[WADA president] Reedie later acknowledged the role whistleblowers have had in exposing the alleged use of performance-enhancing drugs, while pointing to the increase in Wada’s powers in the last 18 months.
“There is no question that the Stepanovs provided vital information and intelligence that allowed the commission to be established; and, without which, widespread doping in Russian athletics may never have truly been exposed,” he said.
“What may have appeared as inaction reflected the fact that, until the revised World Anti-Doping Code came into effect on January 1, 2015, Wada did not have the power to conduct its own investigations. At the time, the agency was only able to collect information and pass it on to those that did have the power to investigate, in this case, the Russian authorities.
“Wada believes that passing the whistleblowers’ information on to the Russian authorities would not have resulted in the required scrutiny.”