The International  Olympic Committee (IOC) has indicated that the matter involving the  stripping of USA’s 2012 Olympic 4x100m relay silver medal is still  ongoing and yet to reach a conclusion. 
Speaking  to Trinidad and Tobago Olympic Committee (TTOC) president, Brian Lewis,  yesterday, he revealed that the IOC has finally responded to an email  of enquiry which he sent to the governing body last week.  
 
“What the IOC has said categorically to us is that the process is  still ongoing,” remarked Lewis. “The US Olympic Committee athletes,  having been notified, now have 21 days to respond. If they don’t object  (to the decision), the IOC will now meet to consider, and they will take  on board a number of factors including the IAAF (International  Association of Athletics Federations) reclassification recommendation.” 
 
Lewis is unsure though when the US Olympic Committee was officially  notified. International reports on May 13 revealed that the entire USA  4x100m relay team was stripped of their London 2012 Olympic silver  medals as a consequence of a positive test of US sprinter Tyson Gay. The  former 100m and 200m world champion Gay was suspended for a year after  testing positive for a banned anabolic steroid. The 32-year-old returned  his London 2012 medal when his suspension was announced in May 2014.  Now the IOC later indicated to US Olympic authorities that the whole  team (Trell Kimmons, Justin Gatlin, Ryan Bailey, Jeffery Demps, Darvis  Patton) must return their medals. 
 
Lewis added: “Whatever decision the IOC comes to, it is at that  point that they will notify the National Olympic Committee concerned,  which in this case is ours. At this particular point in time, no  decision has been made with regards to the reclassification or the  reallocation. With the IOC having confirmed that the process is still  ongoing, the Trinidad and Tobago Olympic Committee has to await the  results of that particular process that is ongoing.”  
 
If reports are confirmed by the IOC, TT’s bronze medal quartet of  Keston Bledman, Richard Thompson, Emmanuel Callender and Marc Burns will  be bumped up into silver medal position, while fourth placed France  will be elevated to third.  It would be a remarkable ending for the TT  men who initially finished fourth in the final but fortune favoured them  as Canada — who placed third — were disqualified for a lane violation.