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French
judge denies allegations, is very emotional about incident
By
Raf Casert
Associated Press
SALT
LAKE CITY The figure skating scandal that has become one
of the biggest soap operas in Winter Olympics history isnt
going away.
In
a newspaper interview Monday, the French judge at the center of
the dispute denied that any deals were made and said she falsely
implicated skating officials from her own country out of fear.
The
dispute was settled by giving the silver medalists, Canadians Jamie
Sale and David Pelletier, their own gold medals Sunday night. Figuring
out whether there were back-room deals to swap votes hasnt
been as easy.
The
judge is Marie-Reine Le Gougne, who allegedly favored a Russian
couple in last weeks pairs skate to ensure a gold medal for
the French in the current ice dancing competition. Le Gougne asked
for a chance to explain herself at an International Skating Union
meeting Monday, but ISU president Ottavio Cinquanta said she wasnt
expected
to get the chance.
According
to colleagues, Le Gougne wept the morning after the event as she
accused French figure skating federation president Didier Gailhaguet
of pressuring her to back the Russians.
But
Gailhaguet denied the allegation. And in the newspaper interview,
so did Le Gougne, who had not spoken publicly since the Feb. 11
event.
I
judged in my soul and conscience, Le Gougne told the French
sports daily LEquipe.
I
considered that the Russians were the best .... I never made a deal
with an official or a Russian judge.
Immediately
after the event, Le Gougne said, she was verbally attacked and felt
physically threatened because of the way she had voted. She said
she would name names when the time comes.
I
felt threatened physically,' she said, without specifying
whether she had been threatened.
And that continued inside the shuttle and when I reached the
hotel.
There,
Le Gougne claimed, ISU official Sally Stapleford assailed
me, scolding me for having voted for the Russians. Thats when
I broke down.
American
attorney John Jackson, an ISU championship judge, witnessed Le Gougnes
outburst, along with Stapleford and ISU technical committee members
Walburga Grimm of Germany and Britta Lindgren of Sweden.
He
said Le Gougne has it all wrong.
The
French judges characterization of what happened is inaccurate,
Jackson said. Her admission was unsolicited, unequivocal and
clear. Theres no question about it. It was witnessed by at
least four parties.
Jackson
also laughed off Le Gougnes assertion that Stapleford
who was born and raised in Britain but also holds a Canadian passport
came up with the idea that the French judge may have been
pressured to vote as she did by Gailhaguet.
When
accusations get that ridiculous, its an indication that people
are running scared, Jackson said.
Stapleford
denied the allegation Monday, saying she saw Le Gougne in the hotel
and she ran off in a very emotional state.
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