Hall Of Fame Trainer Fighting Testosterone Positive For Harness Racing Champion

Perfect Sting, named 3-year-old male pacing champion of 2021 by the U.S. Harness Writers Association when Dan Patch Award winners were announced on Dec. 20, was subsequently found to have failed a drug test from the $148,332 Pennsylvania Sire Stakes at The Meadows that took place six months earlier.

The ruling, published  at the United States Trotting Association website on Dec. 31 and reported at HarnessLink.com, stated that Perfect Sting tested positive for testosterone at a level of 3,765 pg/ml. A split sample subsequently confirmed the finding at a level of 3,635/pg/ml.

Trainer Joseph Holloway has been suspended 15 days from Jan. 17, 2022, through Jan. 31, 2022, and fined $500. Perfect Sting, who was elevated to first place in the Pennsylania Sire Stakes via disqualification of the original first-place finisher, has been disqualified from his win, with $74,166 in purse money ordered returned and redistributed.

Perfect Sting, also the champion 2-year-old pacer in 2020, was harness racing's richest performer in 2021 (prior to this ruling). Holloway, a member of the Harness Racing Museum Hall of Fame, was recipient of the Dan Patch Good Guy Award in 2021.

Holloway, who has appealed the ruling, contends Perfect Sting was never given testosterone, according to a report in HarnessLink.com. Instead, he suggests, the testosterone level of Perfect Sting – an intact horse – may have spiked naturally through proximity to an in-heat mare or other reason. Levels for testosterone for females and gelded males are more predictable than full colts and stallions.

“Stallions can have seasonal highs and lows for testosterone levels,” said Dr. Mary Scollay, executive director and chief operating officer of the Racing Medication and Testing Consortium. “That's why RMTC does not recommend a threshold level for testosterone.”

Pennsylvania may be the only racing state that has a threshold level for testosterone for intact male horses, apparently set at 3,000 pg/ml.

Holloway told HarnessLink.com he has sent hair samples from Perfect Sting to a laboratory in the United Kingdom that he said “can tell whether the testosterone at that time was given to him, or  it is just natural in his system at such a high level.”

Read more at HarnessLink.com

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Veterinarian In Federal Drug Case Gets Three Years In Prison

Former veterinarian Dr. Kristian Rhein was sentenced to three years in federal prison Jan. 5 after he entered a plea of guilty to one count of drug adulteration and misbranding in the ongoing case around a series of racehorse doping rings.

U.S. District Judge Mary Kay Vyskocil ordered Rhein to surrender himself before 2 p.m. on March 7 to begin his sentence, which the court recommended he serve at FCI Otisville or “as close to New York as possible.” Rhein was also ordered to pay a $10,000 fine in addition to $729,716 in restitution to victims of his offense. As with previous defendants, public-facing court documents do not reveal exactly who the “victims” of his crimes are, or how restitution will be distributed to them. Schedules for restitution payments with previous defendants have been filed under seal. He may share responsibility for that restitution amount with other co-defendants, in the event others are ultimately ordered to pay restitution on the same count of the indictment.

Rhein had previously agreed to forfeit the proceeds he took in from his offense, which total $1,021,800. Previous orders from the court required he pay more than half that total before his sentencing hearing.

Rhein was a racetrack-based veterinarian operating primarily in New York, where he was accused of giving horses clenbuterol without valid prescriptions and selling SGF-1000 to trainers, including co-defendant trainer Jason Servis. Rhein was later revealed to own a share in MediVet Equine, which sold SGF-1000. Intercepted communication between Rhein and others revealed he did not know exactly what was in the substance, except that he was confident it was untestable.

Read more about SGF-1000 in our previous reporting here and here.

MediVet sales director Michael Kegley changed his plea from not guilty to guilty last summer, around the same time as Rhein. He is due to be sentenced Jan. 6.

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Court Documents Show Indicted Veterinarian Fishman Was Subject Of 2011 Complaint Involving A Dead Racehorse

Attorneys for the prosecution and defense have been trading motions in federal court over the past few weeks as they work out what evidence will be permitted in the upcoming trial of veterinarian Dr. Seth Fishman and Lisa Giannelli, the first two defendants to be tried in the 2020 drug adulteration and misbranding case that involves more than two dozen trainers, veterinarians and suppliers.. Fishman is charged with two counts of conspiracy to commit drug adulteration and misbranding, and two counts of conspiracy to defraud the United States, while Giannelli is charged with one count of each.

Fishman, who is licensed as a veterinarian, is accused of creating and distributing adulterated or misbranded drugs that were marketed as performance enhancing substances he then sold to others outside the context of a valid prescription. Giannelli is alleged to have acted as a sales associate on Fishman's behalf.

It's still unclear when the trial may begin; it is the “back-up” case for a Jan. 19 start date and is also the back-up option for a date in March. Attorneys in the case have been notified they should be ready to proceed in January.

Both the prosecution and defense have filed motions in limine, which refers to motions asking for the judge to rule on limiting or allowing certain pieces of evidence at trial. The documents included a few partial previews of evidence and arguments that may come up at trial:

  • Fishman and Giannelli's drug sales have been the focus of a state investigation before. In early 2011, the Delaware Division of Professional Regulation received a complaint from an unnamed veterinarian who believed a racehorse had died after receiving an injection of a product sold by Giannelli for Fishman. The horse, a Standardbred named Louisville, was owned by Nanticoke Racing Stables, though the trainer and attending veterinarian's names were not immediately available in court documents. The prosecution's description of the complaint (which was filed under seal) stated the complaining veterinarian suspected Fishman and Giannelli were selling equine drugs without first examining the horses and diagnosing medical conditions. Attorneys for Fishman and Giannelli point out the horse's ownership did not permit a necropsy, but that state investigators wondered whether the cause of death was related to the injected substance going incorrectly into an artery, rather than a reflection of some impurity of the drug itself. At the time, Fishman maintained that he did perform examinations of horses to establish valid veterinary relationships with his clients; Giannelli indicated at the time that she acted as a delivery person with little knowledge of what substances Fishman was sending out or why.Defense attorneys also stated the substance was Pentosan Gold, which they said was produced by a company called NatureVet. Counsel for the pair at that time characterized the substance as a “supplement” and prescribed use was “a generally acceptable off-label use in this industry.”

    The complaint was ultimately dismissed with no regulatory action taken.

    Pentosan is commonly known as a drug used to treat osteoarthritis either through intramuscular or intra-articular administration.

    The defense is seeking to preclude evidence of the horse's death and some of the investigative file, asserting it will unfairly bias the jury.

  • The prosecution is seeking to introduce information Fishman gave to investigators ahead of the 2010 prosecution of harness owner David Brooks. In 2013, Brooks was sentenced to 17 years in prison in connection with a fraud and obstruction of justice case surrounding his DHB Industries. Fishman offered evidence to prosecutors in that case related to performance-enhancing products, human growth hormone and other drugs he said he supplied to Brooks for use on Brooks' horses. At that time, Fishman told authorities Brooks' horses were not testing positive because the substances were designed to evade tests. The two sides disagree over whether the terms of Fishman's participation in the Brooks case allow his statements at that time to be used against him in the current case.
  • Both sides take issue with each other's veterinary experts and seek to limit or exclude their testimony. Prosecutors plan to call Dr. Diana Link, veterinary medical officer/Master Reviewer for the FDA Center for Veterinary Medicine, Dr. Jean Bowman, veterinary medical officer in the Division of Surveillance for the FDA Center for Veterinary Medicine, and Dr. Cynthia Cole, director of the Racing Laboratory at the University of Florida. The defense argues that Cole should not be able to opine on whether the products were adulterated or misbranded according to their labeling, and that she should not testify to the “safety and efficacy” of the products. Likewise, the defense wants to introduce Dr. Clara Fenger, longtime expert witness and detractor to new drug regulations, to testify to the “safety and efficacy” of Fishman's products, as well as the “propriety of using these products for the purpose of maintaining the health and welfare of horses involved in racing.” Prosecutors argue that it's unclear which, if any, seized substances Fenger has analyzed or how she determined that they were safe and effective for horses and want her precluded from testifying.
  • Fishman has admitted to making substances for foreign distribution in addition to his domestic business. One of the details the defense is hoping to preclude from the trial is an allegation from the prosecution that Fishman was solicited by the United Arab Emirates' Presidential Affairs Department, Sector of Scientific Centers and Presidential Camel Department “to distribute performance enhancing drugs and to create and distribute other illegal drugs.” The defense points out that the documents it has seen so far from the government do not describe illegal or performance-enhancing products.The defense's in limine motion also makes reference to a person referred to only as “Bengawi” who is supposed to have solicited Fishman for this purpose. Prosecutors also say they have intercepted communication in which Bengawi asks Fishman to create a substance “intended for use in spiking a woman's unattended drink, i.e., a 'Viagra for ladies.'”

    “The Government alleges that the defendant responded to the request with an offer to make 'BI-AGRA' which he described as 'female Viagra it makes the woman bisexual.' It is unclear whether the defendant was responding in a humorous vein; or even taking the request seriously. There is no indication that the defendant subsequently shipped a substance for this purpose.”

  • Prosecutors allege that Fishman was selling products to “a veterinarian engaged in training horses for Olympic equestrian events. Those sales were, nevertheless, intended to dope those horses using Fishman's same suite of purportedly untestable, misbranded and adulterated drugs.”The veterinarian is not named, nor is any detail given about which Olympic equestrian sport or team may have been involved.

Also this week, U.S. District Judge Mary Kay Vyskocil heard arguments from prosecutors that Fishman should have his bail revoked after saying they uncovered evidence that Fishman has continued making and distributing illegal substances since his arrest. Fishman's attorneys argued that the products he was making in Florida were for foreign distribution only, which was not prohibited under federal statutes on drug adulteration and misbranding. Judge Vyskocil did not revoke Fishman's bail as requested, but did accept an agreement between the two sides to add new restrictions to the terms of bail. Fishman has been ordered to surrender all substances and drugs housed in a storage unit in Boca Raton, Fla., to either the FBI or FDA, not to enter the unit or send any agents or employees to the unit, and to refrain from manufacture or distribution of any drug or substance.

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Reports: Navarro Sobs In Court As Judge Sentences Him To Five Years In Prison For PEDs Case

Former trainer Jorge Navarro was handed the maximum prison sentence of five years by U.S. District Judge Mary Kay Vyskocil in New York on Dec. 17. The proceedings, which were held in person, went on for 90 minutes, with Judge Vyskocil “lashing into” Navarro several times, according to the Thoroughbred Daily News.

Navarro became emotional and eventually began openly weeping in court as Judge Vyskocil characterized his actions. Navarro had entered a guilty plea to one count of drug adulteration and misbranding, after having been charged with two counts in a November 2020 superseding indictment.

“For years, Mr. Navarro, you effectively stole millions, cheating other trainers, owners and jockeys who you competed against,” the judge said. “You also demonstrated, Mr. Navarro, a collective, callous disregard for the well-being of the horses. Bottom line, you likely killed or endangered horses in your care.”

Defense attorneys for Navarro wrote in their pre-sentencing report that they believe the ex-horseman will almost certainly be deported at the conclusion of his sentence, based upon his immigration status. Navarro came to the United States legally from Panama 35 years ago.

He is due to begin his sentence in 60 days.

The prosecution's pre-sentencing report painted a picture of an arrogant trainer unafraid to give his horses illegal performance enhancers irrespective of their potential risk, boasting to others in text messages about his drug program, and openly admitting to some owners that their horses were being doped. Read our summary of that report here.

Navarro had already agreed to forfeit a total of $70,000, which represents the value of drugs he obtained and gave to racehorses. He has also agreed to pay restitution of $25,860,514 – representative of the amount of purse earnings he got during the illegal doping conspiracy.

Read more about the Dec. 17 sentencing hearing at Thoroughbred Daily News

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