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http://www.cnn.com/2016/08/18/sport/us-swimmers-olympics-robbery-questions/
Rio de Janeiro (CNN)[Breaking news update, posted at 3:39 p.m. ET]
Civil Police chief Fernando Veloso said at a press conference about four American swimmers: "In theory, one or all of them might be charged for false communication of a crime and for damaging private assets, the gas station. I'm not saying that they are charged right now because of that. We have to finalize the investigation and in theory that could be the case. This is not really a -- this kind of crime will not lead to their arrest."
[Breaking news update, posted at 3:33 p.m. ET]
Four American swimmers who claimed that they were robbed in Rio de Janeiro should apologize to residents, Brazilian police said.
[Breaking news update, posted at 3:30 p.m. ET]
U.S. Olympic swimmer Ryan Lochte was confrontational with security guards after they stopped him and three other American swimmers from vandalizing a gas station because he was "very angry because he was intoxicated," said Fernando Veloso, chief of civil police in Rio de Janeiro.
[Breaking news update, posted at 3:28 p.m. ET]
A firearm was pointed at the American swimmers by one of the security guards at a vandalized gas station in order to control one of them, Brazilian police said. It is not being deemed an excessive use of force.
[Breaking news update, posted at 3:22 p.m. ET]
One of the American Olympic swimmers confirmed the account that the surveillance video showed that the swimmers -- Ryan Lochte, Jack Conger, Gunnar Bentz and James Feigen -- were committing acts of vandalism at a gas station when confronted by security guards, Brazilian police said.
[Breaking news update, posted at 3:20 p.m. ET]
Civil police in Rio de Janeiro say that American Olympic swimmer James Feigen has not been interviewed. Gunnar Bentz and Jack Conger are giving their statements to police now.
[Breaking news update, posted at 3:15 p.m. ET]
Surveillance videos show that there was no violence or robbery committed against the four American Olympic swimmers who Brazilian police say vandalized a Rio gas station.
[Breaking news update, posted at 3:10 p.m. ET]
Civil Police chief Fernando Veloso says "there was no robbery" in Rio de Janeiro the way the US swimmers have described. One or more of the four vandalized a gas station, said Veloso.
[Previous version, posted at 2:33 p.m. ET]
Four US Olympic swimmers facing scrutiny after they reported being robbed in Rio de Janeiro allegedly vandalized a gas station on the morning in question, according to Brazilian media and a police source.
Brazil's Globo media group has released footage that shows US swimmers Ryan Lochte, James Feigen, Jack Conger and Gunnar Bentz at the gas station in Rio's Barra da Tijuca neighborhood early Sunday when the athletes said they were robbed at gunpoint by men in police uniforms.
The footage shows a man in the act of urinating in a side alley at the gas station and being confronted by gas station staff.
Daily newspaper O Globo cited the station's owner as saying the athletes had thrown stones at the business and torn one of its signs before urinating in the street.
Swimmer Ryan Lochte, right, has returned to the United States. James Feigen appears to be in Brazil.
"They stopped next to the gas station, and urinated outside right next to the gas station. We even have images of one of the athlete's butts, as he is pulling up his pants," said the owner, who the newspaper said chose to remain unnamed.
A police source told CNN that the athletes, who had been drinking, had torn a sign at the gas station and vandalized it.
CNN has been to the gas station and seen damage at the site.
The police source said that officers were called by the station's security guard, but by the time they arrived, an agreement had been reached between the owner and the athletes and it was decided charges would not be pressed.
He said no firearms were drawn during the incident.
CNN has viewed the footage but cannot confirm its authenticity.
CNN has reached out to police and attorneys for the swimmers for comment on the footage but has not received any responses.
Scrutiny mounts
The swimmers' accounts of being robbed at gunpoint have been subjected to increasing scrutiny, with Brazilian authorities issuing search and seizure warrants against the athletes to examine perceived inconsistencies.
US swimmers Gunnar Bentz, left, and Jack Conger leave the police station at the Rio de Janeiro airport.
Conger and Bentz were pulled off their flight bound for the United States overnight and had their passports seized as the affair spiraled into a diplomatic matter, which threatens to overshadow the Olympic Games as they draw to a close. The pair arrived at a police station Thursday in Rio's Leblon neighborhood to answer questions about the incident.
A source close to the police investigation has told CNN that they believe there was not a robbery.
An attorney for Lochte, Jeff Ostrow, brushed off suggestions of conflicting stories, saying the four swimmers' accounts "are 95% consistent."
He says his client, a gold medal winner in the pool in Rio, has been cooperative with authorities and has not been asked again for assistance.
Ostrow had confirmed to CNN earlier his client returned to the United States.
"He's the victim. He didn't commit a crime. Same with the other guys," Ostrow said.
"The story needs to be about 20-something-year-old kids pulled off an airplane, they're being detained to testify to police?" Ostrow said. "C'mon."
The US Olympic Committee said the remaining three swimmers are cooperating with police. Feigen appears to be in Brazil, but it is unclear if he is in Rio.
The incident poses questions about how much the US Olympic Committee knew about the incident from the time it was initially reported -- and what action it may take against its athletes if their behavior is found to have fallen short of expected standards.
Rio de Janeiro (CNN)[Breaking news update, posted at 3:39 p.m. ET]
Civil Police chief Fernando Veloso said at a press conference about four American swimmers: "In theory, one or all of them might be charged for false communication of a crime and for damaging private assets, the gas station. I'm not saying that they are charged right now because of that. We have to finalize the investigation and in theory that could be the case. This is not really a -- this kind of crime will not lead to their arrest."
[Breaking news update, posted at 3:33 p.m. ET]
Four American swimmers who claimed that they were robbed in Rio de Janeiro should apologize to residents, Brazilian police said.
[Breaking news update, posted at 3:30 p.m. ET]
U.S. Olympic swimmer Ryan Lochte was confrontational with security guards after they stopped him and three other American swimmers from vandalizing a gas station because he was "very angry because he was intoxicated," said Fernando Veloso, chief of civil police in Rio de Janeiro.
[Breaking news update, posted at 3:28 p.m. ET]
A firearm was pointed at the American swimmers by one of the security guards at a vandalized gas station in order to control one of them, Brazilian police said. It is not being deemed an excessive use of force.
[Breaking news update, posted at 3:22 p.m. ET]
One of the American Olympic swimmers confirmed the account that the surveillance video showed that the swimmers -- Ryan Lochte, Jack Conger, Gunnar Bentz and James Feigen -- were committing acts of vandalism at a gas station when confronted by security guards, Brazilian police said.
[Breaking news update, posted at 3:20 p.m. ET]
Civil police in Rio de Janeiro say that American Olympic swimmer James Feigen has not been interviewed. Gunnar Bentz and Jack Conger are giving their statements to police now.
[Breaking news update, posted at 3:15 p.m. ET]
Surveillance videos show that there was no violence or robbery committed against the four American Olympic swimmers who Brazilian police say vandalized a Rio gas station.
[Breaking news update, posted at 3:10 p.m. ET]
Civil Police chief Fernando Veloso says "there was no robbery" in Rio de Janeiro the way the US swimmers have described. One or more of the four vandalized a gas station, said Veloso.
[Previous version, posted at 2:33 p.m. ET]
Four US Olympic swimmers facing scrutiny after they reported being robbed in Rio de Janeiro allegedly vandalized a gas station on the morning in question, according to Brazilian media and a police source.
Brazil's Globo media group has released footage that shows US swimmers Ryan Lochte, James Feigen, Jack Conger and Gunnar Bentz at the gas station in Rio's Barra da Tijuca neighborhood early Sunday when the athletes said they were robbed at gunpoint by men in police uniforms.
The footage shows a man in the act of urinating in a side alley at the gas station and being confronted by gas station staff.
Daily newspaper O Globo cited the station's owner as saying the athletes had thrown stones at the business and torn one of its signs before urinating in the street.
Swimmer Ryan Lochte, right, has returned to the United States. James Feigen appears to be in Brazil.
"They stopped next to the gas station, and urinated outside right next to the gas station. We even have images of one of the athlete's butts, as he is pulling up his pants," said the owner, who the newspaper said chose to remain unnamed.
A police source told CNN that the athletes, who had been drinking, had torn a sign at the gas station and vandalized it.
CNN has been to the gas station and seen damage at the site.
The police source said that officers were called by the station's security guard, but by the time they arrived, an agreement had been reached between the owner and the athletes and it was decided charges would not be pressed.
He said no firearms were drawn during the incident.
CNN has viewed the footage but cannot confirm its authenticity.
CNN has reached out to police and attorneys for the swimmers for comment on the footage but has not received any responses.
Scrutiny mounts
The swimmers' accounts of being robbed at gunpoint have been subjected to increasing scrutiny, with Brazilian authorities issuing search and seizure warrants against the athletes to examine perceived inconsistencies.
US swimmers Gunnar Bentz, left, and Jack Conger leave the police station at the Rio de Janeiro airport.
Conger and Bentz were pulled off their flight bound for the United States overnight and had their passports seized as the affair spiraled into a diplomatic matter, which threatens to overshadow the Olympic Games as they draw to a close. The pair arrived at a police station Thursday in Rio's Leblon neighborhood to answer questions about the incident.
A source close to the police investigation has told CNN that they believe there was not a robbery.
An attorney for Lochte, Jeff Ostrow, brushed off suggestions of conflicting stories, saying the four swimmers' accounts "are 95% consistent."
He says his client, a gold medal winner in the pool in Rio, has been cooperative with authorities and has not been asked again for assistance.
Ostrow had confirmed to CNN earlier his client returned to the United States.
"He's the victim. He didn't commit a crime. Same with the other guys," Ostrow said.
"The story needs to be about 20-something-year-old kids pulled off an airplane, they're being detained to testify to police?" Ostrow said. "C'mon."
The US Olympic Committee said the remaining three swimmers are cooperating with police. Feigen appears to be in Brazil, but it is unclear if he is in Rio.
The incident poses questions about how much the US Olympic Committee knew about the incident from the time it was initially reported -- and what action it may take against its athletes if their behavior is found to have fallen short of expected standards.