Kerley, who won a bronze in the 100m in Paris and a silver in Tokyo, was provisionally suspended in August by the Athletics Integrity Unit for missing three drug tests within a 12-month period.
The 30-year-old is facing a two-year ban for the 'whereabouts failures', which Kerley
previously announced he will appeal.
Nonetheless, it was announced on Wednesday that he is joining Enhanced, which is partly backed by 1789 Capital - the investment fund of Omeed Malik, Chris Buskirk, and
Donald Trump Jr.
The competition is offering a $1million prize for broken world records, and each event has a total purse of $500,000, with $250,000 for each winner.
He was obv juicing