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Report confirms Russian sample-swapping, widespread doping during Olympics

WATCH ABOVE: A damning report from a Canadian law professor details how Russia has been operating a state-sponsored doping scheme for four years. Mike Drolet reports – Jul 18, 2016

TORONTO – An independent investigation led by a Canadian law professor has confirmed widespread, state-sponsored doping across many Russian sports.

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Richard McLaren of Western University unveiled the report’s findings this morning in Toronto.

WATCH: WADA investigation finds evidence of ‘state-directed’ doping program in Russian sports

READ MORE: Anti-doping leaders draft letter calling to ban Russia from Olympics

It found evidence of organized doping from late 2011 to August 2015.

McLaren says labs in Moscow and Sochi protected Russian athletes.

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WATCH: Richard McLaren says Moscow drug testing lab routinely ignored evidence of positive drug tests for Russian athletes

According to the report, the lab at the Sochi Olympics “operated a unique sample swapping methodology” that allowed Russian athletes to compete at the 2014 Winter Games.

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The report also says that Russia’s Ministry of Sport “controlled and oversaw the manipulation of athlete’s analytical results or sample swapping” with the “active participation” of other government bodies, including the country’s security agency.

READ MORE: Rio 2016: Russian ban could boost Canadian track and field team

The World Anti-Doping Agency commissioned the investigation following a New York Times story in May that detailed a state-run system that helped athletes get away with cheating and win medals at the Sochi Games.

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McLaren says he’s “supremely confident” in the report’s findings.

WADA lawyer: ‘Dirty’ Russian athletes competed in Sochi knowing ‘for certain’ their samples would come back clean

The report does not make any recommendations. McLaren says it’s up to other sports bodies like the IOC and WADA to determine the next steps.

The Russian athletics team has already been banned from competing at the 2016 Games in Rio de Janeiro. Several national anti-doping organizations, including from Canada and the United States, were awaiting McLaren’s findings to see if they would push for a total ban of the Russian team.

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WATCH: Russian Ministry of Sport was directly involved in doping program
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