Maria Borell Pleads Not Guilty To 43 Animal Cruelty Charges Filed In 2016

Breeders' Cup-winning trainer Maria Borell has pleaded not guilty in Mercer County District Court in Kentucky to 43 charges of animal cruelty originally filed in June 2016.

Russell J. Baldani, attorney for Borel, made the plea on behalf of his client on June 13. A pre-trial conference has been scheduled for Sept. 15 for Borell, who was not immediately served with an arrest warrant for the second degree animal cruelty charges after she left Kentucky.

Baldani told the Harrodsburg Herald – which first reported the not guilty plea – that Borell turned herself in to authorities in May because “she wants to address the allegations and clear her name.”

Cash bond of $7,500 was posted May 17. A condition attached to the bond is that Borell is “not to be responsible for the care of any horses in the Commonwealth of Kentucky.”

Baldani said Borell has not lived in Kentucky since December 2015.

Borell and her father, Charles Borell, were both charged with animal cruelty after 43 neglected horses were found on a Mercer County farm that was leased in the elder Borell's name. Charles Borell entered an Alford guilty plea in the case – meaning he did not admit to committing a crime but conceded there was enough evidence to convict him. Prosecutors dropped 34 animal cruelty charges in exchange for his guilty plea on nine counts. He was put on probation for two years.

Maria Borell trained Eclipse Award-winning sprinter Runhappy for most of his 3-year-old campaign in 2015, when he won the Grade 1 King's Bishop (now H. Allen Jerkens Stakes) at Saratoga and the G1 Breeders' Cup Sprint at Keeneland. She was dismissed the day after the Breeders' Cup by owner James McIngvale and closed out the year with a G1 victory in the Malibu Stakes at Santa Anita.

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Animal Protection Organizations Applaud Congressional Action On Soring, Slaughter Bills

Critical votes on two horse protection bills and on a funding bill with key horse provisions made Thursday a benchmark date in the long history of equine advocacy by the Humane Society of the United States and Humane Society Legislative Fund. The Subcommittee on Consumer Protection & Commerce of the House Energy & Commerce Committee voted on legislation to ban soring in the Tennessee walking horse industry and the slaughter of horses for human consumption. The two measures are at the heart of the organizations' equine protection agenda. And the House Appropriations Committee approved important provisions we sought for horses in the bill funding the U.S. Department of Agriculture for Fiscal Year 2023.

“Horse lovers and advocates have been seeking to hasten the day when we'd give horses a measure of justice on these issues,” said Keith Dane, senior director on equine protection for the HSUS. “It's hard to imagine any greater betrayal of horses than slaughter and soring, and there could be no simpler solution than to ban them outright, no compromise.”

“If average Americans of any persuasion could vote on it, these cruelties would have long since disappeared. Neither one is worthy of a humane nation, and that should seal the deal with the 117th Congress, which we hope will pass these two measures immediately,” said Tracie Letterman, vice president of federal affairs at HSLF.

The subcommittee passed the Prevent All Soring Tactics (PAST) Act, H.R. 5441, as introduced, without any weakening amendments. The bill would amend the federal Horse Protection Act to eliminate industry-self policing, ban soring devices and strengthen penalties for soring, in which unscrupulous trainers use painful techniques to induce an artificially high-stepping gait in some show horses. The effectively-crafted PAST Act has the strong support of the HSUS and HSLF and other leading animal, veterinary and horse industry organizations, which have united to oppose the efforts of a single animal organization that recklessly promoted a so-called “compromise” that would have codified further cruelty and victimization of walking horses.

As for the slaughter of horses to eat them, more than 80% of Americans reject the practice. But the export of horses to other countries for slaughter continues, and the foreign slaughter industry would welcome the opportunity to restart operations in the United States. Passage of the Save America's Forgotten Equines (SAFE) Act, H.R. 3355, would produce a permanent ban on domestic slaughter of horses for food and prohibit their shipment abroad for that purpose.

Their focus on equine protection is not the only thing the two measures have in common. Both enjoy the strong support of a bipartisan majority in the House of Representatives. The SAFE Act currently has 218 sponsors, while the PAST Act has 258 and already won House approval by a vote of 333-96 in 2019. This represents an historic opportunity to pass humane legislation for which there is clear and substantial support.

The vote today of the Fiscal Year 2023 Agriculture, Rural Development, Food and Drug Administration, and Related Agencies Appropriations Bill in the House Committee on Appropriations could also prove decisive regarding horse slaughter. The bill contains a permanent defunding of inspections of domestic horse slaughter plants, which would prevent them from ever reopening on U.S. soil. Through the efforts of the HSUS, HSLF and allied organizations, there has been a de facto ban on funding for most of the past 17 years, but that requires an annual lobbying effort. A permanent prohibition on allocation of taxpayer dollars for inspections would signal the definitive end of horse slaughter for food on American soil. The bill also contains more than $4 million (a $1 million boost from last year) for USDA enforcement of the Horse Protection Act and provisions encouraging the agency to strengthen its enforcement against soring.

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Star-Studded Lineup In Place For July 9 Real Rider Cup In Lexington

The Real Rider Cup, a charity show jumping event created by Anita Motion to benefit Thoroughbred aftercare, is bringing the racing and equestrian worlds together in Lexington, Kentucky just ahead of Fasig-Tipton's July Sale. The Kentucky leg of this fundraiser takes place on July 9 at New Vocation Racehorse Adoption Program at Mereworth Farm, and a star-studded lineup of personalities and horses has already pledged its support!

Fans of Zenyatta will be thrilled to see her first offspring Cozmic One making an appearance with Real Rider Cup veteran Sergio de Sousa. Exercise rider Kristin VanMeter will be competing with Discovery Stakes (G3) winner Sticksstatelydude. Veteran rider Jordan Sigmon, foreman for Rodolphe Brisset, returns with a new partner Lanse Mitan; Jocelyn Brooks also returns to ride in the silks of her employer Airdrie Stud with her Perpetual Optimism.

1/ST Racing is furnishing an entire team coming in from the West Coast, consisting of Jodie Vella-Gregory, Manager of Innovation; Aaron Gryder, Vice President, Industry Relations and former jockey; and Dr. Dionne Benson, Chief Veterinary Officer.

It's not just competitors representing the best of the racing industry, either: known as “the voice of Fasig-Tipton,” Terence Collier will announce the Kentucky Real Rider Cup event.

There's still time to get involved: the Real Rider Cup is welcoming riders who still want to participate in the July 9 event, with fundraising open through the Maryland leg in mid-September. Title sponsorships are available for the Kentucky event as well. Donate now to show your support for your favorite rider or team and benefit Thoroughbred aftercare, and come out to the event in person to cheer everyone on: get started now at therealridercup.com.

All proceeds benefit the Retired Racehorse Project, New Vocations Thoroughbred Adoption and the Fair Hill Thoroughbred Show.

Fair Hill Thoroughbred Show is a 501c3 organization supporting riders of Thoroughbreds by providing affordable show fees, scholarships, stakes classes and prizes in every division. By supporting their riders, we are helping more OTTBs find second careers.

The Retired Racehorse Project (RRP) is a 501(c)3 charitable organization working to increase demand for off-track Thoroughbreds in the equestrian world. In addition to producing the Thoroughbred Makeover and National Symposium the world's largest and most lucrative retraining competition for recently-retired racehorses, the organization also publishes Off-Track Thoroughbred Magazine, produces the Master Class retraining clinic series, and presents programming at major horse expos and events around the country. The RRP maintains an educational library of content to empower more equestrians to ride a Thoroughbred.

Founded in 1992, New Vocations has grown into the largest racehorse adoption program in the country. Its mission to rehabilitate, retrain and rehome retired Thoroughbred and Standardbred racehorse has led to the placement of over 7,000 individuals, with 500 retirees entering the program each year. With facilities in Kentucky, Louisiana, New York, Ohio and Pennsylvania, New Vocations serves over 40 racetracks, working directly with owners and trainers in need of aftercare options.

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Welfare And Safety Of The Racehorse Summit Focuses On Impact Of Data

Returning to an in-person format for the first time since 2018, the 10th Welfare and Safety of the Racehorse Summit, held Wednesday in the Keeneland sales pavilion in Lexington, Ky., featured a range of presentations on the progress of the racing industry to promote the health of its equine and human athletes while focusing on the significance of data in facilitating these gains.

The summit was co-hosted by The Jockey Club and Grayson-Jockey Club Research Foundation and open to the public. It was emceed by Annise Montplaisir, equine education coordinator of the Kentucky Equine Education Project Foundation and president of Amplify Horse Racing.

A video replay of the summit, which was livestreamed, will be posted on the Grayson website next week.

“The information shared at this year's Welfare and Safety of the Racehorse Summit demonstrates how the Thoroughbred industry can come together to make meaningful positive changes,” said Jamie Haydon, president of Grayson. “It is clear that collecting and utilizing comprehensive data is key to maximizing the safety of our human and equine athletes. We are thankful to Keeneland for enabling us to host this event and to our speakers for sharing their wealth of knowledge for the benefit of our industry.”

Dr. Tim Parkin, head of Bristol Veterinary School, kicked off presentations with an update on the Equine Injury Database (EID). He reviewed findings from the database since it began collecting data in 2009, including a 31.5% drop in the rate of fatalities. He discussed the spike in 2-year-old fatalities in 2020, hypothesizing that this trend may have been caused by disruptions in training at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Parkin also compared changes in risk for horses who compete on multiple surfaces versus those who race on one surface. Furthermore, he pointed out that sudden deaths have become a larger proportion of all fatalities since the advent of the EID as the decreasing rate of musculoskeletal injuries has outpaced the decline in sudden death rates.

Building off of the information in Parkin's presentation, Dr. Larry Bramlage of Rood & Riddle Equine Hospital presented on the importance of training 2-year-olds. According to Bramlage, bones are dynamic organs that strengthen and remodel in response to exercise.

“Bone trains to the level of work, not the amount. The cardiovascular system trains to the amount of work,” Bramlage said. “The limiting system is always the skeleton in the horse.”

Given this knowledge and the aforementioned spike in 2-year-old fatalities in 2020, Bramlage believes that 2-year-olds racing that year may have been kept in a holding pattern in terms of intense training due to the uncertainty of race dates. Consequently, the development of their cardiovascular systems outpaced their skeletal systems.

Dr. Dionne Benson, chief veterinary officer of 1/ST Racing, talked about the changes implemented at 1/ST tracks following the highly publicized rash of breakdowns at Santa Anita Park in 2019. Among the protocols are an increased veterinary presence at the tracks, stricter medication rules during racing and training, additional monitoring on race day, out-of-competition testing, and required registration of a horse before participating in a timed workout. Santa Anita recently completed the safest Winter/Spring meet on record, showing a 74% improvement since the spring of 2019.

“We have changed to a culture of safety out there,” Benson said. “There is a conscious effort to put the horse first.”

Dr. Ryan Carpenter, who is a practicing surgeon at Equine Medical Center in California, described a program whereby racehorses that suffer complex musculoskeletal injuries on the track are given the opportunity to undergo surgery to repair their fractures if there is a favorable prognosis for them to ultimately become pasture-sound.

Joseph Appelbaum, president of the New York Thoroughbred Horsemen's Association, moderated a panel on wearable technologies for horses. Valentin Rapin, managing director and co-founder of Arioneo, described his company's sensors that horses can wear during training that track metrics such as heart rate.

Will Duff Gordon, the chief executive officer of Total Performance Data (TPD), talked about his company's tracking technology and the potential benefits to gamblers. Equibase is currently working with TPD to harness this data and acknowledged the challenge of making this technology scalable.

“You're looking for a technology that is attainable, that tradeoff, can every horse produce the same information to help with the welfare and the wagering, but not such that only a few racecourses can adopt it,” said Gordon.

“The last few years have been about acquiring the data, getting onto as many racecourses as possible, having a big enough data set. The present and the future is about mining that data.”

Dr. Scott Palmer, equine medical director of the New York State Gaming Commission, reviewed findings from a case study using StrideSAFE, a device that detects abnormalities in a horse's gait and may have use in the future for detecting injuries before visible lameness develops. He sees great potential in the data from these technologies, especially with the imminent implementation of the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act (HISA), which goes into effect July 1.

“I think that the introduction of HISA is going to make a huge change. They're already requiring a lot of data, and it seems to me that right now the challenge is going to be to prioritize,” he said. “Having sensors on horses while they train and while they race is going to be important.”

In addition to serving as emcee, Montplaisir moderated a youth panel of individuals working in the Thoroughbred industry or pursuing a career in the industry. The group consisted of Hayley Amoss, manager, communications & social media, Breeders' Cup; Hallie Hardy, executive director, Horse Country; Dr. Ferrin Peterson, jockey and veterinarian; Eric Resendiz, student at Bluegrass Community & Technical College and former Amplify Horse Racing mentee; and Deja Robinson, pre-vet student.

There was shared sentiment among the youth panel that participants in the Thoroughbred industry must take the time to educate those who are unfamiliar with the industry so that they develop a positive impression. They highlighted the impact of connecting with people on a personal level, either in person or through social media.

“People want a response that shows empathy,” said Amoss.

The summit included a regulatory panel that was moderated by Dr. Mary Scollay-Ward, executive director and chief operating officer of the Racing Medication & Testing Consortium. Formerly the equine medical director of the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission, she was joined by Dr. Will Farmer, equine medical director, Churchill Downs Inc.; Dr. Jaclyn Bradley, Prairie Meadows; and Dr. Lynn Hovda, chief commission veterinarian, Minnesota Racing Commission. The group offered their perspectives on the experience of a regulatory veterinarian, what they've learned, and challenges in the role. All agreed on the importance of clear communication with horsemen, owners, and other veterinarians across jurisdictions.

In a continuation on the work in California, Dr. Mathieu Spriet, professor of diagnostic imaging at University of California, Davis, presented findings from the use of positron emission tomography (PET) to evaluate fetlocks. In 2019, California installed a standing PET machine that can scan all four limbs in under 20 minutes without the use of anesthesia. The data demonstrated the efficacy of this technology for monitoring horses for injury and tracking healing.

Dr. Jerry Hill, chief medical adviser for the British Horseracing Authority (BHA), detailed a strategy by the BHA to improve the physical and mental wellbeing of jockeys by raising weights, prioritizing nutrition, and revamping areas at the racetracks that are dedicated to riders on race day.

Dr. Wayne McIlwraith, founding director of the Orthopaedic Research Center at Colorado State University, talked about the history of surface testing and the Racing Surfaces Testing Laboratory. Key factors in a safe racetrack are consistency, proper moisture content, and temperature. With HISA set to go into effect next month, racetracks will be required to have data protocols and standardized testing methods in place.

The summit concluded with presentations from Chris Dobbins, senior vice president of InCompass, and Dr. Stuart Brown, vice president of equine safety at Keeneland. Dobbins summarized the programs that InCompass offers to tracks to assist them in collecting and organizing data that is used to promote safety and welfare, including current efforts to facilitate record keeping once HISA goes into effect. Brown reviewed Keeneland's safety protocols and how InCompass software provides Brown with important data for flagging horses that are at increased risk of injury.

The first Welfare and Safety of the Racehorse Summit was held in October 2006; subsequent summits were held in March 2008, June 2010, October 2012, July 2014, July 2015, June 2016, and June 2018. A virtual summit series was held in 2020.

Among the major accomplishments that have evolved from the previous nine summits are the Equine Injury Database; the Jockey Injury Database; the Racing Surfaces Testing Laboratory; a uniform trainer test and study guide; the racing surfaces white paper and publication of educational bulletins for track maintenance; the publication of stallion durability statistics; the Hoof: Inside and Out DVD, available in English and Spanish; protocols for horses working off of the veterinarian's list; recommended regulations that void the claim of horses suffering injuries during a race; and inclement weather protocols.

Grayson-Jockey Club Research Foundation is traditionally the nation's leading source of private funding for equine medical research that benefits all breeds of horses. Since 1983, the foundation has provided more than $32.1 million to fund 412 projects at 45 universities in North America and overseas. Additional information about the foundation is available at grayson-jockeyclub.org.

The Jockey Club, founded in 1894 and dedicated to the improvement of Thoroughbred breeding and racing, is the breed registry for North American Thoroughbreds. In fulfillment of its mission, The Jockey Club, directly or through subsidiaries, provides support and leadership on a wide range of important industry initiatives, and it serves the information and technology needs of owners, breeders, media, fans and farms. It founded America's Best Racing (americasbestracing.net), the broad-based fan development initiative for Thoroughbred racing, and in partnership with the Thoroughbred Owners and Breeders Association, operates OwnerView (ownerview.com), the ownership resource. Additional information is available at jockeyclub.com.

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