| Banned Austrian coach in car crash as anti-doping war escalates (AP)
 Updated: 2006-02-20 09:13
 
 VIENNA, Austria - The banned Austrian ski coach at the center of a doping 
investigation at the Turin Olympics crashed his car into a police roadblock 
Sunday evening after leading authorities on a bizarre chase. 
 
 
 
 Walter Mayer was 
slightly injured in the accident, in which he struck an unoccupied police car 
set up as an impromptu barrier in the town of Paternion in the southwestern 
province of Carinthia, about 15 miles from the Italian frontier and some 250 
miles from Turin, police said. He was taken into protective custody.
 |  Austrian Nordic 
 trainer Walter Mayer is seen on this February 18, 2004 file photo in 
 Innsbruck, Austria. [AP]
 |  Mayer was returning to his native Austria just hours after Italian 
authorities searched Austria's biathlon and cross-country team quarters for 
banned substances. Police acted on a tipoff that Mayer — who was accused of 
blood doping at the 2002 Olympics while he was Austria's Nordic team coach — was 
with the team. 
 Italian police seized blood analysis equipment during the raids, as well as 
syringes, vials of distilled water, asthma medication and other substances, the 
national news agency ANSA reported, quoting unidentified investigative sources. 
One Austrian athlete threw a bag out of a window containing needles and 
medicines, and Mayer apparently left the scene in a minivan, ANSA said. 
 The chain of events in Austria started when Mayer pulled over to the side of 
the road and took a nap in his car, a police statement said. 
 A suspicious local resident alerted police that a man was sleeping in a car 
with the engine turned off, and when officers arrived on the scene to wake him 
up, Mayer sped away, striking and slightly injuring an officer, the statement 
said. 
 The officers on the scene then called for backup, and authorities parked an 
empty police vehicle across the highway as a roadblock. Mayer slammed into the 
squad car, totaling both vehicles. 
 Police said Mayer refused to take a blood-alcohol test, which an officer 
requested after Mayer showed signs of intoxication. 
 
 
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