Sprinter Justin Gatlin and his agent Renaldo Nehemiah (R) exit a hearing on Gatlin's appeal against a four-year ban with the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) in New York May 29, 2008. A U.S. arbitration panel suspended the 26-year-old disgraced Olympic 100 metres champion in January for four years, ruling a 2006 positive test for the male sex hormone testosterone was a second offence. It took into consideration a 2001 positive for a medication Gatlin had taken for years for Attention Deficit Disorder. Gatlin is arguing the 2001 violation should not be taken into consideration by the panel.
Sprinter Justin Gatlin (2nd R), his parents Frank and Janet Gatlin, and his agent Renaldo Nehemiah (2nd L) exit a hearing on Gatlin's appeal against a four-year ban with the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) in New York May 29, 2008. A U.S. arbitration panel suspended the 26-year-old disgraced Olympic 100 metres champion in January for four years, ruling a 2006 positive test for the male sex hormone testosterone was a second offence. It took into consideration a 2001 positive for a medication Gatlin had taken for years for Attention Deficit Disorder. Gatlin is arguing the 2001 violation should not be taken into consideration by the panel.