Weekly Stewards’ and Commissions’ Rulings, Oct. 11-17, 2022

Every week, the TDN publishes a roundup of key official rulings from the primary tracks within the four major racing jurisdictions of California, New York, Florida and Kentucky.

Here's a primer on how each of these jurisdictions adjudicates different offenses, what they make public (or not) and where.

With the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act (HISA) having gone into effect on July 1, the TDN will also post a roundup of the relevant HISA-related rulings from the same week.

California

Track: Santa Anita
Date: 10/15/2022
Licensee: Kent Desormeaux, jockey
Penalty: Three-day suspension
Violation: Careless riding
Explainer: Having received notice of a Proposed Decision adopted by the California Horse Racing Board that the appeal of DMTD Ruling #11 (July 24, 2021) has been overruled, the original ruling is reinstated. Jockey Kent Desormeaux is suspended for 3 racing days (October 21, 22 and 23, 2022). Pursuant to California Horse Racing Board rule #1766 (Designated Races), the term of suspension shall not prohibit participation in designated races.

Track: Santa Anita
Date: 10/15/2022
Licensee: Kent Desormeaux, jockey
Penalty: Five-day suspension
Violation: Careless riding
Explainer: Having received notice of a Proposed Decision adopted by the California Horse Racing Board that the appeal of DMTD Ruling #56 (August 21, 2021) has been overruled, the original ruling is reinstated. Jockey Kent Desormeaux is suspended for FIVE (5) racing days (October 28, 29, 30, November 4, and 5, 2022). Pursuant to California Horse Racing Board rule #1766 (Designated Races), the term of suspension shall not prohibit participation in designated races.

Track: Santa Anita
Date: 10/16/2022
Licensee: Ash Morgan, jockey
Penalty: One-day suspension, $250 fine 
Violation: Excessive use of the whip
Explainer: Having violated the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority Rule #2280 (Use of Riding Crop) and pursuant to Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority Rule #2282 (Riding Crop Violations and Penalties – Class 3), Jockey Ash Morgan, who rode LOUD LOUD MUSIC in the eighth race at Santa Anita Park on October 15, 2022, is suspended for one (1) day (October 23, 2022), and fined $250.00 for one (1) strike over the limit.

Furthermore, Jockey Ash Morgan is assigned three (3) violation points that will be expunged on April 16, 2023, six (6) months from the date of final adjudication pursuant to Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority Rule #2282 (Riding Crop Violations and Penalties. Jockey Ash Morgan has accrued a total of nine (3) points.

Track: Santa Anita
Date: 10/16/2022
Licensee: Aaron Kroul, owner
Penalty: Suspended license
Violation: Failure to appear before stewards
Explainer: Owner Aaron Kroul, having failed to respond to written notice to appear before the Board of Stewards at Santa Anita Park  on October 16, 2022, is suspended for violation of California Horse Racing Board rule #1547 (Failure to Appear) pending an appearance at a hearing before the Board of Stewards to answer to charges alleging violation of CHRB rule #1876 (Financial Responsibility- Southern California Equine Foundation $900.00). Suspension to commence on October 23, 2022.

NEW HISA STEWARDS RULINGS

Note: While HISA has shared these rulings over the past week, some of them originate from prior weeks.

Violations of Crop Rule

Aqueduct
Feargal Lynch – ruling date October 12, 2022
Kendrick Carmouche – ruling date October 14, 2022
Amin Castillo – ruling date October 14, 2022
Richard Mitchell – ruling date October 14, 2022

Belterra Park
Gregory Romero – ruling date October 12, 2022

Delaware Park
Jhonatan Mendoza – ruling date October 15, 2022

Gulfstream Park
Victor Fernandez – ruling date October 12, 2022

Hawthorne
Constantino Roman – ruling date October 15, 2022
Javier Tavares – ruling date October 15, 2022

Horseshoe Indianapolis
Marion F. Gorham – ruling date October 11, 2022

Laurel Park
Denis Araujo – ruling date October 8, 2022
Sheldon Russell – ruling date October 8, 2022

Parx Racing
Anthony Nunez – ruling date October 12, 2022

Pimlico Race Course
Carlos Eduardo Lopez – ruling date September 30, 2022
David Howard – ruling date September 30, 2022*
Joshua Vance – ruling date September 30, 2022*
Horacio Karamanos – ruling date October 2, 2022

Presque Isle Downs
Gaddiel Martinez – ruling date October 12, 2022

Thistledown
Malcom Franklin – ruling date October 12, 2022

Voided Claims

Delaware Park
Attuck – ruling date October 13, 2022

Thistledown
Armada – ruling date October 4, 2022
Amigo's Affair – ruling date October 10, 2022

Parx Racing
Another Flirt – ruling date October 10, 2022
Classified Info – ruling date October 11, 2022
Midnightcharly – ruling date October 11, 2022

Penn National
Last Investment – ruling date October 12, 2022

Violations Involving Forfeiture of Purse

Aqueduct
Richard Mitchell – violation of crop rule; ruling date October 14, 2022; ten strikes; $500 fine; 3-day suspension; 5 points; disqualification; purse redistribution

Horseshoe Indianapolis
Marion F. Gorham – purse redistribution – owner of horse ridden by Edgar Perez (ruling on 10/7/2022)

Pimlico Race Course
David Howard – purse redistribution – trainer of horse ridden by Carlos Eduardo Lopez on 9/25/2022
Joshua Vance – purse redistribution – owner of horse ridden by Carlos Eduardo Lopez on 9/25/2022

Appeal Request Updates

Mountaineer Park
Gerald A. Erfle
Crop rule violation
Owner of horse ridden by Marco Ccamaque
Ruling date October 7, 2022; violation date October 3, 2022
Appeal filed October 13, 2022
No stay requested

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HISA Announces Membership of Horsemen’s Advisory Group

The Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority (HISA) has announced the members of its Horsemen's Advisory Group, who were selected from among the more than 250 applications received from hands-on racing participants from across the country. Starting in November, the Advisory Group will convene on a monthly basis to provide feedback to the Authority's executive team and Standing Committees on the implementation and evolution of HISA's Racetrack Safety and Anti-Doping and Medication Control regulations. Members will serve between 1-2-year terms to stagger changes in the composition of the group and to maximize the opportunity for participation across the industry in the coming years.

“I want to thank everyone across the horseracing community who expressed interest in joining the Horsemen's Advisory Group. I am particularly grateful to its distinguished and highly qualified new members who have agreed to collaborate with us on an ongoing basis,” said Lisa Lazarus, HISA CEO. “I know that HISA will benefit immensely from this group's extensive, hands-on experience in Thoroughbred racing as we continue to work with all industry stakeholders to advance the safety and integrity of our sport.”

The following individuals have been selected to serve as members of the inaugural Horsemen's Advisory Group:

  • Mark Casse is a trainer and the founder of Casse Racing based in Ocala, Florida. He has been inducted into both the Canadian Horse Racing Hall of Fame and the National Museum of Racing Hall of Fame.
  • Kelsey Danner is a trainer based at Palm Meadows in Boynton Beach, Florida and at Delaware Park.
  • Tom Drury is a trainer from Louisville, Kentucky and a board member of the Kentucky Thoroughbred Association (KTA) and Kentucky Thoroughbred Owners and Breeders (KTOB).
  • Linda Gaudet is Vice President of the Maryland Thoroughbred Horsemen's Association (MTHA), where she has been a member since its inception in 1994. She will serve as the Horsemen's Advisory Group's Backstretch Worker Representative given her history of advocacy on behalf of Backstretch workers.
  • Rick Gold is chair of the Thoroughbred Owners of California's Integrity and Safety Committee and a Thoroughbred racehorse owner in California and Australia.
  • Donnie K Von Hemel is a trainer based in Piedmont, Oklahoma and operates Von Hemel Racing, founded by his father Don Von Hemel. He races in Arkansas, Kentucky and Oklahoma.
  • Fred Hertrich III is the former chairman of the Breeders' Cup Board of Directors and proprietor of Watercress Farm in Paris, Kentucky. He has been a breeder and owner of standardbred racehorses for the last 35 years and is also the Treasurer of the Hambletonian Society. He will be serving as the Advisory Group's Harness Racing Representative.
  • David Ingordo is a Thoroughbred racehorse owner and Bloodstock agent.
  • Frank Jones serves as Vice Chairman of both the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission and Kentucky Horsemen's Benevolent and Protective Association. He is also a Thoroughbred racehorse owner and an avid horseplayer.
  • Tim Keefe is President of the MTHA and a trainer stabled at Laurel Park in Maryland.
  • Sara Langsam is an equine veterinarian with Teigland, Franklin and Brokken DVMs who is based at Belmont Park. She is one of the Advisory Group's two Veterinarian Representatives.
  • Ron Moquett is an Oklahoma native and trainer based in Hot Springs, Arkansas. He races in Arkansas, Kentucky, New York and Oklahoma.
  • Maggi Moss is a former chief Prosecutor from Des Moines, Iowa and a practicing attorney who is also a Thoroughbred owner with horses racing in Iowa, Kentucky, Louisiana and New York.
  • Graham Motion was born in Newmarket, England and is a trainer based in Fair Hill, Maryland and the owner of Herringswell Stables.
  • John Piehowicz is an equine veterinarian and founder of Cincinnati Equine, LLC. He will serve as the second Veterinarian Representative.
  • Tom Robbins is Executive Vice President, Racing and Industry Relations at the Del Mar Thoroughbred Club and will be serving as the Advisory Group's Racing Office Representative.
  • Rick Schosberg is a trainer and Vice-President of the New York Thoroughbred Horsemen's Association (NYTHA), President of Take2 Second Career Thoroughbreds, and Director on the Board of the Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance.
  • Thomas Trosin is a second-generation Farrier and past President of the American Farriers Association. He has been licensed as a plater in both California and Oklahoma and will serve as the Advisory Group's Farrier Representative.
  • Kirk Wycoff is a Thoroughbred racehorse owner and the proprietor of Three Diamonds Farm.

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“Horrifically Wrong”: California VMB and Equine Practitioners at Odds

Last month marked the resumption of business as usual for Jeff Blea, back as California Horse Racing Board (CHRB) equine medical director after an eight-month plus enforced hiatus due to the California Veterinary Medical Board's (VMB) controversial step of suspending his license.

In a settlement with the medical board, Blea agreed to continuing education classes in record keeping, a remittance to the VMB of $131,464 for the investigation costs, and a three-year probationary period.

Those believing the return of Blea to his prior role would bring an end to the veterinary medical board's regulatory inroads into the state's racing industry would be sorely mistaken.

The medical board has ongoing cases against at least nine other backstretch veterinarians in California, and the nature of some of the accusations–often identical in nature to those leveled against Blea–reveal a yawning schism between the veterinary board and the CHRB concerning approaches to standard equine veterinary care.

Until these differences are rectified, the legal ramifications hang like a Sword of Damocles over not just the state's racetrack practitioners but the performance horse veterinary community in general.

“It's been very unusual,” says David Foley, executive director of the American Association of Equine Practitioners (AAEP), about the nature of the complaints against Blea and some of the other backstretch veterinarians.

“If the veterinary medical board is going to interpret the rules in a companion animal manner towards equine practitioners, nobody's going to want to practice in California,” Foley says.

Areas of Conflict

The main areas of disconnect with the medical board–at least where the CHRB is concerned–surrounds the use of what the VMB terms misbranded drugs like Thyro-L, non-FDA approved compounded drugs and the correct nature of the veterinarian-patient-client relationship. More broadly, the disconnect also ensnares the prophylactic use of medications and record keeping differences between small and large animal veterinarians.

In the process, these areas highlight often conflicting sets of rules between these separate state agencies throwing the work of backstretch practitioners into confusion and possible professional jeopardy.

In short, some of the veterinarians with pending cases face a conundrum should they settle with the VMB and return to work under probation: If they then continue to practice under the CHRB's standard of equine veterinary care-but against the VMB's interpretation of the rules-they could face stark professional consequences.

The VMB deems Thyro-L, or thyroxine, misbranded under the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act. And in laying out its accusations against some of the veterinarians, the medical board argues that the use of such misbranded drugs is prohibited through statutes written into the California Health and Safety Code.

Specifically, the code states that it is “unlawful for any person to receive in commerce any drug or device that is misbranded or to deliver or proffer for delivery any drug or device.”

Sarah Andrew

Essentially, a drug is misbranded if its labeling proves false or misleading in any particular situation, says attorney Mike Casey, who represented Blea in his case against the veterinary board. This could mean that the drug has been proven effective in the treatment of ailments for which it hasn't been labeled, says Casey, or vice versa.

But confusingly, Thyro-L is labeled for use in horses to treat hypothyroidism–a relatively rare equine condition–if dispensed by a licensed veterinarian.

Furthermore, many equine veterinarians routinely use it to treat a variety of conditions, including insulin resistance, for which there's a body of research.

“Veterinarians have a wide authority to prescribe medications,” says David Ramey, president of the Los Angeles Equine Advisory Committee, who says the VMB's stance on Thyro-L runs “absolutely contrary to regular medical practice.”

Most pertinent for backstretch veterinarians operating in California within the last decade is how the CHRB has issued advisories outlining thyroxine use in racehorses.

The first such advisory came in 2014 following an agency investigation into a series of sudden deaths among Bob Baffert-trainees, which found that the uniform use of thyroxine among the horses in question is “concerning in horses with suspected cardiac failure.”

The CHRB's much tightened rules surrounding thyroxine use went into effect earlier this year.

“If the VMB truly believed that Thyro-L was prohibited in use by the FDA as misbranded, why didn't they simply pick up the phone and call the CHRB,” says Casey. “They've been aware of the concerns surrounding Thyro-L since 2013.”

As a non-FDA approved drug, thyroxine overlaps another key area of conflict between the two agencies-the use of non-FDA approved compounded medications, which is permitted in veterinary practice in California.

So, where does the conflict arise?

Look no further than the CHRB's own Rule 1867 (b) which states that “the possession and/or use on the premises of a facility under the jurisdiction of the Board of any drug, substance or medication that has not been approved by the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for use in the United States.”

The veterinary medical board appears to interpret that rule categorically, stating in complaints against several backstretch veterinarians how no compounded drugs are FDA approved, even if compounded from FDA approved parent drugs.

The list of drugs the CHRB prohibits–at least according to the veterinary board–includes commonly used compounded medications like dantrolene, used on horses that tie-up, and naquasone, which ameliorates swelling.

Crucially, the CHRB's own interpretation of its rules follows existing state law, leaving the door open to backstretch practitioners using compounded medications so long as they contain FDA-approved parent drugs.

Indeed, just last month–seemingly with this interpretive discord in mind–the agency issued an advisory to its relevant stakeholders stating that while compounded medications are not FDA approved, the CHRB's “longstanding interpretation” of rule 1867 “is that lawfully prescribed, compounded medications which are manufactured according to Federal and State guidelines do not violate this regulation.”

The advisory continues: “The CHRB recognizes that compounded medications are necessary for the safe and effective treatment of horses. These medications contain approved Federal Food and Drug Administration (F.D.A.) substances, which have been compounded to achieve proper dosages for safe and effective equine treatment and are necessary for equine veterinarians to effectively treat various medical conditions.”

Furthermore, the CHRB has never filed a complaint for violation of 1867 (b), according to CHRB spokesperson, Mike Marten.

Which leads to the final area of tension-how to define the proper veterinarian-client-patient relationship on a racetrack backstretch.

As the veterinary medical board sees it, no veterinarian can prescribe, dispense or administer a medication without first performing three main tasks: examining the patient and documenting the findings, establishing and documenting a diagnosis, then communicating the best course of treatment with the client.

Among the list of common medications that backstretch practitioners allegedly issued without first performing these tasks includes acepromazine, a tranquilizer used routinely to keep horses calm, and GarstroGard, used to treat stomach ulcers.

But backstretch practitioners and performance horse veterinarians voice frustration with what they see as the VMB's narrow interpretation of this relationship.

The problem arises, says Ramey, because the Veterinary Medicine Practice Act-the overarching rules by which all licensed veterinarians must comport their business-is almost entirely geared around small animal practice.

“The practice act doesn't really address herd health,” says Ramey, who added the American Veterinary Medicine Association (AVMA) is currently reviewing its model practice act to possibly address this. “In herd health, animals aren't always treated individually every time.”

Indeed, California's current laws are “far easier to understand and follow for small animal practitioners (who typically see individual animal patients in a brick-and-mortar context) than they are for veterinarians who treat herds, such as equine or livestock veterinarians,” wrote Dan Baxter, executive director of the California Veterinary Medical Association (CVMA), in an emailed response to questions.

Another wrinkle in the picture, say experts, concerns the currently routine prophylactic use of certain medications in performance horses to avoid injury and the onset of common training-driven ailments.

A prime example in racehorses would be the use of acepromazine-or ace, for short-used ubiquitously during morning training to keep fractious horses calm and to minimize the risk of harm to themselves and others.

“They're saying you can't give GastroGard without listening to their gut sounds and without taking their temp' and what-not on every horse every time. But not every medication requires that degree of [daily diagnosis],” says John Madigan, professor emeritus at the UC Davis school of Veterinary Medicine, calling the VMB's recent actions “horrifically wrong,” due to what he sees as those unfamiliar with equine practice leading complaint investigations.

Who Wields the Stick?

One of the main questions that arise is this: To whose rules should backstretch practitioners adhere?

The CHRB strikes the note that neither agency appears to have “primacy” of authority when it comes to regulating backstretch veterinarians. “And that's the problem because in certain areas there seems to be a disagreement about interpretation,” says CHRB executive director, Scott Chaney.

Veterinary medical board spokesperson, Monica Vargas, equivocated, writing that while the VMB “cannot advise on CHRB enforcement of laws applicable to their licensees,” the VMB has jurisdiction over the practice of veterinary medicine in California “unless otherwise pre-empted.”

Legal pre-emption, in this case, appears to come in the form of the federal Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act's (HISA) racetrack safety rules, which went into effect July 1 and provides guidelines for record keeping and appropriate veterinary-patient-client relationships.

Scott Chaney | CHRB

Indeed, “federal authority does pre-empt state law and state reg's,” says Chaney.

A HISA spokesperson told the TDN that the agency has not yet involved itself with the differences that have arisen between the VMB and CHRB.

For backstretch practitioners with cases from prior years open against them, however-along with the state's broad contingent of performance horse practitioners-HISA pre-emption is a moot point.

That's why California's equine veterinarians and leading equine veterinary bodies have been publicly sounding the alarm about the potential pitfalls of this schism since at least the January veterinary board meeting.

After that January meeting, the CVMA and other stakeholder groups asked the VMB if they could submit a presentation at the following April board meeting about their concerns. The board pulled that presentation prior to the meeting, however.

Asked why, Vargas responded that the presentation went beyond the scope of the request and included, among other things, discussion regarding pending disciplinary matters. “The Administrative Procedure Act prohibits the Board from receiving communications regarding the merits of any issue in a pending disciplinary proceeding,” wrote Vargas.

Interestingly, in a subsequent statement to its constituents, the CVMA took issue with that interpretation, writing that the VMB routinely holds policy discussions concerning the Veterinary Medical Practice Act, including while enforcement cases are simultaneously being conducted.

“If it were the case that the VMB could never talk about problematic regulations or statutes due to a risk of infringing on current disciplinary cases, then the VMB would not be able to function as a rulemaking body at all,” wrote the CVMA.

After that aborted presentation, the VMB assembled a two-person Equine Practice Subcommittee tasked with researching the equine practice regulations and statutes, taking “input” from relevant stakeholders, then “returning to the Board with particular recommendations,” wrote Vargas.

The VMB failed to answer other questions about specific goals of the subcommittee, including those about timelines and about whether the subcommittee's work could lead to amendments to the California Veterinary Medicine Practice Act.

Vargas did write, however, that at the upcoming Multidisciplinary Advisory Committee meeting this Tuesday, the Equine Practice Subcommittee will provide an “update on the issues the Board has directed the Subcommittee to research.”

One of these key stakeholders is the CVMA, which has already approached the VMB several times requesting an “in-depth look be taken at the aforementioned laws,” wrote Baxter.

“The CVMA will continue to engage the VMB in dialogue about the regulations and will strongly advocate for the veterinary profession,” Baxter added.

According to Chaney, the CHRB met with the subcommittee some two weeks ago.

The CHRB's goal for these ongoing negotiations, Chaney says, is “clarity” for licenced backstretch practitioner. “All racing veterinarians that I've spoken with want to comply with CHRB rules and vet' med' board rules, they just don't know what they are right now,” he says.

This “clarity” could come the way of changes to the California Veterinary Medicine Practice Act or to the CHRB's own regulations, says Chaney. But changes to these state rule books can be a glacially slow process.

In the meantime, backstretch practitioners with open cases against them face a Catch-22.

On the one hand, they're incentivized to settle their cases swiftly or even to defend themselves due to the VMB's right, if it prevails on any finding, to seek cost recovery, says Casey.

For Blea, that was a six-figure sum.

However, if the veterinarians settle with the VMB before these practical differences have been smoothed over, they face potentially serious consequences if they then return to active practice under a probationary period.

The VMB is “aware of that potential,” responded Chaney, when asked about this conundrum. But he was unable to elaborate on whether the VMB has proposed any timeline for resolving the agencies' differences.

Investigatory integrity

Which leads to concerns among certain stakeholders about the manner in which the VMB is conducting its investigations into California's backstretch practitioners.

According to both Casey and Blea, neither Blea nor the clients relevant to his case were interviewed as part of the investigatory process.

“At no point did anyone ever ask Jeff [Blea] what was the purpose of administering acepromazine. What was the purpose of administering aspirin powder. He was never asked at any point during the quote, investigation, end quote about anything in his medical record. Not once,” says Casey.

A busy backstretch | Sarah Andrew

“Neither were the trainers, the owners, the grooms,” Casey added. “No one.”

The TDN asked the veterinary medical board about these claims-including about standard investigatory procedures when a practitioner's veterinarian-patient-client relationship is in question-but the agency offered no response.

Other prominent figures in equine practice question the VMB's impartiality in these matters.

As someone frequently called upon to provide expert testimony in cases involving equine practice, Ramey responded to the veterinary medical board's open call for experts in Blea's case, he says.

Ramey told the TDN that when he saw the accusations against Blea, however, he spent an hour and a half explaining to two VMB attorneys that the accusations against Blea amounted to typical standards of care in horses facing rigorous training programs.

“These horses are at risk of developing certain problems, and you're trying to help mitigate that risk,” says Ramey, describing his version of the conversation with the VMB's attorneys.

“The next day they let me know that they did not need my services as an expert witness,” says Ramey, who added that he is “firmly convinced” that the VMB had a “pre-determined outcome that they were looking for.”

It should be noted that Ramey considers himself Blea's professional and personal acquaintance.

“I think it's important that the public is protected against poor veterinary practice,” he responded, when asked about how this relationship might color his opinions. “But [Blea's case] wasn't that.”

When asked about Ramey's claims, Vargas wrote that “As the adjudicator in administrative disciplinary actions, the Board does not participate in prosecutorial activity leading up to an administrative hearing. As such, the Board has no knowledge of expert witness preparation discussions for administrative hearings.”

In speaking with nearly a dozen equine practitioners or leading figures within prominent veterinary organizations, it's clear the ongoing philosophical and practical discord in equine practice has rattled the veterinary community in California.

Some veterinarians have already begun to question their professional futures in the state, says Madigan. “Unfortunately,” he adds, “a lot of veterinarians are thinking 'I just hope it doesn't happen to me.'”

The post “Horrifically Wrong”: California VMB and Equine Practitioners at Odds appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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Weekly Rulings and Commissions Rulings: Oct. 4-10

Every week, the TDN publishes a roundup of key official rulings from the primary tracks within the four major racing jurisdictions of California, New York, Florida and Kentucky.

Here's a primer on how each of these jurisdictions adjudicates different offenses, what they make public (or not) and where.

With the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act (HISA) having gone into effect on July 1, the TDN will also post a roundup of the relevant HISA-related rulings from the same week.

California
Track: Santa Anita
Date: 10/07/2022
Licensee: Leonard Rivero, owner
Penalty: Suspended license
Violation: Failure to appear for hearing
Explainer: Owner Leonard Rivero (DBA; WINNER CIRCLE STABLES), having failed to respond to written notice to appear before the Board of Stewards at Santa Anita Park on October 6, 2022, is suspended for violation of California Horse Racing Board rule #1547 (Failure to Appear) pending an appearance at a hearing before the Board of Stewards to answer to charges alleging violation of CHRB rule #1876 (Financial Responsibility- $2594.52 to K C Horse Transport, Inc.). Suspension to commence on October 13, 2022.

Track: Santa Anita
Date: 10/07/2022
Licensee: Luis Aguilar, owner
Penalty: $200 fine
Violation: Shoeing without license
Explainer: Owner Luis Aguilar is fined $200.00 for violation of California Horse Racing Board rule #1481 (Occupational Licenses and Fees–shoeing without a proper license)

Track: Santa Anita
Date: 10/07/2022
Licensee: Lloyd Wicker, trainer
Penalty: $500 fine
Violation: Out of competition medication violation
Explainer: Trainer Lloyd Wicker, who worked out the horse HOLLYWOOD RUMOR at San Luis Rey Downs on July 20, 2022, is fined $500.00 and assessed one half (1/2) point in accordance with California Horse Racing Rule #1843.4 (Multiple Medication Violations–Expires 10/08/23) for violation of California Horse Racing Board Rule #1868 (Authorization Medication During Workouts) and Rule #1843.1  (Prohibited Drug Substances – Phenylbutazone [(Class 4]).

Track: Santa Anita
Date: 10/09/2022
Licensee: Juan Hernandez, jockey
Penalty: One-day suspension, $250 fine
Violation: Excessive use of the whip

Explainer: Having violated the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority Rule #2280 (Use of Riding Crop) and pursuant to Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority Rule #2282 (Riding Crop Violations and Penalties–Class 3), Jockey JUAN HERNANDEZ, who rode TURN ON THE JETS in the ninth race at Santa Anita Park on October 8, 2022, is suspended for one (1) day (October 16, 2022), and fined $250.00 for one (1) strike over the limit. Furthermore, Jockey JUAN HERNANDEZ is assigned three (3) violation points that will be expunged on April 9, 2023, six (6) months from the date of final adjudication pursuant to Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority Rule #2282 (Riding Crop Violations and Penalties. Jockey JUAN HERNANDEZ has accrued a total of nine (9) points. Pursuant to California Horse Racing Board rule #1766 (Designated Races), the term of suspension shall not prohibit participation in designated races.

Track: Santa Anita
Date: 10/09/2022
Licensee: Ian Kruljac, trainer
Penalty: Reimbursement by owner of claim and stabling costs
Violation: Voided claim
Explainer: In the matter of the claim submitted for the horse GYPSY LYNN; Having received first notice of a Prohibited Substance (methocarbamol) in the post-race test sample, pursuant to Horse Racing Integrity and Safety Rule 2262 (c)(5) (Void Claim), the claim submitted for the horse GYPSY LYNN, in the first race on August 21, 2022, at Del Mar Racetrack is hereby deemed void.

The horse, GYPSY LYNN trained by IAN KRULJAC, shall be returned to owner CLARKE M. COOPER (DBA: CLARKE M. COOPER FAMILY TRUST) and CLARKE M. COOPER (DBA: CLARKE M. COOPER FAMILY TRUST) shall return the amount of the claim of TWENTY THOUSAND DOLLARS ($20,000) to owner TODD CADY by October 16, 2022. Furthermore, owner CLARKE M. COOPER (DBA: CLARKE M. COOPER FAMILY TRUST) shall reimburse owner TODD CADY in the amount of $1,679.54 for the care and training of the horse during the time the horse was in the claimant's barn.

Track: Santa Anita
Date: 10/10/2022
Licensee: Drayden Van Dyke, jockey
Penalty: Reimbursement by owner and jockey of purse money
Violation: Excessive use of the whip
Explainer: Pursuant to a formal hearing held on October 8, 2022, it is hereby ordered that BOLT'S BROAD, who finished first in the sixth race at Del Mar Race Track on September 9, 2022, be disqualified and deemed unplaced pursuant to HISA Rule 2282 (Riding Crop Violations and Penalties [Class 2 Violation]) for violation of HISA Rule 2280 (Use of Riding Crop).

It is further ordered that the purse money awarded to Owner WENDY RUIS (RUIS RACING LLC), $60,000 and Jockey DRAYDEN VAN DYKE, 4,800 be distributed in accordance with the revised order of finish by the Paymaster of Purses at Del Mar Race Track

Revised order of finish is as follows:
1st  Classymademoiselle; 2nd La Peer; 3rd Anacaro; 4th Balenciaga Betty; 5th  Free and Humble; 6th  Shirley's Bane

All records are ordered to reflect this ruling. In accordance with California Horse Racing Board rule #1956 (Race Declared Official) neither pari-mutuel payoffs nor the distribution of any pari-mutuel pool shall be affected.

New York
Track: Aqueduct
Date: 10/06/2022
Licensee: Tom Morley, trainer
Penalty: Ten-day suspension, $1,000 fine
Violation: Medication violation
Explainer: Having received a report from the NYS Gaming Commission Equine Drug Testing Laboratory of the finding of Phenylbutazone in the post-race sample taken from Horse “Built to Last” (#4) which raced in the 3rd race and finished 1st on August 24th 2022. Trainer of record Mr. Thomas Morley having been notified of the post-race positive and having waived his right to appeal is hereby fined the sum of $1,000 and suspended ten Calendar days effective Thursday October 13th 2022, through Saturday October 22nd 2022, inclusive.

Furthermore, the Stewards order horse “Built to Last” disqualified from any part of the purse and the purse redistributed as follows:

  1. (#11) Kingstown
  2. (#12) Tommy Gun
  3. (#13) Full Complement
  4. (#10) Magic Truck

Ordered that during your period of suspension, you shall not directly or indirectly participate in New York State pari-mutuel horse racing. You are denied the privileges and use of the grounds of all racetracks, you are forbidden to participate in any share of purses or other payment. Every horse is denied the privileges of the grounds and shall not participate in pari-mutuel racing in New York State, that (a) is owned or trained by you, or by any individuals who serves as your agent or employee during your suspension: or (b) for which you during your suspension are directly or indirectly with training, including any arrangements to care for, train, enter, race, invoice, collect fees or other payments, manage funds, employ or insure workers, provide advise or other information or assist with any aspect of the training of such horses.

Track: Aqueduct
Date: 10/07/2022
Licensee: Edmund Davis, trainer
Penalty: Fifteen-day suspension, $1,500 fine
Violation: Medication violation
Explainer: Having received a report from the NYS Gaming Commission Equine Drug Testing Laboratory of the finding of Phenylbutazone in the post-race sample taken from Horse “Cap't Remington” #6 which raced in the 3rd race and finished 2nd on August 5th 2022. Trainer of record Mr. Edmund Davis having been notified of the post-race positive and having waived his right to appeal is hereby fined the sum of $1,500 and suspended fifteen Calendar days effective October 16th 2022 through October 30th 2022, inclusive.

Furthermore, the Stewards order horse ” Cap't Remmington” disqualified from any part of the purse and the purse redistributed as follows:

  1. (#5) Jay'stalker
  2. (#3) Barone Marchis
  3. (#4) Makart
  4. (#2) Devil Or Angel
  5. (#7) My Slick Nick

Ordered that during your period of suspension, you shall not directly or indirectly participate in New York State pari-mutuel horse racing. You are denied the privileges and use of the grounds of all racetracks, you are forbidden to participate in any share of purses or other payment. Every horse is denied the privilages of the grounds and shall not participate in pari-mutuel racing in New York State, that (a) is owned or trained by you, or by any  individuals who serves as your agent or employee during your suspension: or (b) for which you during your suspension are directly or indirectly with training, including any arrangements to care for, train, enter, race, invoice, collect fees or other payments, manage funds, employ or insure workers, provide advise or other information or assist with any aspect of the training of such horses.

Kentucky
Track: Keeneland
Date: 10/08/2022
Licensee: Carlos Villasana, jockey
Penalty: Suspended license
Violation: Failed drug test
Explainer: Carlos Villasana is hereby immediately suspended by the Board of Stewards for his failed drug test (reported on October 7, 2022 as positive for cocaine) and is ordered to undergo an evaluation by a professional in the field of addictive or substance abuse disorders approved by the KHRC. Consideration for reinstatement is contingent upon the adherence to the recommendation of the approved counsellor. Mr. Villasana must also provide a negative drug test prior to reinstatement. During his suspension Carlos Villasana is denied the privileges of all facilities under the jurisdiction of the KHRC.

Track: Keeneland
Date: 10/09/2022
Licensee: Jose Ortiz, jockey
Penalty: Three-day suspension
Violation: Careless riding
Explainer: After a hearing before the Board of Stewards, Jose Ortiz who rode Raging Sea in the ninth race at Keeneland on October 7, 2022, is hereby suspended three days, October 19 through October 21, 2022 (inclusive) for careless riding in the stretch that resulted in the disqualification of his mount.

Track: Keeneland
Date: 10/09/2022
Licensee: Irad Ortiz, jockey
Penalty: Three-day suspension
Violation: Careless riding
Explainer: After a hearing before the Board of Stewards, Irad Ortiz who rode Longpants Required in the tenth race at Keeneland on October 7, 2022, is hereby suspended three days, October 19 through October 21, 2022 (inclusive) for careless riding near the 3/8 pole.

Track: Keeneland
Date: 10/09/2022
Licensee: Joel Rosario, jockey
Penalty: Three-day suspension
Violation: Careless riding
Explainer: After a hearing before the Board of Stewards, Joel Rosario who rode Olga Isabel in the fifth race at Keeneland on October 7, 2022, is hereby suspended three days, October 19 through October 21, 2022 (inclusive) for careless riding near the 1/4 pole that resulted in the disqualification of his mount.

NEW HISA STEWARDS RULINGS
Note: While HISA has shared these rulings over the past week, some of them originate from prior weeks.

Violations of Crop Rule
Churchill Downs
Francisco Arrieta – ruling date October 4, 2022
Francisco Arrieta – ruling date October 8, 2022

Hawthorne
Eduardo Gallardo – ruling date October 6, 2022

Horseshoe Indianapolis
Adam Beschizza – ruling date October 6, 2022
Javier Padron-Barcenas – ruling date October 6, 2022
Kendal Deann Sterritt – ruling date October 6, 2022
Eduardo Perez – ruling date October 7, 2022

Mountaineer Park
Juan Gabriel Lagunes – ruling date September 27, 2022
Luciano Barron Hernandez – ruling date September 27, 2022
Eder Luis Martinez – ruling date October 3, 2022
Luciano Barron Hernandez – ruling date October 5, 2022
I'm Praying for That – ruling date October 5, 2022
Marco Ccamaque – ruling date October 7, 2022 (violation date Sept. 28)
Marco Ccamaque – ruling date October 7, 2022 (violation date Oct. 3)

Penn National
Pedro Requena – ruling date October 6, 2022

Pimlico
Xavier Perez – ruling date September 10, 2022

Presque Isle Downs
Alexis Valdes – ruling date October 10, 2022
Wilfredo Martinez – ruling date October 10, 2022

Remington Park
Obed Sanchez – ruling date October 6, 2022

Zia Park
J.C. Villanueva – ruling date October 8, 2022

Voided Claims
Churchill Downs
Thatch – ruling date October 1, 2022

Hawthorne
Gotta Chase It – ruling date October 2, 2022

Belterra Park
Monolito – ruling date October 5, 2022

Violations Involving Forfeiture of Purse
Mountaineer Park
Marco Ccamaque – $500 fine; 3-day suspension; 5 points; redistribution of purse; 7-day additional suspension due to accumulation of HISA points; ruling date October 7, 2022 (violation date Sept. 28)

Mountaineer Park
Marco Ccamaque – $500 fine; 3-day suspension; 5 points; redistribution of purse; 15-day additional suspension due to accumulation of HISA points; ruling date October 7, 2022 (violation date Oct. 3)

Appeal Request Updates
Mountaineer Park
Marco Ccamaque
Crop rule violation
Ruling date October 7, 2022 (violation date Sept. 28)
Appeal filed October 8, 2022
Stay granted

Mountaineer Park
Marco Ccamaque
Crop rule violation
Ruling date October 7, 2022 (violation date Oct. 3)
Appeal filed October 8, 2022
Stay granted

Horseshoe Indianapolis
Eduardo Perez
Crop rule violation
Ruling date October 7, 2022
Appeal filed October 11, 2022
Stay granted

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