Russian hurdler Natalya Antyukh stripped of 2012 Olympic victory for doping

Russian runner Natalya Antyukh was disqualified on Monday from her 400-metre hurdles win at the 2012 London Olympics for doping, and Lashinda Demus of the United States is set to be upgraded to the gold medal.

American Lashinda Demus, a 2011 world champion, to receive gold medal from IOC

Natalya Antyukh of Russia, pictured competing at the 2012 London Olympics, has had her women's 400-metre victory taken away for a doping offence. (Clive Brunskill/Getty Images/File)

Russian runner Natalya Antyukh was disqualified on Monday from her 400-metre hurdles win at the 2012 London Olympics for doping, and Lashinda Demus of the United States is set to be upgraded to the gold medal.

Antyukh was already serving a four-year ban in a previous case judged by the Court or Arbitration for Sport last year that stripped her results from 2013 to 2015.

The new ruling based on historical evidence recovered from a Moscow testing laboratory database further disqualified Antyukh in all her events from July 15, 2012 through June 29, 2013, track and field's Athletics Integrity Unit said.

At the 2012 Olympics, on Aug. 8, Demus finished 0.07 seconds behind the Russian winner.

Now 39, Demus is in line to become an Olympic champion for the first time and get a gold medal from the International Olympic Committee to add to her world title won in 2011.

The bronze medallist 10 years ago, Zuzana Hejnova of the Czech Republic should be upgraded to silver, and the bronze is set to go to Kaliese Spencer of Jamaica.

The AIU did not specify evidence against Antyukh from the Moscow database that was part of a years-long standoff between the World Anti-Doping Agency and Russian authorities.

The latest case was prosecuted at national level in Russia and can be appealed, the Monaco-based AIU said.

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