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BG-012 Weightlifting · International Weightlifting Federation 2022

Tamás Aján — The Tyranny of Cash, Bought Ballots, and a Lifetime Ban

Body
International Weightlifting Federation (IWF)
The Scheme
Unaccounted cash funding vote-buying at electoral congresses
Amount
~$10.4 million unaccounted
Status
Banned

Summary

In June 2022 the Court of Arbitration for Sport imposed a lifetime ban on Tamás Aján, the Hungarian who had run the International Weightlifting Federation for two decades as president and a quarter-century as general secretary before that. The CAS award, issued on June 16, formally ended a 43-year career at the top of the sport. The arbitral charges that carried the lifetime sanction concerned tampering with the anti-doping process and complicity in covering up positive tests — but those doping offenses sit alongside, and were funded by, the story this file is built on: a federation run on untraceable cash, roughly $10.4 million of which simply could not be accounted for, and electoral congresses in which votes were bought and sealed.

The mechanism was, in the words of the investigation that exposed it, "the tyranny of cash." Aján was the sole collector of money paid in cash to the IWF, including doping fines that athletes and federations paid directly to him, and large cash withdrawals from the federation's accounts that — tellingly — clustered just before major competitions and before IWF congresses. Some of it flowed through what investigators described as hidden Hungarian bank accounts for which no statements were ever produced. Professor Richard McLaren, the Canadian lawyer the IWF itself commissioned to investigate after a German television documentary aired the allegations in January 2020, concluded that approximately $10.4 million was unaccounted for under Aján's stewardship.

The cash had a purpose beyond enrichment: it bought the elections that kept Aján in power. McLaren found that at the IWF's two most recent electoral congresses, members were bribed to vote for Aján and his preferred candidates, given precise instructions on how to mark their ballots, and told to photograph the completed papers as proof. When that proved insufficiently controllable, the voting procedure was altered so bribed members could not change their ballots after photographing them — a stamp replacing erasable ink. A federation's democracy had been converted into a paid transaction, with a chain of custody to guarantee delivery.

A note on framing is owed. The CAS lifetime ban was, in its legal text, grounded in anti-doping rule violations — tampering and complicity. The financial corruption and the vote-buying were McLaren's findings, not separate CAS charges, and they are the heart of the matter here: the missing millions and the bought ballots are the governance scandal, the doping cover-ups the adjacent context the same cash made possible. What follows is how the longest-reigning figure in weightlifting turned a federation into a personal cash economy, and how an investigation he himself authorized brought it to light.

Timeline

1976
The general secretary
Aján takes a senior administrative role at the IWF, serving as general secretary for some 24 years and accumulating control over its money and machinery.
2000
The presidency
Aján becomes IWF president, consolidating the political and financial reins in a single office he will hold for two decades.
2009 onward
The cash economy
Investigators later date the documented financial irregularities and anti-doping failures to roughly this period.
Two recent congresses
The bought ballots
McLaren finds members bribed to vote for Aján and his slate, instructed how to mark ballots, and told to photograph them as proof.
January 5, 2020
The documentary
German broadcaster ARD airs an exposé alleging financial malpractice and anti-doping corruption at the IWF, triggering the crisis.
2020
The investigator he hired
The IWF Executive Board commissions Richard McLaren to investigate; Aján steps aside while the inquiry proceeds.
April 15, 2020
Resignation
The Executive Board accepts Aján's resignation as president, ending 43 years of service to the federation.
June 4, 2020
The McLaren Report
The 120-plus-page report finds ~$10.4 million unaccounted for, "the tyranny of cash," vote-buying at congresses, and at least 40 covered-up doping cases.
2020–2022
The prosecution
The International Testing Agency, acting for the IWF, investigates 146 unresolved cases from 2009–2019 and prosecutes Aján and former vice-president Nicu Vlad before CAS.
June 16, 2022
The lifetime ban
CAS finds Aján guilty of tampering and complicity in anti-doping violations and bans him for life; Nicu Vlad receives a lifetime ban as well.

The Tyranny of Cash

The architecture of the corruption was its simplicity. For a sport that prizes the clean lift — weight raised overhead and held, witnessed by judges, recorded to the kilogram — Aján's financial system was the opposite of accountable: cash, collected and dispensed by one man, leaving as little trace as he could arrange. McLaren's investigators called it "the tyranny of cash," and the phrase is precise. Aján was the sole collector of money the IWF received in cash, a category that included doping fines paid directly to him in person. He made large cash withdrawals from the federation's accounts, and the timing was its own confession: they clustered just before major competitions and IWF congresses, the two occasions when discreet money is most useful in a sport's politics.

Where the money went is the part that could not be reconstructed, because it was engineered to resist reconstruction. Some of it moved through Hungarian bank accounts investigators described as hidden, for which no statements were ever furnished. Tally what could be traced against what should have been there, and a hole opened up: approximately $10.4 million unaccounted for — a figure sometimes rounded to $10.5 million, but $10.4 million as McLaren's team specifically determined it. That is not an accounting discrepancy. That is a federation's treasury operated as a private float, the controls deliberately removed so that no statement could ever show the balance.

The elegance of cash, from a corrupt administrator's standpoint, is that it makes the absence of evidence look like the absence of crime. There is no wire to subpoena, no memo line to read, no counterparty to flip. Aján had built a financial system whose defining feature was that it could not be audited, and for years that was enough. It took an investigator with a mandate from the federation itself to establish that the most damning fact was the missing one: millions the IWF had handled, and no one could say where they went.

The Bought Congress

The missing cash was not merely pocketed; a great deal of it did work, and the work was buying elections. McLaren found that at the IWF's two most recent electoral congresses, the body's democracy had been rigged from the inside — members bribed to vote for Aján and the candidates he favored for senior Executive Board posts. The funding source closed the loop with grim symmetry: cash from anti-doping fines, paid in by the very athletes and federations the IWF was meant to be policing, was recycled into the bribes that kept Aján in the office from which the policing was supposed to come.

The operational detail is what elevates this from generic vote-buying to a documented machine. Bribed members were not merely paid and trusted. They were given specific instructions on how to mark their ballots, then told to photograph the completed paper as proof they had voted as purchased — a receipt for a sold vote. When even that left room for a change of heart, the voting procedure itself was altered: Aján's regime replaced erasable ink with a stamp, so a bribed member could not photograph the correct ballot and quietly change it afterward. The corruption had a quality-control system.

This is the heart of the bagman's offense, the part that has nothing to do with chemistry and everything to do with power. An electoral congress is the one mechanism by which a federation's members hold its leadership accountable. Aján did not evade it; he bought it, instrumented it, and stamped it shut. The two most recent congresses that had returned him and his allies to office were, on McLaren's findings, transactions financed out of the federation's own untraceable cash. A man cannot be voted out by a congress he has purchased — which is the point of purchasing it.

The Inquiry He Authorized

The unraveling began, as these affairs often do, with journalism. On January 5, 2020, the German broadcaster ARD aired a documentary alleging financial malpractice and systematic anti-doping corruption at the IWF. The Executive Board chose, fatefully for Aján, to investigate, commissioning Richard McLaren — the lawyer whose earlier reports had laid bare Russia's state doping program — to dig into its own house. Aján stepped aside while the work proceeded and, on April 15, 2020, resigned the presidency after 43 years at the federation.

McLaren's report, published June 4, 2020, ran to more than 120 pages and read like an indictment: the $10.4 million unaccounted for, the tyranny of cash, the bought congresses with their photographed ballots, and at least 40 doping positives covered up so compromised athletes could keep competing, some at the Olympic level.

The report was not itself a verdict, and here the file must be exact. The sanctioning ran through the anti-doping channel: the International Testing Agency, acting for the IWF, worked through 146 unresolved cases from 2009 to 2019 and prosecuted Aján — alongside former vice-president Nicu Vlad — before the Court of Arbitration for Sport. On June 16, 2022, CAS found Aján guilty of tampering with the anti-doping process and complicity in anti-doping rule violations, and banned him for life; Vlad was banned for life as well. The lifetime sanction on record is thus framed in the language of doping offenses, even though the McLaren findings that destroyed Aján's standing were principally about money and votes. The man who built a federation on uncountable cash was finally stopped by the one set of charges the sport had the machinery to prosecute to a binding award.

The Five Factors

01
Cash is the corruption instrument that hides itself
Aján ran the IWF on physical money he alone collected and withdrew, leaving no wires to trace and no statements to read; ~$10.4 million went missing precisely because the system was designed to be unauditable. Any governance regime that permits an official to handle institutional cash without independent reconciliation has pre-authorized the theft.
02
He who controls the treasury controls the election
The unaccounted cash was not idle; it bought the congresses that re-elected Aján and his slate. When the same person controls a federation's money and stands for its highest office, the money will be spent to retain the office, and the membership's vote becomes a commodity.
03
Vote-buying scales when it can be verified
The scheme worked because it solved the briber's classic problem — how to know the vote was delivered — with photographed ballots and a stamp that prevented members from reneging. Secret ballots exist to make vote-buying unenforceable; defeating the secrecy is how a bought congress becomes a reliable one.
04
Fused money and doping make one ecosystem, not two
Doping fines paid in cash funded the vote-buying; the same opacity that hid the missing millions hid at least 40 covered-up positives. Where a federation's finances are corrupt, its integrity functions are corruptible by the same hands, and reform must address the money and the testing together.
05
An institution that investigates itself can still find the truth — if it hires an outsider
The decisive blow came from an independent investigator the IWF itself commissioned after a documentary forced the issue. Self-investigation is meaningful only when delegated to someone with genuine independence and a mandate to publish; absent that, a federation's inquiry into itself is theater.

Aftermath

The lifetime ban on Aján — confirmed against his challenge before CAS, as it was for Nicu Vlad — closed the personal chapter, but the institutional one ran on. The McLaren findings forced a wholesale overhaul of IWF governance: new leadership, financial controls to replace the tyranny of cash, and a delegation of anti-doping responsibility to the independent International Testing Agency, the body that ultimately prosecuted Aján. The federation that had been run as one man's cash economy was rebuilt, under duress, into something that could at least be audited.

The cost reached beyond Aján himself. Fallout from the scandal put weightlifting's very place at the Olympics in jeopardy: the IOC, long impatient with the sport's doping and governance failures, left weightlifting off the initial program for the 2028 Los Angeles Games, even as the door to reinstatement stayed ajar. That is the measure of what a bought congress and a missing $10.4 million can cost a sport — not just the disgrace of its longest-serving leader, but the standing of the entire discipline on the Olympic stage. Aján had ruled weightlifting for 43 years on a foundation of untraceable cash; when it was finally counted and found short, it nearly took the sport's Olympic future down with him.

Lessons

  1. Never let one official collect, hold, and disburse an institution's cash without independent reconciliation; cash handled in private is corruption pre-approved, and the missing balance will be invisible by design.
  2. Separate control of the money from candidacy for office — when the treasurer is also the incumbent, the treasury becomes a re-election fund and the membership's vote becomes purchasable.
  3. Protect ballot secrecy as an anti-corruption control, not a mere courtesy: vote-buying becomes enforceable, and therefore worthwhile, the moment a buyer can verify how each member voted.
  4. Treat financial corruption and integrity failures as one problem; the same opacity that hides missing money hides covered-up cheating, and fixing one without the other fixes nothing.
  5. When forced to investigate yourself, hand the inquiry to a genuinely independent outsider with a mandate to publish; anything less is a federation grading its own exam.

References