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Ex-Russian official opens up about massive doping at 2014 Olympics

Russian officials took clean urine from athletes months before the Sochi Olympics and transported it in soda containers and baby bottles as part of a scheme to evade doping tests, the former head of Russian's anti-doping laboratory told The New York Times.

Grigory Rodchenkov, now in California and working with a filmmaker on a documentary, gave the newspaper details of the elaborate scheme, which he said involved dozens of Russian athletes and officials and replaced tainted samples for at least three gold medalists.

The International Olympic Committee called Thursday's report "very worrying," saying Olympic officials would work with the World Anti-Doping Agency to investigate.

Russia's track team is currently banned from international competition over doping allegations, and the sport's governing body will decide next month whether the team should be allowed to compete in Rio.

On Sunday, CBS' "60 Minutes" reported that over the last few months, Rodchenkov has been sharing what he knows with Vitaly Stepanov, who had a low-level job collecting urine and blood samples for Russia's anti-doping agency before coming forward about the scheme to the World Anti-Doping Agency.

What Rodchenkov didn't know was that Stepanov recorded 15 hours of their conversations.

"60 Minutes" reported that the biggest bomb Rodchenkov dropped in the conversations was this: At least four Russians won gold medals at the Sochi Olympics while on steroids, and his lab covered it up.

Stepanov said on "60 Minutes" that Rodchenkov told him, referring to the Russian equivalent of the FBI, the FSB, "That some FSB agents worked as doping control officers during the Sochi games. That FSB tried to control every single step of the anti-doping process in Sochi."

On Wednesday, CBS News learned that the FBI is investigating allegations surrounding the Russian doping scandal, according to someone familiar with the investigation.

Rodchenkov's details add more evidence that the Russian government was deeply involved in attempts to cheat and cover up the doping.

He told the newspaper he was ordered to replace athletes' tainted samples with clean urine so that they would not fail drug tests. At night, when the laboratory in Sochi was not under observation, he said tainted samples were passed to him through a concealed hole in the wall. The samples were then given to a man he believed to be an employee of the Russian security services.

The man allegedly opened the supposedly tamper-proof bottles. Rodchenkov then filled them with clean urine supplied by the athletes months before, and the bottles were returned to the lab. Samples are supposed to be anonymous during testing, but Rodchenkov said that athletes took pictures of their doping forms so that the containers could be identified later.

The operation worked "like a Swiss watch," Rodchenkov told the newspaper.

The newspaper named three Russian athletes who won four gold medals in Sochi, saying their names were listed on a spreadsheet of cheaters Rodchenkov provided. The spreadsheet was not published and The Associated Press could not verify it.

Sports Minister Vitaly Mutko defended the Russian athletes.

"They are outstanding athletes and the accusations are absurd," Mutko told the state Tass news agency. "The accusations against them are absolutely groundless. We will study this article and will decide how to react."

Rodchenkov also claimed he provided some athletes with a cocktail of steroids mixed with liquor, using Scotch whisky for men and vermouth for women.

"These allegations are very detailed and very worrying and we ask the World Anti-Doping Agency to investigate immediately," the IOC said in a statement. "Based on the findings of a WADA inquiry the IOC will not hesitate to act with its usual policy of zero tolerance for doping and defending the clean athletes."

The IOC's medical director Dr. Richard Budgett told The Associated Press earlier Thursday, prior to the publication of the story, that the IOC was considering retesting samples from the Sochi Olympics. But according to Rodchenkov, the tainted urine was flushed down the toilet after it was replaced.

After a World Anti-Doping Agency commission accused Rodchenkov of a role in a separate doping cover-up in track and field in a report published in November, he resigned and moved to the U.S. Documentary filmmaker Bryan Fogel arranged his interviews with the newspaper.

Calls to two numbers for Rodchenkov were not answered Thursday.

Two former executives from the Russian national anti-doping agency, Nikita Kamayev and Vyacheslav Sinev, died within the space of two weeks in February. The agency said the 52-year-old Kamayev had died of a heart attack after skiing, and did not elaborate on the cause of death for Sinev, 58. The agency had been accused by WADA in November of covering up doping.

On Wednesday, Mutko had told Tass that Russian sports were under an "information attack" from Western media, without explicitly referring to a specific story. "Actually there is nothing to back all of this up. No facts," he said.

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