Athletes and Athlete Support Persons can be sanctioned for possessing Prohibited Substances or Prohibited Methods. This is the case even if they have not used the Prohibited Substance or the Prohibited Method.
An Athlete or Athlete Support Person cannot possess a Prohibited Substance or Prohibited Method unless the Athlete or Athlete Support Person establishes that the possession was in accordance with a Therapeutic Use Exemption or acceptable justification.
Acceptable justification would not include, for example, buying or purchasing a Prohibited Substance for a friend, but could include justifiable medical circumstances, for example buying insulin for a diabetic child using a physician’s prescription.
Possession by an Athlete or Athlete Support Person can include:
- Actual, physical possession
- Constructive possession (where a person has control or intends to exercise control over the Prohibited Substance or Prohibited Method or the premises in which the Prohibited Substance or Prohibited Method exists)
- Possession by purchase (including electronic or other means).
If an Athlete needs to use a Prohibited Substance or a Prohibited Method for therapeutic reasons, they should apply for a Therapeutic Use Exemption (TUE).