Brazilian police pulled two US Olympic swimmers off a plane about to leave the country for questioning in a row over their claim to have been victims of an armed mugging, US officials said today.
"We can confirm that Jack Conger and Gunnar Bentz were removed from their flight to the United States by Brazilian authorities," said Patrick Sandusky, spokesman for the US Olympic Committee.
The two were with star US swimmer Ryan Lochte and another squad member, James Feigen, when they said they were robbed at gunpoint. A Brazilian judge ordered a probe saying their story is full of inconsistencies.
Globo, a leading Brazilian news organisation, posted a video online showing the two swimmers walking into a police station. The G1 news site, which is part of Globo, reported that Bentz and Conger were detained for questioning and that Feigen had been taken in earlier while still in the airport. Police did not immediately respond to a request for more information.
Lochte is believed to be already in the United States, having left before the Brazilian authorities ordered the swimmers' questioning.
Earlier, Judge Keyla Blank "issued warrants for searches and the seizure of the
passports for the US swimmers," a statement from her office said. "With this, they are banned from leaving the country," the statement said.
The court order was the latest twist in a story of a supposedly terrifying incident that embarrassed Rio authorities and ramped up the fear factor for hundreds of thousands of tourists in Rio at South America's first Olympics.
Now Brazilian officials are suggesting that the US swimmers may have made up their account -- and could face charges for filing a false report. Lochte says that he and three team-mates were held up by muggers posing as police as they left a late night party in central Rio.
At first the International Olympic Committee denied that anything had happened. Lochte, however, gave interviews describing an incident in detail and Brazilian Olympic authorities later issued a public apology for the security slip up.
With some 85,000 police and soldiers guarding the Olympics -- twice the number used in London -- the apparently high-profile crime touched a nerve in Rio. In addition to multiple incidents of thefts from Olympic athletes or media, a Portuguese government minister was mugged in the swish Leblon district.