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This year began with a number of investigations and analyses that became talk of the town in the Capitale Olympique Lausanne. No other media outlet has demonstrably offered you this exclusive level of coverage in this area.

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From Italy with love: a Russian Winter Olympian as part of Epstein’s global network
The 2006 Winter Olympics in Torino, an underage Olympian, Jeffrey Epstein, Terje Rød-Larsen, Zubair Khan, crypto, law firms, banks in France, Monaco and Switzerland: this story, which may has begun 2006 at the Olympic snowboard competitions, has many elements, even a potential FSB/GRU honey trap.
The Epstein Files create an Olympic problem
Casey Wasserman, chairman of LA 2028, appears in the Epstein Files published by the DOJ. Wasserman is not under investigation, but moral questions arise that the Olympic movement cannot avoid. IOC members are also named in the documents. The latter is a different matter from the Wasserman case.
IOC administration: ‘The whole place is rotten to the core’
IOC employees describe a culture of fear not only in the offices in Lausanne. The situation in Madrid, where a quarter of the IOC workforce is based, is also described as toxic in some departments. The incidents and the way in which management deals with them reveal a worrying Olympic pattern.
Toxic climate in parts of the IOC administration: ‘cultural pattern of fear and retaliation’
EXCLUSIVE: Following internal investigations, IOC director Marie Sallois has been relieved of her duties, but strangely enough, she is now coordinating president Coventry’s ‘Fit for the Future’ project. Who is protecting her? Employees report similar problems in other IOC directorates.
The art of the Olympic deal in the oligarchy: everything they want
The man who once introduced his model Melania Knavs to Donald Trump is now Trump’s ‘Special Envoy for Global Partnerships’ with growing influence in the Olympic world. His current partner holds positions in three Olympic federations, while the mother of his son was deported by ICE.
Record salaries: IOC directors receive more money than all Olympic champions and the best compensated Olympic federations
Read the figures for the 2021–2024 Olympic cycle: more than $55 million was paid to IOC directors – much more than the top-tier Olympic federations (World Athletics & Co) receive from the IOC revenue. The total amount is significantly higher, as some salaries are kept secret.

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'There is no rest for the wicked'

'There is no rest for the wicked'

Lord Triesman, former Labour minister and chairman of the Football Association, died at the age of 82. He was a remarkable man. Sporting roles were only a small part of his activities. And yet he left his mark. Read an article written by Lord Triesman about FIFA and journalism. Rest in peace, David!

Members Public
The Epstein Files create an Olympic problem

The Epstein Files create an Olympic problem

Casey Wasserman, chairman of LA 2028, appears in the Epstein Files published by the DOJ. Wasserman is not under investigation, but moral questions arise that the Olympic movement cannot avoid. IOC members are also named in the documents. The latter is a different matter from the Wasserman case.

Members Public
IOC administration: ‘The whole place is rotten to the core’

IOC administration: ‘The whole place is rotten to the core’

IOC employees describe a culture of fear not only in the offices in Lausanne. The situation in Madrid, where a quarter of the IOC workforce is based, is also described as toxic in some departments. The incidents and the way in which management deals with them reveal a worrying Olympic pattern.

Members Public