‘Such A Competitive Meet’: Tyler Gaffalione Hopes Early Kentucky Downs Success Continues

Jockey Tyler Gaffalione came to Kentucky Downs ready to go to work. He has certainly done that.

Gaffalione, who celebrated his 28th birthday Monday, is poised to win his second Kentucky Downs riding title in three years.

With two days left in the meet, Gaffalione has nine wins from 47 mounts. He is well equipped for more as he is named to ride in all nine races on Tuesday's card (the completion of the Sunday card, which was postponed because of rain) and 11 of the 12 races on Wednesday.

“This meet is always definitely on our radar,” Gaffalione said. “We like to do well everywhere we go. We enjoy Kentucky Downs because it's such a competitive meet and it's so short and you race for such big prize money. Coming out of here with a successful meet means a lot.”

Gaffalione won his first Kentucky Downs meet in 2020 when he got to the winner's circle 11 times. Last September, he was second with eight wins.

“Tyler rides that course very well – he rides very well everywhere,” said Matt Muzikar, Gaffalione's agent. “He really likes that course.”

“I look forward to coming here every year,” Gaffalione said. “But, really, you have to have the horse. It depends on if the horse likes the course or not. That is what contributes to your success at the meet.”

Gaffalione has had more mounts – 47 – than anyone else in the first five days of the meet. Besides leading in wins, he has 10 second-place finishes, more than anyone else riding Kentucky Downs. His horses have earned a meet-high $1,755,391.

He started strong with a three-win opening day and had three more wins on Sept. 8.

“It's very important to get off to a good start at a short meet,” Gaffalone said. “You want to get the momentum going in your favor.”

Among his mounts on Tuesday is the 3-2 Global Tote morning-line favorite Family Way for trainer Brendan Walsh in the G3, $550,000 AGS Ladies Marathon Stakes. Family Way and Gaffalione are looking to win the race for the second straight year. In 2021, they won the 1 5/16 mile race by a neck in a three-horse photo finish.

Family Way and Gaffalione finished third in the G1, $500,000 Beverly D. at Churchill Downs on Aug. 13 behind Dalika, who came back to win the G3, $1 million Kentucky Downs Ladies Sprint last Saturday. Before that, Family Way was second, beaten a half-length in the G1, $750,000 New York Stakes at Belmont Park on June 10.

“She is a very talented filly,” Gaffalone said. “She has been knocking on the door the last two times. She's very consistent and she shows up every time.”

On closing day, Gaffalione will ride Really Good, the 5-2 Global Tote morning-line favorite in the $500,000 Kentucky Downs Juvenile Mile for leading trainer Mike Maker; Fuerteventura (9-2) in the $400,000 Pepsi Gun Runner for Jonathan Thomas and Petricor (10-1) in the $400,000 Pepsi One Dreamer for Hall of Famer Bill Mott.

“It's a tough meet because it's such a solid jockey colony,” Muzikar said “You have Joel (Rosario), Irad and Jose (Ortiz). The top riders are all there. It's difficult, but the difficult thing with Kentucky Downs is that there are so many entries in each race. You need things to fall your way.”

Muzikar also said it doesn't hurt that Gaffalione has been riding for trainers like Maker, who has already won a meet-record 11 races, Walsh, Steve Asmussen, Joe Sharp and Wesley Ward.

Winning a riding title is important to any rider and agent, no matter where it is.

“Everyone wants to win at Saratoga, everyone wants to win at Keeneland,” Muzikar said. “We try to do our best at every meet we are at. It so happens that the money is tremendous at Kentucky Downs. It's a win-win if you have a great meet.”

Gerardo Corrales, who is riding the Kentucky Downs meet for the second time (he had five wins in 2020), is in second place with six wins. Rosario, who won 17 races to win the meet last year, has four winners, as does Julien Leparoux and Brian Hernandez Jr.

“It would mean a lot,” Gaffalione said about being the leading rider again. “We go into every meet trying to fight to be leading rider. As long as we win our fair share of the races and continue to pick up some nice, young horses, that is the most important thing.”

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Constitution Colt Gets Keeneland Day 2 Off to Fast Start

After a bonanza first session, bidding resumed at Keeneland September Tuesday afternoon and a colt by Constitution, the second horse through the ring on the day, became the sale's 10th seven-figure yearling when selling for $1.3 million to Richard Knight Bloodstock. The chestnut colt, consigned by Highgate Sales, is out of graded winner Cozze Up Lady (Cozzene) and is a half-brother to Grade I winner Kimari (Munnings). He was bred by the China Horse Club, which purchased Cozze Up Lady for $300,000 at the 2014 Fasig-Tipton November sale.

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Fishman Claims $13.5M Forfeiture is ‘Unlawful in its Entirety’

The veterinarian Seth Fishman, who is currently imprisoned but appealing his 11-year sentence for two felony drug-supplying convictions in a decades-long international racehorse doping conspiracy, has filed legal paperwork objecting to the $13.5-million forfeiture that was also imposed upon him, claiming the judge's order was illegal.

“The forfeiture sought here is not authorized by statute and is therefore unlawful in its entirety,” Fishman's attorney, Steven Kessler, stated in a Sept. 12 filing in United States District Court (Southern District of New York).

“The Preliminary Order of Forfeiture (POF) seeks a money judgment equal to the alleged value of the misbranded or adulterated products that form the basis for the criminal charges,” the filing continued. “It further seeks an order forfeiting substitute assets–i.e., property having no relationship to any criminal activity–up to the value of the money judgment.

“[But] the [relevant] statute does not authorize a money judgment equal in value to the misbranded products. Nor does it authorize the forfeiture of substitute assets if the misbranded products are no longer available….” the filing stated.

“Thus, the government's statutory remedy for the manufacture or introduction into interstate commerce of misbranded or adulterated products is limited to the confiscation of the products themselves. The POF exceeds and contravenes the statute. It is therefore unlawful and must be rejected….

“If the POF actually sought 'forfeiture…of any and all drugs that were adulterated or misbranded by the Defendant' for introduction into the stream of interstate commerce, the POF would be lawful….” Fishman's filing stated.

“Misbranding is not a forfeiture crime. The misbranding statute under which the government seeks forfeiture against Dr. Fishman, 21 U.S.C. § 334, only permits the government to confiscate the misbranded or adulterated products themselves and any equipment used to manufacture those products. Nothing more,” the filing stated.

Fishman's filing further argued that “Congress has prescribed monetary penalties for introducing misbranded and adulterated products into the stream of interstate commerce. Those penalties, however, are fines, not forfeitures of proceeds,” and are capped at $1 million for certain violations.

Fishman was indeed fined $250,000 after prosecutors introduced evidence showing that his drug-peddling business earned millions of dollars a year. Fishman is also jointly responsible for $25 million in restitution along with other convicted co-conspirators. Neither of those monetary orders were questioned in Fishman's formal objection to the forfeiture.

The filing continued: “On a few occasions, a court has permitted forfeiture of proceeds or facilitating property or a money judgment forfeiture where there is an allegation of a misbranding violation. Those decisions, however, permitted such relief based on other criminal charges, bundled with the misbranding violations, that specifically authorize forfeiture, such as wire fraud or money laundering, none of which were even alleged against Dr. Fishman, let alone proven, here.”

In summation, the filing stated, “It has never been alleged or shown that Dr. Fishman 'actually acquired' any tainted property as a result of any crime, let alone more than $13 million.”

A separate legal filing from Sept. 8 noted that Fishman has been in transit within the federal prison system from New York to Florida, and that because of COVID-19 restrictions related to his movement, his attorney has been largely unable to speak with him.

“He has [been in transit to] Philadelphia and Tallahassee (and possibly other venues) before arriving [Sept. 7] in Miami. As the Court knows, upon reaching each facility, a prisoner is quarantined and must go through strict COVID protocols before being permitted phone privileges, even with his counsel.

“Because of this, I have been able to speak to Dr. Fishman just once while he was in transit, and that call was brief. We have made substantial efforts to speak with him since, but, through no fault of mine or the Bureau of Prisons, that has not yet happened. I am hopeful that, now that Dr. Fishman has arrived at his destination, communication will be easier to facilitate,” the Sept. 8 filing stated.

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Mom’s Command’s MGSW Son Jonesboro to Old Friends

Jonesboro (Sefapiano–Mom's Command, by Top Command) has been pensioned from stallion duties and retired to Old Friends near Georgetown, Ky. The hard-knocking millionaire, who won 10 black-type events, including the GII Prairie Meadows Cornhusker H. and three other graded stakes, has stood since 2011 at Lake Hamilton Equine in Royal, Ark. His nine small crops of racing age include three stakes winners.

Jonesboro is a son of Mom's Command, the 1985 Eclipse champion 3-year-old filly whose five Grade I wins included the Filly Triple Crown. Bred by Peter Fuller, who campaigned Mom's Command, Jonesboro raced for Michael Langford and trainer Randy Morse.

“Like most of us, Jonesboro owes a lot to his mother,” said Old Friends President Michael Blowen. “Mom's Command was owned by Peter Fuller, who also campaigned Dancer's Image [Native Dancer]. Peter contributed $500 to Old Friends when we first started. And his daughter, Abby, who rode Mom, is a lifelong friend. Generosity and nepotism still matter.”

The now 20-year-old stallion arrived at Old Friends Sept. 11.

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