Baffert Again Argues That NYRA Can’t Proceed With Efforts to Suspend Him

The matter of whether or not the New York Racing Association should be held in contempt and whether it can go ahead with a hearing that could lead to the suspension of Bob Baffert landed once again Friday on the desk of Judge Carol Bagley Amon.

The latest twist in the Baffert-NYRA saga began last week when Baffert's attorneys charged that NYRA should be held in contempt because of its announced plans to afford Baffert a hearing. The two sides have been at odds over the interpretation of a July 14 ruling from Amon, which blocked NYRA's plans to immediately exclude Baffert from its tracks. The Baffert team contends that Amon's ruling forbade NYRA from, at this point in time, taking any disciplinary actions against the trainer and called the proposed hearing a “sham.” NYRA has argued that it has been fully compliant with the order all along and should be permitted to go ahead with the hearing. The latest filing from NYRA read: “Plaintiff moves to hold NYRA in contempt for providing Plaintiff exactly what he argued he was entitled to in support of his motion for a preliminary injunction–notice and an opportunity to be heard.”

On Friday, Baffert's attorney Craig Robertson sent Amon a letter requesting permission for Baffert to file a Reply Memorandum that challenged NYRA's latest legal maneuver and reiterated reasons why the court should hold NYRA in contempt and issue a stay that would prevent NYRA from going forward with the hearing, now scheduled to begin Oct. 11.

The Reply Memorandum outlined the following arguments, most of which have appeared in previous court filings.

(*) NYRA should be held in contempt for violating the Injunction Order.

“The Injunction Order is clear, unambiguous, and directly prohibits NYRA from suspending Baffert,” the filing reads. “NYRA is simply inventing imagined ambiguities where they do not exist to excuse its own bad faith effort to circumvent the Injunction Order.”

(*) NYRA's new rules, procedures and charges are inconsistent with due process.

“Baffert has already defeated NYRA in court when it sought to unilaterally and unlawfully suspend him,” the filing reads. “It now seeks to do the very same thing all over again with vague and highly subjective charges. The idea that he will receive, through the retroactive application of newly created rules and procedures, a fair adjudication from a body intent on punishing him, is laughable.”

(*) NYRA should be sanctioned.

“Finally, NYRA argues that it should be excused from the consequences of its overt attempt to circumvent the Injunction Order,” the filing reads. “However, civil contempt sanctions are necessary to 'coerce future compliance and to remedy past compliance.' NYRA is a sophisticated entity with a long history of litigation. It is painfully obvious that its failure to abide by the Injunction Order is no accident. Sanctions and fees are necessary in this case to make it clear to NYRA that the Court will not tolerate its actions.”

The Baffert team again requested that its client be reimbursed for his legal fees.

The United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York has a hearing date set for Oct. 5 on Baffert's motion to hold NYRA in contempt and to issue a stay regarding possible suspension proceedings.

The post Baffert Again Argues That NYRA Can’t Proceed With Efforts to Suspend Him appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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‘I’ve Learned Who My Friends Are’: Baffert Opens Up For The First Time Since May

Hall of Fame trainer Bob Baffert spoke to the Los Angeles Times this week regarding Medina Spirit's post-Kentucky Derby positive for betamethasone, the first time he's addressed the therapeutic medication overage publicly since May.

“I've learned who my friends are,” Baffert said of the last five months. “It's truly painful when you know what the truth is. There have been so many false narratives that have come up and the hearing process isn't even done yet. The consolation is knowing the truth will come out as the process plays out.”

On June 2, Baffert was banned from participation at tracks owned by Churchill Downs for two years after Zedan Racing Stables Inc.'s Medina Spirit failed a drug test following his first-place finish in this year's Grade 1 Kentucky Derby at Churchill Downs in Louisville, Ky.

The positive test for the corticosteroid betamethasone on May 1 was Baffert's fifth failed drug test in 365 days, beginning with two lidocaine positives for Charlatan and Gamine at Oaklawn Park on May 2, 2020 – Charlatan's bad test coming in the G1 Arkansas Derby and eventual filly and mare sprint champion Gamine testing positive after an allowance win. Both Charlatan and Gamine were disqualified from their victories by Oaklawn stewards, but the Arkansas Racing Commission reinstated the wins, overturned a 15-day suspension of the trainer and fined him $10,000.

Baffert was fined $2,500 by California Horse Racing Board stewards after Merneith tested positive for dextromethorphan at Del Mar in July 2020 and then Gamine tested positive for a second time – this time for betamethasone – after a third-place finish in the G1 Kentucky Oaks on Sept. 4, 2020. She was disqualified and Baffert was fined $1,500.

Additional stories about Baffert's Kentucky Derby positive and ensuing legal battles can be found here.

Read more at the Los Angeles Times.

The post ‘I’ve Learned Who My Friends Are’: Baffert Opens Up For The First Time Since May appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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Re-Routed Private Mission Tops Zenyatta Field

Bob Baffert's budding star Private Mission, originally scheduled to run in the Grade 1 Cotillion Stakes near Philadelphia Sept. 25, will take on older competition for the first time on Sunday as she bids for her third consecutive win in the Grade 2, $200,000 Zenyatta Stakes at Santa Anita. Named in honor of racing's 2010 Eclipse Horse of the Year, the Zenyatta, which has attracted a field of eight fillies and mares three and up, will be contested at a mile and one sixteenth. A Breeders' Cup “Win & You're In” Challenge Race qualifier, the Zenyatta winner will earn a fees-paid berth into the Grade 1, $2 million Breeders' Cup Distaff Nov. 6 at Del Mar.

In what was her second start of the year and first time around two turns, Private Mission, a 3-year-old filly by Into Mischief, was a resounding 6 ½ length winner going a flat mile in the Grade 3 Torrey Pines Stakes Aug. 21 at Del Mar, a race in which she galloped out a football field in front of her competition mid-way around the clubhouse turn. Private Mission, who is owned by Baoma Corporation, retains the services of Flavien Prat, will no doubt be forwardly placed as she seeks her fourth win from five career starts.

Although beaten a combined 27 lengths in a pair of Grade 1 stakes, the Clement Hirsch at Del Mar on Aug. 1 and the Personal Ensign at Saratoga Aug. 28, Baffert's As Time Goes By will hope to regain the form she held when winning both the Grade 2 Santa Maria here on May 22 and the Grade 2 Santa Margarita (by 9 ¼ lengths) on April 24. Second to Eclipse Champ Swiss Skydiver five starts back in the Grade 1 Beholder Mile on March 13, As Time Goes By has three wins from five tries over the Santa Anita main track. Owned by Michael Tabor, Derrick Smith and Mrs. John Magnier, As Time Goes By, a 4-year-old filly by American Pharoah, is 9-4-2-1 with earnings of $415,600.

Don Alberto Stable's homebred Stellar Sound will stretch out off a third place finish in the Rancho Bernardo while Peter Miller's streaking Samurai Charm, an impressive gate to wire allowance winner going one mile in her last two starts, tries stakes company for the first time and seeks her fifth consecutive win. Phil D'Amato's Miss Bigly, fresh off victory in the restricted one mile Tranquility Lake Stakes Aug. 27, seeks her first graded stakes win in what will be her 23rd career start.

THE GRADE 2 ZENYATTA STAKES WITH JOCKEYS & WEIGHTS IN POST POSITION ORDER

Race 9 of 10 Approximate post time 5 p.m. PT

  1. Samurai Charm—Kyle Frey–122
  2. As Time Goes By—John Velazquez—124
  3. Private Mission—Flavien Prat—120
  4. Miss Bigly—Juan Hernandez—122
  5. California Kook—Abel Cedillo–122
  6. Miss Stormy D—Geovanni Franco—122
  7. Lady Kate—Joe Bravo—122
  8. Stellar Sound—Drayden Van Dyke–122

The Zenyatta is one of five stakes on a 10-race card Sunday with first post time at 1 p.m. For additional information, please visit santaanita.com or call (626) 574-RACE.

The post Re-Routed Private Mission Tops Zenyatta Field appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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NYRA: New Procedures Are ‘Exactly’ What Baffert Asked For, Hearing Pushed To Oct. 11

Last week, Hall of Famer Bob Baffert's attorneys filed a letter with U.S. District Judge Carol Bagley Amon requesting she hold the New York Racing Association in contempt for scheduling a hearing. NYRA fired back at Baffert in court on Wednesday, reports the Thoroughbred Daily News, arguing that the new hearing procedures are exactly what the trainer argued he was entitled to when filing his lawsuit.

NYRA notified Baffert ahead of the Belmont Stakes that it was suspending his ability to enter horses in races or have stall space at its racetracks due to his recent history of medication violations (five over a one-year period), the conflicting statements he provided to media around the Medina Spirit scandal, and Churchill Downs' suspension of the trainer.

Judge Amon of the Eastern District of New York determined that NYRA's suspension of Baffert should not have taken place without some sort of hearing allowing him to address the organization's accusations against him. Although NYRA was asserting its private property rights in the case, Amon said the organization is closely entwined enough with the state that its suspension of Baffert constituted a state action, thereby requiring due process.

NYRA issued a statement of charges against Baffert and fellow trainer Marcus Vitali on Sept. 10, and scheduled a hearing for Baffert to begin on Sept. 27. However, that hearing was delayed until Oct. 11 as Baffert's attorney requested additional time. The trainer will not be participating on that date, because the first hearing will be about scheduling future dates and deadlines.

The Sept. 29 filing by NYRA reads: “Plaintiff moves to hold NYRA in contempt for providing Plaintiff exactly what he argued he was entitled to in support of his motion for a preliminary injunction–notice and an opportunity to be heard.

“Plaintiff incorrectly asserts that the Notice of Hearing, Hearing Rules and Procedures, and Statement of Charges demonstrate that, 'NYRA's conduct is simply a repackaged version of the same action already enjoined. What the Hearing Rules and Procedures and Statement of Charges actually show is a substantially different process that is now in place, which was not afforded in connection with the May 17 suspension that the Court enjoined.”

“Plaintiff's speculation that NYRA created its Hearing Rules and Procedures to target him is incorrect,” the filing continued. “The Hearing Rules and Procedures are of general applicability and are designed to afford the process this Court deemed necessary in its Order.”

Read more at the Thoroughbred Daily News.

An archive of stories about Baffe

Additional stories about Baffert's Kentucky Derby positive and ensuing legal battles can be found here.

The post NYRA: New Procedures Are ‘Exactly’ What Baffert Asked For, Hearing Pushed To Oct. 11 appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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