NYRA Slams Baffert’s ‘Premature’ Claim for ‘Disproportionately High’ Legal Fees

The New York Racing Association (NYRA) fired back in court Monday against Bob Baffert's attempt to collect $162,086 in legal fees and expenses from NYRA that have resulted from the Hall of Fame trainer's lawsuit against NYRA.

Calling his request “premature” while claiming that the $450 to $975 hourly fees charged by his lawyers are “disproportionately high,” NYRA also alleged that Baffert is attempting to twist a legal provision “intended to incentivize attorneys to represent individual civil rights plaintiffs that might otherwise be unrepresented” to his own financial benefit when it purportedly shouldn't apply.

“Plaintiff, the most prominent trainer in Thoroughbred racing, can afford to pay his lawyers and would have brought this action regardless of whether he could obtain an award of attorneys' fees,” NYRA wrote in the Sept. 27 filing in United States District Court (Eastern District of New York).

“An award of attorneys' fees would be particularly unjust, given the vital interests NYRA seeks to promote, and NYRA's status as a not-for-profit corporation,” the filing continued.

Back on Aug. 25, Baffert had asked the court to order NYRA to pay him the money based on Baffert's claim that he is the “prevailing party” in the case even though the trainer has only obtained a preliminary injunction to race at Belmont Park, Saratoga Race Course and Aqueduct Racetrack.

The overall lawsuit stems from NYRA's banishment of the seven-time GI Kentucky Derby-winning trainer back on May 17, which came 16 days after the Baffert-trained Medina Spirit (Protonico) tested positive for betamethasone while winning the Derby.

That case has still not resulted in any Kentucky ruling against Baffert. But in the 12 months prior to Medina Spirit's positive, four other Baffert trainees also tested positive for medication overages, two of them in Grade I stakes.

Baffert responded to NYRA's ruling-off by filing a June 14 civil complaint alleging that the NYRA ban violated his constitutional right to due process.

On July 14, the eve of the Saratoga season, the court granted Baffert a preliminary injunction that allowed him to race at New York's premier tracks until the lawsuit was adjudicated in full.

Six weeks later, Baffert petitioned the court to get NYRA to pay for the legal costs he had incurred to that point.

Baffert's attorneys wrote in that Aug. 25 filing that “Under any view of the case, Baffert has fully prevailed on all of his due process claims asserted under Section 1983…. Baffert has essentially achieved his main objective in this litigation [and] the Court's preliminary injunction is to Baffert the functional equivalent of a final judgment on the merits with respect to his claims and relief sought.”

Baffert had attached to his legal filing detailed invoices to substantiate his requests for payment. Those documents revealed the hourly amounts that Baffert's three main attorneys have charged him.

The Kentucky-based W. Craig Robertson, the lead counsel in the case, wrote in a declaration that he charged Baffert $475 hourly for his work.

The New York-based Charles Michael wrote in a separate declaration that “my $975 hourly rate is within the reasonable rate customarily charged by attorneys with comparable experience.”

The Oklahoma-based Clark Brewster wrote that he billed $450 hourly, noting that “the rate charged to Baffert is reasonable with respect to equine matters and the rates fall within the standard range for commercial and equine litigators.”

But NYRA's Sept. 27 filing took umbrage with those rates and how they were calculated.

“Plaintiff's requested fees and costs associated with the work of lawyers' and paralegals' fees from law firms in three separate states is, under the particular circumstances of this case, disproportionately high and in excess of what courts in this District have deemed reasonable,” NYRA stated. “Accordingly, even if a fee award is granted, which it should not be, this Court should exercise its discretion to substantially reduce any award.”

The NYRA filing continued: “A close review of the billing records attached to the declarations in support of Plaintiff's motion reveals multiple instances in which more than one attorney bills for a task, or series of tasks, that reasonably could have been handled by a single attorney, or tasks that a more junior lawyer or paralegal should perform.”

Beyond the issues with invoicing, NYRA argued that it's not appropriate to award any costs right now because the overall case is ongoing.

“As a threshold matter, Plaintiff's motion is premature because, while this Court granted preliminary relief in the July 14 Order, there has been no final determination of this matter,” the filing stated. “Numerous courts have rejected requests for attorneys' fees predicated on preliminary injunction orders at this early stage.”

The post NYRA Slams Baffert’s ‘Premature’ Claim for ‘Disproportionately High’ Legal Fees appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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Baffert-NYRA Arguments Scheduled for Oct. 5

Arguments on the motion by Bob Baffert's attorneys to hold the New York Racing Association in contempt of court for organizing hearings to suspend him will be heard in the United States District Court Oct. 5, according to a document filed by Judge Carol Bagley Amon.

On July 14, Bagley Amon granted Baffert a preliminary injunction against NYRA that will allow him to race at New York's three major tracks, after they suspended him in May, pending the resolution of the case.

“Defendant NYRA is directed to respond by 9/29/21,” Bagley Amon wrote in a hand-written note on top of attorney Craig Robertson's letter advising his intent to file a motion to hold NYRA in contempt, filed Sept. 21, 2021. Bagley Amon ordered Robertson to file his motion by Sept. 22, and that motion was filed yesterday.

“Agreement on the motion will be held on 10/5/21 at 11:00 a.m.,” she wrote.

Wednesday, Baffert and Robertson filed a motion asking Bagley Amon to hold NYRA in civil contempt for trying to schedule a hearing under its newly created exclusionary procedures that could once again bar him from participating at NYRA's tracks.

The basis for the contempt allegation is NYRA's “failure to comply with the terms of the Court's July 14, 2021, Memorandum & Order enjoining it from enforcing its unlawful suspension of Baffert from New York racetracks.”

According to a Sept. 22 filing by Baffert's legal team, “NYRA seems to believe now that it can simply offer a sham hearing and get around the Court's ruling by creating rules after the fact.”

Baffert is seeking the court to issue an order “staying NYRA's renewed attempt to suspend him.”

The post Baffert-NYRA Arguments Scheduled for Oct. 5 appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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Baffert Alleges NYRA Violating Court Order in ‘Sham Hearing’ Attempt

Trainer Bob Baffert filed a motion Wednesday asking a federal judge to hold the New York Racing Association (NYRA) in civil contempt for trying to schedule a hearing under its newly created exclusionary procedures that could once again bar him from participating at NYRA's tracks.

The basis for the contempt allegation is NYRA's “failure to comply with the terms of the Court's July 14, 2021, Memorandum & Order enjoining it from enforcing its unlawful suspension of Baffert from New York racetracks.”

According to a Sept. 22 filing by Baffert's legal team, “NYRA seems to believe now that it can simply offer a sham hearing and get around the Court's ruling by creating rules after the fact.”

The seven-time GI Kentucky Derby-winning trainer with a history of highly publicized equine drug violations wants the court to issue an order “staying NYRA's renewed attempt to suspend him.”

Baffert is also requesting that the court “admonish NYRA for its behavior” and immediately order it to 1) Cease and desist from all conduct concerning or relating in any way to any suspension of Baffert until after the full conclusion of the case; 2) Order NYRA to pay a $5,000 fine for each day that it does not comply with the court's directives; 3) Reimburse Baffert for his attorneys' fees and court costs related to the new motion for contempt.

“Baffert's requests are reasonable given that NYRA's violations were plainly taken in bad faith,” the trainer's legal team wrote. “The Court has already warned NYRA concerning its efforts to suspend Baffert indefinitely and without due process of law. Clearly, and despite the existing injunction, NYRA believes it may nonetheless disregard any traditional constitutional safeguards and proceed however it wants. This behavior is precisely what Baffert's injunction was intended to halt.”

Patrick McKenna, NYRA's communications director, told TDN via email that all actions taken by NYRA have been in compliance with court orders.

Wednesday's filing is the latest salvo in the increasingly litigious saga that began May 17 when NYRA informed Baffert via letter that he was temporarily not welcome to stable or race at Saratoga Race Course, Belmont Park and Aqueduct Racetrack because of his string of recent equine drug positives.

NYRA's banishment came 16 days after the Baffert-trained Medina Spirit (Protonico) tested positive for betamethasone after the colt won the GI Kentucky Derby. Even though that case has still not resulted in any Kentucky ruling against Baffert, in the 12 months prior to Medina Spirit's positive, four other Baffert trainees also tested positive for banned substances, two of them in Grade I stakes.

Baffert responded June 14 by filing a civil complaint alleging that the NYRA ban violated his constitutional right to due process.

On July 14, the eve of the lucrative Saratoga season, Judge Carol Bagley Amon of United States District Court (Eastern District of New York) granted Baffert a preliminary injunction that allowed him to race at New York's premier tracks until the lawsuit was adjudicated.

But Amon also wrote in that ruling that “Baffert should have been given notice of all of the reasons that NYRA intended to suspend him….[The] benefits of providing notice and a pre-suspension hearing would likely have been substantial.”

In the wake of that ruling, NYRA has since drafted and distributed a new set of rules and procedures for holding hearings and issuing determinations designed to suspend licensees who engage in injurious conduct.

After those rules were made public, NYRA, on Sept. 10, wrote a letter summoning Baffert to appear at a video conference hearing Sept. 27. (Separately, NYRA had already moved for dismissal of the entire lawsuit).

On Tuesday, Baffert's legal team submitted a letter to the judge that gave notification that a contempt filing was imminent. That letter also asked for a pre-motion hearing on the subject.

But Judge Amon–as she has already done once in this case when NYRA's attorneys made a similar request for a pre-motion hearing on another matter–nixed the idea of adding another time-consuming appearance to the growing court docket in this case.

In a handwritten note penned atop the Sept. 21 letter from Baffert's legal team, Amon wrote that there would be no pre-motion conference, and that Baffert's attorneys instead had to file any “contempt” motion by 10 a.m. Sept. 22. NYRA then would have one week to respond to it.

The Wednesday filing emphasizes three key points for why the judge should find NYRA in contempt: “A) The Court's Order is clear and unambiguous…B) NYRA's recent actions are clear and convincing evidence of noncompliance with the Court's Order…C) NYRA's actions are not an attempt to comply in a reasonable manner.”

Baffert's filing also alleges that NYRA isn't even following the procedures outlined in its just-implemented hearing process.

“[NYRA's] newly created rules make clear that the notice of hearing is required to include the 'proposed penalty being sought.' Nothing in its 12-page letter and notice to Baffert makes any reference to the length of the suspension NYRA seeks to impose. The Court has already found this to be problematic…. This is the exact same thing NYRA seeks to do again-impose an indefinite suspension…All of these deficiencies in NYRA's newly implemented procedures indicate why due process is so important…

“Further, Baffert cannot reasonably expect a fair proceeding when NYRA controls the outcome of the hearing, refuses to tell him what punishment he may face and gives him no right to appeal. Due process plainly requires 'notice and an opportunity to be heard at a meaningful time and in a meaningful manner,'” the filing continues. “None of those basic components have been met here, which is the entire reason Baffert brought this action against NYRA in the first place.”

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Baffert’s Attorneys File Letter Protesting Planned NYRA Hearing

Attorneys for embattled trainer Bob Baffert have filed a letter with U.S. District Judge Carol Bagley Amon, notifying the court they intend to file a motion to hold NYRA in contempt and stay the racing organization's planned hearings.

NYRA had temporarily banned Baffert ahead of this year's Belmont Stakes, citing his recent history of medication violations and conflicting public statements around the betamethasone overage in Medina Spirit, the reigning Kentucky Derby winner. The organization informed Baffert of its decision in May, triggering a civil suit from Baffert in the Eastern District of New York. Baffert won a motion for preliminary injunction against the racing organization after Amon ruled in July that NYRA could not rule him off without a hearing allowing him to address the organization's accusations against him.

Read more about that decision here.

On Sept. 10, NYRA released a statement of charges against Baffert and fellow trainer Marcus Vitali, along with dates for preliminary hearings to deal with scheduling and logistics for formal hearings into whether they should be denied privileges at the organization's tracks. Those preliminary hearing dates had been scheduled for next week. Baffert's preliminary hearing has since been pushed back to Oct. 11 — a date which all parties have agreed to, according to NYRA.

In a letter filed on Baffert's behalf, attorney Craig Robertson claims that NYRA's announcement it intended to proceed with a hearing is in “direct contravention” of the court's order, since the organization did not appeal the judge's ruling on the motion for preliminary injunction. NYRA's list of charges against Baffert released two weeks ago is nearly identical to the reasons it gave for banning him earlier this year.

“The only thing different is that it appears that NYRA has concocted some procedures — apparently just for this case — in an attempt to retroactively install legitimacy to its blatantly unlawful actions,” Robertson wrote.

Further, Robertson said “The Court made it clear to NYRA in oral argument that it was 'too late' to try to give Baffert an after-the-fact hearing to fix its errors … NYRA cannot turn around and attempt to reissue the same suspension based on the same factual allegations — as it has explicitly stated it aims to do — when this Court has enjoined that very conduct.

“There is nothing new which has transpired since NYRA was enjoined. No new facts, no new allegations. If anything, the facts have moved more solidly in Baffert's favor and toward maintaining the status quo, as Baffert has raced several horses at the recent Saratoga meet without incident.”

NYRA issued the following statement via a spokesman soon after news broke of the coming filing:

“Contrary to the assertion filed in court today, Mr. Baffert is not currently under suspension at any NYRA racetrack. In fact, Mr. Baffert is free to stable horses and enter races at all NYRA facilities, just as he has been for the past two months,” said Pat McKenna, senior director of communications for NYRA.

“NYRA is not seeking to 'enforce' the May 17, 2021 letter temporarily suspending him. That letter is no longer in effect and NYRA does not now or in the future intend to enforce or otherwise invoke that letter as the basis for any action taken against Mr. Baffert. The current NYRA hearing proceeding was independently commenced pursuant to NYRA's common law and regulatory authority to exclude licensees, subject to the requirements of due process, and in full compliance with the U.S. District Court's order and memorandum, dated July 14, 2021, in Bob Baffert v. The New York Racing Association, Inc.”

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