CTHS Alberta Thoroughbred Sale Catalog Now Online

The catalog for the 2021 Canadian Thoroughbred Horse Society (Alberta Division) Thoroughbred Sale is now online, featuring 56 horses on offer.

The auction will take place Friday, Sept. 17 at Westerner Park in Red Deer, Alberta, beginning at 3 p.m. Mountain.

This year's catalog features 48 yearlings, five juveniles, two broodmares, and one weanling. The bulk of the horses on offer were foaled in Alberta, with others born in British Columbia, Ontario, and Saskatchewan, as well as Kentucky

Graduates of the CTHS Alberta sale are eligible for a series of sales stakes at Century Mile Racetrack, from ages two to four.

Stallions whose first crops of yearlings are represented in the catalog include Destin, Firespike, Mor Spirit, Mr. O'Prado, and Mr. Recio.

To view the online catalog, click here.

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Motions to Dismiss Now Active in Both HISA Constitutionality Lawsuits

Defendants in one of two currently active federal lawsuits aiming to get the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act (HISA) and its regulatory Authority voided for alleged constitutional violations fired back Aug. 16 with a two-pronged motion to dismiss the case.

This is the suit brought Apr. 26 by state governments and private entities. Oklahoma and its racing commission are joined as plaintiffs by West Virginia and its racing commission, plus the state of Louisiana. Three Oklahoma tracks–Remington Park, Will Rogers Downs and Fair Meadows are also among the plaintiffs.

The defendants are the United States of America, the HISA Authority, and six individuals acting in their official capacities for either HISA or the Federal Trade Commission (FTC).

This lawsuit is separate from the similar complaint over constitutional issues initiated by the National Horsemen's Benevolent and Protective Association against FTC members that is also currently facing a “motion to dismiss” by the defendants.

According to two documents filed Monday in United States District Court (Eastern Division of Kentucky), the defendants told the court that the plaintiffs' suit “falters out of the starting gate, as no Plaintiff has alleged an injury that satisfies Article III standing or has pressed a claim that is ripe for review.”

The motion to dismiss argues that “The FTC has not considered or subjected to notice-and-comment a single proposed rule under the Act, and any rule that the FTC may ultimately promulgate would not take effect until July 2022. Plaintiffs' allegations of harm are thus conjectural at best.

“Moreover, the non-Thoroughbred associations …will never be subject to the FTC-approved rules unless they or other third parties independently make that election. And the States' asserted harm from federal preemption is not fairly traceable to–rather, is inconsistent with–the commandeering claim they actually press.”

The filing continues: “Beyond those threshold stumbling blocks, Plaintiffs fail to state a claim on the merits. Their lead theory is that the Act unconstitutionally delegates legislative power to the Authority. But longstanding Supreme Court precedent makes clear that private entities may lawfully assist the development and implementation of federal regulation so long as the agency retains final review.”

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FTC Calls For Dismissal Of Challenge To Horseracing Integrity And Safety Act

Attorneys for the Federal Trade Commission have filed a motion to dismiss a lawsuit filed in the U.S. District Court for Kentucky against the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act, reports the Daily Racing Form, using similar arguments to those in a dismissal motion against the National HBPA's suit challenging HISA filed in U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas.

The Kentucky lawsuit was filed by a trio of states and their respective racing commissions: Louisiana, Oklahoma, and West Virginia. FTC attorneys argued that the creation of the HISA regulatory body does not violate constitutional doctrines regarding Congress' delegation of powers to a private entity.

“Adjudicating the merits of plaintiffs' legal claims now would require the court to evaluate HISA's framework in the abstract, unaided by any concrete facts or interpretative rules from the agency that Congress charged with the statute's implementation,” the motion states. “There is no justification for the court treading this path under any circumstances, and it is doubly improper in a constitutional
challenge.”

Read more at the Daily Racing Form

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