Report: Chad Brown Pleads Guilty to a Lesser Charge

According to Albany television station WNYT, trainer Chad Brown pled guilty in Saratoga Springs City Court to reduced charges Monday related to an alleged case of domestic violence that occurred during the Saratoga meet. Originally arrested and charged with “obstruction of breathing,” or choking a woman who came to his house on the evening of August 17, Brown pled guilty to the lesser charge of harassment. He was accompanied by his lawyer, Matthew Chauvin.

According to the TV station, prosecutors said that there were “problems of proof,” with the case. Brown will now be sentenced to one year of conditional discharge, ordered to pay a $370 fine, and will undergo an evaluation. The judge also issued an order of protection.

Brown expressed gratitude that the incident would not go on his record, but said he found it unfortunate that the case had made its way into the media.

“While I'm satisfied to put this unfortunate incident behind me and pleased that as a result I will not have a criminal record, I regret details of my personal life being made public through the media,” WNYT's Mark Mulholland quotes Brown as saying. “For this, I apologize to my family, friends, clients, and coworkers. I can and will do better in the future. I greatly appreciate all who have supported me throughout this ordeal.”

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Frost Speaks Out After Bullying Ban: ‘If I Allowed It To Happen I’d Be Going Back On Everything I Stand For’ 

Top female national hunt jockey Bryony Frost opened up to The Sun on Tuesday, speaking to the media for the first time since the British Horseracing Authority issued an 18-month ban to jockey Robbie Dunne for bullying and harassment.

Frost revealed the reasoning behind her decision to take the bullying matter to the BHA.

“In the end it came down to two things,” Frost told The Sun. “There was the point of I don't believe anyone should make anyone feel that way, that you're not worthy of being who you are.

“And the main one was I wouldn't be a decent human being if I one day saw someone go through what I did, knowing I could have done something to prevent it happening again.

“If I allowed it to happen I'd be going back on everything I stand for in my own rules of life, how you treat people. I didn't want to see anyone go through what I did.”

Over the course of the five-day hearing into Dunne's conduct, Frost's representative Louis Weston told the panel that Dunne had used “foul, sexually abusive and misogynistic language” toward Frost as well as threats to “cause her serious physical harm.”

Dunne's representative Roderick Moore argued that other female jockeys had not spoken out about malevolent behavior from Dunne.

Dunne gave testimony during the second week, arguing that when he said he would “put her through a wing,” he didn't mean it as a threat.

Reactions across the racing industry have been heavily mixed, and Frost hopes to find some sense of normalcy moving forward.

“I just want to enjoy my riding, I want to move forward. . . I just want to be me,” she told The Sun.

Read more at The Sun.

The post Frost Speaks Out After Bullying Ban: ‘If I Allowed It To Happen I’d Be Going Back On Everything I Stand For’  appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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Dunne Banned For 18 Months For Conduct Towards Frost

Jockey Robbie Dunne has been suspended from riding for 18 months, three of which were suspended, for conduct prejudicial to racing for his harassment and bullying of fellow rider Bryony Frost as the British Horseracing Authority Disciplinary Panel handed down their verdict on Thursday morning. Dunne's suspension begins immediately and he has seven days to appeal.

Charged with seven counts in total, Dunne was found in breach of four counts prejudicial to horseracing–rule (J) 19–and three of violent and threatening behavior, with only one charge denied. The three-person panel, chaired by Brian Barker, QC, found the first four to be proven and the latter three are yet to be considered. Most of the incidents took place last year, when Dunne was found by the panel to have threatened Frost by promising to “put her through a wing [of a fence]” in September and he was also accused of using misogynistic language.

“Our conclusion on the whole of the evidence is that a course of deliberate conduct over a significant period of time has been revealed,” said Baker. “This has progressed from distasteful targeting to deliberate harassment on and off the course and onwards to occasional cases of dangerous bullying. We find that the words used on Sept. 3 were, as a promise, to cause real harm–over and above the usual jockey mantra of 'murdering'.

“On the examination of Ms Frost's evidence and demeanour we find her to be truthful, thoughtful and compelling. By taking her complaint to the authority she has broken the code [of the weighing room], knowing that her isolation–and rejection by some–was inevitable.”

“Behind the four elements set out in rule (J) 19 we find those proved.

“We note that you were following a culture that seems to be approved of by your peers and we are particularly conscious that your livelihood will be significantly affected. We have taken particular notice to the medical report, we do understand your suffering at the loss of your best friend [Liam Treadwell].

He added, “There are a combination of factors, in our view, that take this substantially above the entry point. We agree the appropriate approach is to give concurrent sentences, our view is overall that the appropriate sentence is one of 18 months' suspension of licence. We did not consider a financial penalty to be appropriate.”

Frost, who was riding at Warwick on Thursday, said in a statement, “I would like to thank every individual including the racing public that has supported me not only during the last couple of weeks but throughout.

“I wish now to take a few days to reflect on the outcome before I make any further comment. I ask the media to please give me and the people closest to me a few days of privacy. I need to focus on my upcoming rides over the weekend. Thank you.”

The British Horseracing Authority released a statement following the panel's findings. It read in part:

“The British Horseracing Authority (BHA) welcomes the finding of the independent Disciplinary Panel that jockey Robbie Dunne is in breach of four counts of Rule (J)19 and to impose an 18-month suspension upon him.

“In our view this decision, and the comments of the independent Judicial Panel, reflect the seriousness of the accusations. It sends a clear message that conduct of this nature cannot be tolerated in any working environment within our sport. This case has been a ground-breaking one for British racing, the first of its kind, and it is important that it acts as a catalyst for further change within the industry.

“We understand that, for the vast majority of those who work in the sport–and in particular in the jockeys' weighing room–it is a positive, supportive, welcoming place. We recognise the pressures on those involved in the sport, and that temperatures will at times be raised.

“However, there is a line as to what is acceptable. It is essential that when something does go wrong that people feel that they can call out bad behaviour, and not be made to suffer in silence. The independent Judicial Panel Chair voiced concerns regarding these issues in his judgement. We call on everyone in the industry to recognise this.

“By stepping forward to report the behaviour of which she was on the receiving end, Bryony Frost took a courageous step. We hope that others who may be in similar positions will feel comfortable doing the same.

“Nothing is more important than our people and our horses. We must take positive steps across the sport to ensure that British racing is a welcoming place to work for everyone.

“Finally, we recognise that this has been a difficult period for all involved, in particular for Robbie Dunne and Bryony Frost. We ask that the privacy and well-being of both is now respected. It is important that both are now supported by the BHA, their colleagues and their representative body the PJA.”

For the full BHA statement, please click here.

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