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Lochte confesses: I overexaggerated ‘robbery’ story

Star American swimmer Ryan Lochte said Saturday he took "full responsibility" for vandalizing a gas station bathroom and then telling police an "overexaggerated" story about it during the Rio Olympics.
(FILES) This file photo taken on August 03, 2016 shows US swimmer Ryan Lochte holding a press conference in Rio de Janeiro, two days ahead of the opening ceremony of the Rio 2016 Olympic Games. Brazilian police have prevented two more U.S. swimmers from leaving the country after the Rio de Janeiro Olympics over the investigation of a robbery complaint by teammate Ryan Lochte. According to a report on O Globo Web site, swimmers Gunnar Bentz and Jack Conger were arrested and removed from their plane so Brazilian federal police could interview them Wednesday night. The U.S. Olympic Committee later confirmed their detention. / AFP PHOTO / MARTIN BUREAU

“I am sorry, it won’t happen again,” Lochte said of the Rio incident when interviewed by Brazil’s Globo TV. “It was my fault. I was immature.” PHOTO: AFP/MARTIN BUREAU

Star American swimmer Ryan Lochte said Saturday he took “full responsibility” for vandalizing a gas station bathroom and then telling police an “overexaggerated” story about it during the Rio Olympics.

The episode, which has embarrassed the US sporting superpower, saw Lochte and three other gold-winning US swimmers embroiled in a controversy after he gave a shocking — and false — account of how they had been robbed at gunpoint.

“That’s why I’m taking full responsibility for it, is because I overexaggerated that story and if I had never done that, we wouldn’t be in this mess,” said Lochte in an interview broadcast in part late Saturday, the peroxide color washed out of his hair.

The full interview will be aired later by NBC television.

Lochte had already apologized on Friday for saying that the swimmers had been mugged by robbers pretending to be police on their way back from an all-night party.

It was only after police declared the story bogus — saying that the four had only been detained by security and made to pay compensation for their drunken vandalization of a gas station bathroom — that Lochte finally came clean.

“I left details out… I left certain things out, and I overexaggerated some parts of the story,” he said in the interview.

Following the incident, Lochte flew back to the United States, while the other — Gunnar Bentz, Jack Conger and Jimmy Feigen — three stayed in Brazil.

On Wednesday, a Rio judge ordered that their passports be confiscated so that they could not leave the country, with all three questioned by police.

“I let my team down,” Lochte said when asked how he felt being home while his teammates were detained in Brazil.

– ‘It won’t happen again’ –

“I wanted to be there, like, I don’t want them to think that I left, and left them dry because they were my teammates.

“I just wanted to make sure that they were at home safe before I came out and talked,” he added.

Lochte had similar words of contrition when interviewed by Brazil’s Globo TV.

“I am sorry, it won’t happen again,” he said.

“It was my fault.. I was immature.”

On Thursday, police released closed-circuit TV footage and other evidence about the events at the gas station.

The athletes, who appeared intoxicated, stopped in a taxi at the gas station to use the bathroom during the early hours of the morning.

Lochte and the others then vandalized the area near the bathroom and, according to the manager, urinated on the walls.

Back home, Lochte has come in for scathing criticism over the incident, with media coverage and online comments almost universally damning.

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