension on Wednesday by the International Olympic Committee, the US Olympic Committee, and USA Swimming, TMZ reports.

Lochte will also be banned from the 2017 world championship meet, which will be held in Budapest next July.
Link

--Al
 
https://www.usatoday.com/story/spor...ges-stemming-rio-olympics-incident/481222001/
An appellate court in Brazil has dismissed a criminal case against U.S. swimmer Ryan Lochte, concluding that Lochte did not break the law in exaggerating the details of an incident at a gas station during the Rio Olympics in August.

Lochte had been charged with falsely communicating a crime to authorities after he gave an interview to NBC in which he said he and three other members of the U.S. swim team had been stopped and robbed at gunpoint as the cab they were in tried to pull away from the service station.
[....]
The swimmers, who were returning to the Olympic Village from a party, stopped at the Shell gas station to use the restroom.

Days later, Rio police held a news conference and said the athletes had vandalized the restroom, breaking a soap dispenser and mirror, as well as destroying a poster outside the bathroom. Police concluded that the swimmers had lied and there had been no crime committed against them, prompting outrage against Lochte in media accounts around the world.

Feigen was subsequently detained by police and agreed to pay a fine so that he could leave Brazil, but Lochte, who already had departed, stood by his story. His lawyers in the U.S. and Brazil moved to have the case dismissed, but a three-judge panel in a lower court ruled 2-1 that the charge was legitimate.

An appeals court on Thursday reversed that decision, 2-1, ruling that Brazilian law was not broken because Rio police had initiated the investigation, not Lochte. Whatever Lochte said in the interview with NBC did not constitute a false report, the court concluded. The decision has not yet been published and prosecutors have 15 days to decide whether they will challenge the ruling.
[....]
Lochte was pilloried for days and lost sponsors after Rio police asserted his story was a fabrication – infamously claiming one of the assailants put a gun to his forehead -- but a subsequent investigation by USA TODAY Sports found that, despite the embellishment, the framework of Lochte’s story was true.

Video surveillance and witness accounts showed Lochte and his teammates had been detained by armed security guards, who drew their weapons and ordered the swimmers to pay money for alleged damage at the gas station. The USA TODAY investigation also found no evidence that the men had vandalized a bathroom at the gas station that night, as authorities had alleged.

The only damage caused by the swimmers at the gas station was the poster that Lochte knocked off a wall. Police and Bentz said that the swimmers paid $20 plus 100 Reais, which is about $33, for the poster.

Lochte acknowledged he was intoxicated at the time and apologized for the negative attention he brought on the U.S. swim team, but he said he had never sought to involve police in the matter and had not filed a false report.

As details supporting Lochte's account emerged, he picked up new sponsors and took a spot on Dancing with the Stars last fall.
 
https://www.bbc.com/sport/swimming/44929537
Twelve-time Olympic medallist Ryan Lochte says he is "devastated" by his 14-month ban for a doping violation.

The 33-year-old American has been sanctioned by the US Anti-Doping Agency (Usada) for an intravenous infusion.

While Lochte was not using a banned substance, athletes cannot usually receive IVs unless related to a hospitalisation or via an exemption.

Lochte posted a photo of himself on social media receiving the IV which prompted an investigation.
_102660583_lochte.jpg

He told a news conference: "A rule is a rule and I accept there is a technical violation.

"I wasn't taking anything that was banned or prohibited. I am hopeful other athletes learn from my mistake."
[....]
His latest ban runs until July 2019 having been backdated to 24 May, the date he received the prohibited intravenous infusion.
[....]
While he fully co-operated, Usada found he had received permitted substances at an infusion clinic in a volume greater than 100ml in a 12-hour period without a therapeutic use exemption (TUE).

US anti-doping rules prohibit such infusions or injections unless hospital treatment or a surgical procedure is required.

He added: "I have never taken a prohibited substance and never attempted to gain any advantage over my competition by putting anything illegal in my body.

"I would never intentionally violate any anti-doping rule. Unfortunately although the rule is a newer one and not as widely known as others I should know better."

Lochte, who has been training with hopes of making the US Olympic team in 2020, had been expected to swim at this week's national championships in California.
 
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