Onetime Triple Crown Prospect Forbidden Kingdom Returns For Santa Anita Sprint Championship

Richard Mandella's classy sophomore Forbidden Kingdom, idle since the Grade 1 Runhappy Santa Anita Derby in April, returns to action this Saturday at Santa Anita in Arcadia, Calif.,  and looms the horse to beat among a field of seven 3-year-olds and up in the Grade 2, $200,000 Santa Anita Sprint Championship.

By 2015 Triple Crown winner American Pharoah, Forbidden Kingdom, on the strength of powerful victories in the Grade 2 San Vicente Stakes Jan. 29 and the Grade 2 San Felipe March 5, was the even money favorite in the Santa Anita Derby April 9, but ended up sixth and last, beaten 14 ½ lengths by top-tier colt Taiba.

Owned by MyRacehorse and Spendthrift Farm, LLC, Forbidden Kingdom has won two of his three Santa Anita starts and is 6-3-1-1 overall as he likely prepares for a berth in the $2 million Breeders' Cup Sprint at Keeneland Nov. 5 with regular rider Juan Hernandez up.

Although Forbidden Kingdom may be the new kid on the block in the Sprint division, C Z Rocket is anything but.  A miracle $40,000 claim on April 30, 2020 at Oaklawn Park, this 8-year-old City Zip gelding took the 2020 Santa Anita Sprint Championship and was subsequently second in that year's Breeders' Cup Sprint at Keeneland some 11 races back.

Most recently a troubled eighth in the Grade 2 Pat O'Brien Stakes going seven furlongs on Aug. 27, C Z Rocket's most recent win came two starts back in a six-furlong allowance at Del Mar on July 23.

Based at San Luis Rey Downs with trainer Peter Miller, C Z Rocket is owned by Altamira Racing Stable, Madaket Stables, LLC, Gary Barber and former Glendora, Calif., youth football coach Tom Kagele.  With one win and a third from three Santa Anita starts, C Z Rocket is 33-12-4-5 overall with earnings of $1,572,641.  He'll be ridden by Ramon Vazquez, who guided him to victory in the Del Mar allowance July 23.

GRADE II, SANTA ANITA SPRINT CHAMPIONSHIP

WITH JOCKEYS & WEIGHTS IN POST ORDER

Race 6 of 10 – Approximate post time 3 p.m. PT

  1. C Z Rocket—Ramon Vazquez—122
  2. Forbidden Kingdom—Juan Hernandez—120
  3. Howbeit—Mike Smith—122
  4. None Above the Law—Joe Bravo—122
  5. Super Ocho—Hector Berrios—122
  6. Kid Corleone—Edwin Maldonado—118
  7. Todo Fino—Umberto Rispoli–122

    First post time on Saturday for a 10-race card that will include five other stakes is at 12:30 p.m.

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1/ST Racing & Gaming Unveiled

The Stronach Group's Belinda Stronach introduced 1/ST RACING & GAMING, an enhanced division of the company designed to position the core Thoroughbred horse racing business to fully capitalize on the future of sports wagering and gaming. According to a Wednesday evening press release from the company, the 1/ST RACING & GAMING division will continue to oversee racing operations at 1/ST tracks and training centers while working to expand the company's gaming footprint in collaboration with 1/ST TECHNOLOGY led by the divisions' Chief Executive Officer, Paul Williams.

“The shifting landscape of sports wagering, digital platforms and interest in high-quality content presents an opportunity for 1/ST to innovate to meet the demands of our modern consumers,” said Stronach. “An enhanced 1/ST RACING & GAMING business unit will enable us to move faster and more efficiently to deliver our unique, industry-leading Thoroughbred horse racing, gaming and sports entertainment content to the next generation audience.”

Stronach has appointed Aidan Butler as Chief Executive Officer and Craig Fravel as Executive Vice-Chairman of the newly formed division.

Butler has appointed Rikki Tanenbaum as Chief Commercial Officer and President of Gaming, and Stephen Screnci as President of Racing and Business Development.

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Case Closed: Murray Rojas Conviction Vacated, Feds Will Not Seek Second Trial

The federal case against Penn National trainer Murray Rojas has been closed after the U.S. Supreme Court vacated the conviction against her on drug misbranding charges and prosecutors opted not to pursue a second trial.

The Sept. 28 order signed by federal Judge Sylvia H. Rambo called for a second superseding indictment to be dismissed and for the clerk of court to close the case. Rambo was the trial judge in U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania in Harrisburg.

In July 2017, a jury convicted Rojas on 14 of 21 counts  of misbranding prescription drugs brought against her as part of a wide-ranging FBI investigation into corruption at Penn National race course in Grantville, Pa. She was found not guilty on seven counts of wire fraud.

Rojas was sentenced to 27 months in federal prison. Rambo denied a motion to overturn the conviction and the Court of Appeals upheld it. 

Last year, however, attorneys for Rojas – with support from the Cato Institute and the American Conservative Union Foundation – petitioned the Supreme Court to hear her case, claiming that the trial judge and appellate court erred  in their definition of misbranding in both jury instructions and in the appeal. Specifically, they said, the judge failed to instruct the jury properly on the distinction between “administering” drugs and “dispensing” them and that the government failed to prove that Rojas “dispensed” the drugs to her horses.

The U.S.solicitor general agreed, stating: “The government now acknowledges that a veterinarian who personally injects a drug into an animal under her direct care in the course of her professional practice, without first issuing a written or oral order (i.e., prescription), has not engaged in misbranding under the FDCA (1938 Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act).”

On Nov. 1, 2021, the Supreme Court granted Rojas' petition to review her case and vacated the judgment against her, remanding it back to District Court. With the government stating it would not pursue a second trial, the case is closed.

Rojas was accused of having veterinarians administer medications to horses within 24 hours of a race in violation of state regulations. Veterinarians who testified in the case say they also falsified dates of the treatments in records submitted to regulators. The practice, according to testimony given during the trial, was widespread at Penn National. Stephanie Beattie, who had been three-time leading trainer there, said she routinely had her horses treated with therapeutic medications on race day, adding “Almost everybody did: 95 to 98 percent. It was a known practice. We wanted to win and they weren't testing for those drugs at that time.”

Rojas, who began training in 2000 and saddled 785 winners from 4,783 starts, has not saddled a horse in a race since August 2015, when she was indicted. A number of other licensees who were indicted, including racing officials, trainers, and veterinarians, either pleaded guilty or had their cases transferred from federal to state court on reduced charges.

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