Kitten’s Joy’s Domain Expertise Gets Up in Florida Oaks

Jouster shot to the front as Domain Expertise settled in the second half of the field heading into the first turn. Residing in the two path while covered up midpack down the backstretch, the 5-1 chance took aim at the front approaching the quarter pole and was fanned four wide around the final turn. Picking up the tempo but with seemingly too much to do as Jouster was free-running in early stretch, the Chad Brown runner proved undeterred as Antonio Gallardo asked for more and his charge responded, reeling in the frontrunner late and pegging her rival at the wire.

“I think I had a pretty good trip,” said Gallardo. “She felt comfortable all the way around. Really, when I put her in the clear, she exploded. She exploded like a good filly. I was trying my hardest and you're not thinking about [whether you're going to catch Jouster, the pacesetter], you're thinking about riding your horse and trying to catch her.”

Runner up in her career debut at Saratoga last September, the Klaravich Stables runner was seventh over the yielding Pimlico turf in the Selima S. Oct. 3, but rebounded to win in a Tampa maiden Dec. 5. Sent off at 7-1 last time out, the chestnut finished third, beaten two lengths, in Gulfstream's GIII Sweetest Chant S. Jan. 30.

Pedigree Notes:

With Saturday's victory at Tampa, Domain Expertise became the 102nd black-type and the 50th graded winner for her sire, Kitten's Joy. The $200,000 KEENOV weanling purchase is the fourth foal out of MSP Teroda, who is also responsible for Sombeyay (Into Mischief), winner of the GIII Sanford S. at two before adding the GIII Canadian Turf S. the following season. The 13-year-old mare produced a Bolt d'Oro filly in 2020 and was bred back to Mendelssohn.

Saturday, Tampa Bay Downs
FLORIDA OAKS-GIII, $152,500, Tampa Bay Downs, 3-6, 3yo, f,
1 1/16mT, 1:41.12, fm.
1–DOMAIN EXPERTISE, 117, f, 3, by Kitten's Joy
                1st Dam: Teroda (MSP, $171,033), by Limehouse
                2nd Dam: Leza, by Strawberry Road (Aus)
                3rd Dam: Goldenley (Arg), by Farley (Arg)
1ST BLACK-TYPE WIN, 1ST GRADED STAKES WIN. ($200,000
Wlg '18 KEENOV). O-Klaravich Stables, Inc.; B-J D Stuart,
Mueller Farms, Inc. & Kenneth L. & Sarah K. Ramsey (KY);
T-Chad C. Brown; J-Antonio A. Gallardo. $90,000. Lifetime
Record: 5-2-1-1, $125,700. *1/2 to Sombeyay (Into Mischief),
MGSW, $412,650. Werk Nick Rating: A+++. *Triple Plus*. Click
for the eNicks report & 5-cross pedigree.
2–Jouster, 119, f, 3, Noble Mission (GB)–Playtime, by Street Cry
(Ire). 'TDN Rising Star'. ($360,000 Ylg '19 FTSAUG). O-Starlight
Racing; B-St. Elias Stables, LLC (KY); T-Todd A. Pletcher.
$30,000.
3–Oyster Box, 119, f, 3, Tapit–Starformer, by Dynaformer.
O-Gainesway Stable (Antony Beck); B-Juddmonte Farms Inc
(KY); T-H. Graham Motion. $15,000.
Margins: NO, 2HF, 1 1/4. Odds: 5.40, 0.70, 5.50.
Also Ran: Mia Martina, Queen of the Green, Be Sneaky, Flight to Shanghai, Forever Boss, Big Band Luzziann, Alex's First. Scratched: Big Bad Diva, Hindsight.
Click for the Equibase.com chart, the TJCIS.com PPs or the free Equineline.com catalogue-style pedigree. VIDEO, sponsored by Fasig-Tipton.

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Winfromwithin Becomes Newest Black-Type Winner for Into Mischief

Winfromwithin boosted his sire's already impressive resume, becoming the newest black-type winner for Into Mischief Saturday at Tampa. Breaking on top from his rail draw, the bay rolled along with ears pricked, clocking early splits of :22.50 and :46.11. Turning for home in front, Winfromwithin spurted clear in the lane for a decisive victory.

Winfromwithin was second on debut sprinting on the Belmont main track July and finished fourth next out in a six-panel event at Saratoga Aug. 1. Filling the same spot in a sloppy off-the-turf renewal of the Spa's With Anticipation S. Sept. 2, he donned cap and gown next out when getting on the grass and going two turns at Gulfstream Jan. 2.

Winfromwithin is the 89th black-type victor for Into Mischief and is bred on the same cross as Horse of the Year Authentic. His dam–a half to MGSW Shakis (Ire) (Machiavellian)–produced an Into Mischief filly in 2019 and a California Chrome colt in 2020. Click for the Equibase.com chart or VIDEO, sponsored by Fasig-Tipton.

COLUMBIA S., $75,000, Tampa Bay Downs, 3-6, 3yo, 1mT, 1:33.72, fm.
1–WINFROMWITHIN, 117, c, 3, by Into Mischief
                1st Dam: Rau Breck, by Mr. Greeley
                2nd Dam: Tawaaded (Ire), by Nashwan
                3rd Dam: Thaidah, by Vice Regent
($100,000 Ylg '19 KEESEP). 1ST BLACK TYPE WIN. O-Jim Bakke;
B-Mulholland Springs LLC (KY); T-Todd A. Pletcher; J-Luis Saez.
$45,000. Lifetime Record: 5-2-1-0, $92,120.
2–Crew Dragon, 117, c, 3, Exaggerator–Go Go Dana, by Malibu
Moon. ($110,000 Ylg '19 KEESEP). O-Kinsman Stable; B-Lee
McMillin & Eric Buckley (KY); T-William I. Mott. $15,000.
3–Boreas, 117, c, 3, Upstart–Deep in December, by The Daddy.
($85,000 Wlg '18 KEENOV; $120,000 RNA Ylg '19 KEESEP).
O-Alastar Thoroughbred Company LLC; B-Brereton C. Jones
(KY); T-Michael J. Maker. $7,500.
Margins: 4, 1, 1HF. Odds: 1.70, 8.00, 22.20.
Also Ran: Blue Cat, The Right Stuff (GB), Private Island, Whatmakessammyrun, Tapwood, Heat of the Night, Castle King, Comedy Town. Scratched: Mira Mission, Tapsasional.

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Micheline Scores First Graded Triumph In Hillsborough Stakes

Making her first starting since a second-place finish to Harvey's Lil Goil in the Grade 1 Queen Elizabeth II at Keeneland last Oct. 10, Godolphin LLC's homebred Micheline recorded her first graded stakes victory in Saturday's Grade 2 Hillsborough Stakes at Tampa Bay Downs in Oldsmar, Fla.

Ridden for the first time by Luis Saez and trained by Michael Stidham, the 4-year-old filly by Bernardini out of the multiple G1 winning Include mare Panty Raid, was clocked in 1:47.19 for 1 1/8 miles on firm turf. She paid $11.20 for the victory.

Morning Molly finished second, with New York Girl third and La Signore and Miss Teheran dead-heating for fourth in the field of 10. Magic Attitude, the 3-1 favorite, breaking from the inside post, had some early traffic troubles, didn't get untracked until late and was never a factor.

Myhartblongstodady went to the front under Daniel Centeno, setting fractions of :24.23, :48.80 and 1:12.41 for the first six furlongs. Morning Molly raced in second, with Micheline, who broke from the outside post position, just behind the top pair and in the clear to the outside.

Approaching the stretch, Morning Molly turned up the heat on the front runner, but Saez and Micheline had them both measured, swinging to the outside and moving to the lead in the stretch. Passing the mile marker in 1:35.74, they cruised to the victory, Micheline's fifth in 13 starts.

“That was the spot I was trying to get, and we got lucky,” said Saez. “She broke good and we were right there. At the half-mile pole, when I started asking her, she started to pick it up, and when we got to the straight everything was about battling, and she did that pretty well. She gave me her kick and it was super. Watching her replays, I knew she could win this race, and it's great when everything comes together so well.”

Micheline broke her maiden in Monmouth Park's Sorority Stakes at 2 in 2019, adding a late December allowance victory at Tampa Bay Downs. As a 3-year-old she won Gulfstream's Honey Ryder and the Dueling Grounds Oaks at Kentucky Downs.

“She is definitely a fighter,” Stidham's assistant, Ben Trask, said after the Hillsborough. “She is kind of a silly filly – she's a bad stall walker, so she lives in a little tent behind the barn. She is definitely a unique filly with a lot of talent. I was a little concerned with the outside post and whether she would overcome it. Luis put her in a great spot the whole time and when he called on her, she was there.”

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Feds Slam Alleged Dopers’ Assertion That HISA Creates Loophole

Prosecutors in the racehorse doping conspiracy case that ensnared 29 racetrackers, veterinarians and pharmaceutical brokers one year ago tried to convince a federal judge Friday that recent motions made by some of the defendants to dismiss drug alteration and misbranding charges are “without merit” and represent “an effort to invent a statutory limitation where none exists.”

The government's memorandum of law filed Mar. 5 in United States District Court (Southern District of New York) addresses a number of alleged legal flaws in the defendants' motions to dismiss, including several that prosecutors state would be more appropriately argued when the case goes to trial, not before it.

The defendants' motions, prosecutors allege, “do not actually seek the dismissal of the Indictment, but are more accurately described as premature motions regarding the sufficiency of the Government's evidence to be presented at trial…. The Second Circuit makes clear that a challenge to whether a statutory element has been satisfied is a matter for trial.”

The government's filing continues: “Defendants Seth Fishman, Lisa Giannelli, Jordan Fishman, Rick Dane, Jr., Christopher Oakes, Jorge Navarro, and Erica Garcia each ask that this Court insert novel, unsupported, and self-serving language into the text of [federal drug laws] in an effort to avoid felony liability for their illegal misbranding conspiracies.” The memo notes that a dismissal motion filed by defendant Michael Tannuzzo on different grounds should also not be granted.

The filing takes aim at the defendants' creative assertion that government prosecutors are overstepping their legal boundary by bringing charges under the applicable federal statute–the Food Drug and Cosmetic Act (FDCA)–when instead, the defendants argue, the case should instead fall under the authority of the Federal Trade Commission (FTC).

Back on Feb. 5, the defendants made the somewhat surprising legal argument that the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act of 2020 (HISA)–which was signed into law a full nine months after the arrests were made–allegedly gives “plenary authority,” or absolute regulatory power, to the FTC in all federal matters pertaining to horse racing.

The government's Mar. 5 filing laced into that assertion: “The defendants' respective discussions of the passage of what is commonly referred to as [HISA] in the Fishman Motion and the Oakes Motion shed no light on the purpose or application of the FDCA. That is because the 116th Congress's passage of the HISA in 2020 has no bearing upon the intent of the 75th Congress's passage of the FDCA in 1938, and no implication for the plain language of the FDCA's provisions criminalizing misbranding and adulteration of animal drugs.

“As an initial matter, the Supreme Court disfavors reliance on subsequent legislative history in assessing the language and meaning of prior statutes,” the government's filing continues. “In particular, while 'subsequent legislation can of course alter the meaning of an existing law for the future' and 'can even alter the past operation of an existing law' (constitutional objections aside) if it makes that retroactive operation clear…it cannot inferentially amend the purpose behind passage of a prior statute, as defendants wish.

“The dangers of such post-hoc analysis are plain here. Congress did not–in either the FDCA or the HISA–indicate its intent either to acknowledge or create a 'racehorse industry' exception to the criminal prohibition against the distribution of adulterated and misbranded drugs with the intent to defraud or mislead in the FDCA, nor did it so indicate with respect to any other federal criminal law.

“The defendants' arguments in this respect reflect what seems to be a purposeful misreading of both the HISA and the charges against them: the defendants are not charged with violating state racing anti-doping rules and regulations, for which no federal analogue existed prior to the passage of the HISA; they are charged with felony misbranding and adulteration of drugs in interstate commerce in violation of the FDCA. No interpretative gymnastics are required to 'make sense' of one statute in light of the other.”

The government's filing sums up: “The HISA contains no criminal penalties because Congress determined sufficient criminal penalties were already provided for in existing federal criminal laws, laws which the HISA expressly does not modify. Ultimately, though, no reading of the Congressional tea leaves is required. There is no contradiction between the FDCA and the HISA, and no retrospective ambiguity in the text of the former arises from the text of the latter.”

Other counts of the government's case against the alleged dopers are not affected by this recent series of motion to dismiss, and trials are expected to begin in the second half of 2021. But one defendant, Scott Robinson, who has already pleaded guilty to conspiring to unlawfully distribute adulterated and misbranded drugs for the purpose of doping racehorses, has a sentencing hearing scheduled Mar. 9.

The multi-state simultaneous sting netted the high-profile arrests of trainers Navarro and the 2019 GI Kentucky Derby-disqualified trainer Jason Servis, plus a vast network of co-conspirators who allegedly manufactured, mislabeled, rebranded, distributed and administered PEDs to racehorses all across America and in international races.

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