IOC Looking to Set Up Disciplinary Commission in Ryan Lochte Case

The International Olympics Committee is setting up a disciplinary commission.

Lochte issued an apology Friday "for not being more careful and candid" when explaining what happened during an alleged gunpoint robbery in Rio de Janeiro last weekend.

Rio's Civil Police Chief Fernando Veloso said the four U.S. swimmers were not robbed.

One or more of the swimmers vandalized a bathroom at the gas station, police said. The athletes broke mirrors and damaged other things in the bathroom. They initially refused to stay, but security asked the taxi to not leave. Then, another person stepped in to intervene between the athletes and the guards, and the swimmers left money, police said.

Police said that witnesses were initially afraid to speak and that there was no evidence against the athletes.

Yesterday, police in Rio de Janeiro recommended that Lochte and Feigen face charges of false reporting of a crime, a civil police spokesperson said. Prosecutors will decide whether or not they will face charges.

Lochte had already returned to the United States.

In a statement, Lochte's lawyer, Jeffrey Ostrow, said he wasn't aware of "the federal police recommending charges for filing a false police report."

ABC News' Matt Gutman, Emily Shapiro and Morgan Winsor contributed to this report.