Justify, Hoppertunity Case Will Be Heard Before Stewards

The connections of Justify and Hoppertunity were unsuccessful in their attempt to obtain a temporary restraining order to stop the California Board of Stewards from holding a hearing regarding the disqualifications of those horses due to scopolamine positives in 2018, and the hearing will go forward as planned, according to a press release from Darrell Vienna, the attorney representing Mick Ruis.

Trainer Bob Baffert, and the owners and two jockeys who rode the undefeated 2018 Triple Crown winner Justify and the MGISW Hoppertunity, had filed a legal petition against the California Horse Racing Board (CHRB) Oct. 13, alleging that the CHRB’s recent decision to reopen hearings on two scopolamine positives from those horses in 2018 amounts to “arbitrary, capricious, and unlawful conduct” that purportedly targets Baffert and his clients unfairly while supposedly damaging the horses’ reputations as stallions.

“The Honorable James C. Chalfant denied the ex parte application of the Justify and Hoppertunity interests clearing the way for a hearing before the Board of Stewards on the potential disqualification of both horses,” read the press release from Vienna. “The court found that there was no legal basis stated in the moving papers which warranted stopping the Stewards’ hearing.”

Ruis is the owner and trainer of Bolt d’Oro, the runner-up in the 2018 Santa Anita Derby behind Justify. Ruis has sued the CHRB alleging that the initial dismissal of all seven cases of scopolamine positives led Ruis to suffer the loss of purse money when Justify was not disqualified and the purse was not redistributed.

Hoppertunity, also trained by Baffert, had a positive scopolamine test after the 2018 GIII Tokyo City Cup S at Santa Anita, two of seven such positives at the time that were dismissed as environmental contamination.

The petition, filed Tuesday in Los Angeles County Superior Court, sought a judgment, injunction, and “peremptory writ of mandate commanding Respondent CHRB to dismiss the Complaints filed against Petitioners and cancel all hearings on the matter.”

“We are pleased that Judge Chalfant saw through this flimsy attempt to delay or avoid a long overdue and proper treatment of the positive tests involving these two horses,” said Vienna.

 

The post Justify, Hoppertunity Case Will Be Heard Before Stewards appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Justify, Hoppertunity Connections Seek Court Block of CHRB Scopolamine Re-Hearings

Trainer Bob Baffert, plus the owners and two jockeys who rode the undefeated 2018 Triple Crown winner Justify and the MGISW Hoppertunity, filed a legal petition against the California Horse Racing Board (CHRB) Oct. 13, alleging that the CHRB’s recent decision to reopen hearings on two scopolamine positives from those horses in 2018 amounts to “arbitrary, capricious, and unlawful conduct” that purportedly targets Baffert and his clients unfairly while supposedly damaging the horses’ reputations as stallions.

The petition, filed Tuesday in Los Angeles County Superior Court, seeks a judgment, injunction, and “peremptory writ of mandate commanding Respondent CHRB to dismiss the Complaints filed against Petitioners and cancel all hearings on the matter.”

The petitioners–Baffert, WinStar Farm LLC, China Horse Club, Head of Plains Partners LLC, Starlight Racing, Michael Pegram, Karl Watson, Paul Weitman, Mike Smith, and Flavien Prat–are also going after the CHRB for unspecified monetary damages, attorney fees, and court costs, plus “other, different, or further relief as the Court may deem just and proper,” according to the 26-page court filing.

“This action challenges the CHRB’s groundless decision to reopen a closed matter and conduct a retroactive hearing with an apparently foregone conclusion to disqualify and redistribute winnings from horse races that occurred two and a half years ago. When those races [the [GI] Santa Anita Derby and [GIII] Tokyo City Cup] were run in April 2018 and two horses (Justify and Hoppertunity, respectively) were declared the winners, the CHRB decided the very issue it is seeking to revisit now,” the court documents state.

“The CHRB has no legal or factual basis for reopening its prior final decision,” the filing continues. “As the CHRB knew when it decided this issue in 2018, both Justify and Hoppertunity tested positive for scopolamine just after their respective races in April 2018. But after a thorough investigation and deliberation, consistent with the well-established equine science and its very own governing statute and rules, the CHRB correctly decided that the positive results were due to naturally occurring contamination in the horses’ feed and therefore dismissed the matter. Now, after almost two and a half years, the CHRB has issued complaints and announced it intends to hold a hearing [Oct. 29] to consider retroactively disqualifying these two horses.”

The filing contends that “The CHRB’s attempted proceedings, however, ignore a critical element: the CHRB could not have disqualified either horse in 2018 and cannot do so now because scopolamine is a classified substance that, by law, does not permit disqualification. Further, the CHRB has no authority, or basis, to reopen this closed matter. Rather, the CHRB has admitted it has issued its complaints and is holding a hearing simply to dispose of a civil action brought against it by a race runner-up, and solely as a way to avoid further litigation and expense in that lawsuit.”

According to the Oct. 13 filing, “All racing jurisdictions have rules that govern the sport and the presence of medications and substances in post-race blood and urine tests. California is no different, and the April 2018 tests were taken pursuant to those rules. Specifically, California’s classification system delineates five classes of substances [and] four categories of penalties. [The more egregious and harmful] Class 1-3 substances correspond with penalty categories A and B, while Class 4-5 substances are associated with penalty categories C and D.”

“At the time of the 2018 Santa Anita Derby, just as it is today, the CHRB’s rules designated scopolamine as a Class 4, penalty C substance. Significantly, disqualification is not an authorized penalty for Class 4, penalty C substances. Plainly stated, disqualification premised on the presence of scopolamine was not a permissible option for the CHRB in April 2018 under its own rules [nor is it an option today].”

The filing continues: “There have been numerous incidents of jimson weed contaminating bales of hay, leading to what are called ‘clusters’ of horses testing positive for scopolamine when they unknowingly ingest contaminated feed. Fortunately, there is a proven scientific method for determining whether the presence of scopolamine in a horse is due to intentional administration or is the result of innocent contamination from hay. If the horse has ingested jimsonweed, blood tests of that horse will reveal the presence of atropine. On the other hand, if scopolamine has been intentionally administered, atropine will not be present.”

“Racing commissions routinely use the presence or absence of atropine in the blood as a determinative factor in deciding whether to pursue complaints against an owner or trainer.. Equally important, the amounts of scopolamine found in the blood of Justify and Hoppertunity..were small enough that they would have no pharmacological effect in a horse.”

The filing states that, “There were five other horses who tested positive for scopolamine during this time period. All seven horses were investigated by Dr. Rick Arthur, the CHRB’s Equine Medical Director, and Rick Baedeker, the CHRB’s Executive Director. Arthur and Baedeker determined that the cluster of scopolamine positives at Santa Anita in 2018 was the result of contaminated hay. They found jimson weed in hay that had been delivered to Santa Anita and the blood and urine samples of all the horses revealed the presence of atropine. The investigation and science were conclusive: this was a case of environmental contamination that had no effect whatsoever on all seven horses tested that day, nor the outcome of their respective races. Thus, Arthur and Baedeker jointly recommended to the Board of the CHRB that all seven cases be dismissed.”

“Arthur and Baedeker’s recommendation was presented to the Board of the CHRB, which voted unanimously to dismiss all seven cases. That decision was not only proper, it was the only one the CHRB could make under its own rules..In sum, the cases for the seven horses testing positive for scopolamine in April 2018..were all thoroughly and properly investigated and were

all dismissed. The science was not only overwhelming, it ‘mandated’ such a result.”

The filing further contends that a January 2020 lawsuit initiated against the CHRB by Mick Ruis, who owned and trained the 2018 Santa Anita Derby runner-up, Bolt d’Oro, is “the only reason the CHRB has decided to reopen the formally closed decisions with respect to Justify,” because the CHRB “agreed to do so as part of a private settlement.”

In his suit, Ruis alleged that the CHRB’s August 2018 vote to dismiss the case against Justify led Ruis to suffer “the loss of purse caused by the CHRB’s failing to disqualify Justify and re-distribute the purse for the positive test result.”

The Oct. 13 filing states that, “the CHRB is only attempting to reopen its 2018 decision regarding Hoppertunity because that horse too was trained by Bob Baffert” and that, “the CHRB agreed to file the [Aug. 25, 2020] complaints against Justify and Hoppertunity solely to avoid further litigation costs associated with its legal defense in the Ruis lawsuit and to placate the race runner-up.”

The Baffert, et al, filing states that as a result of the CHRB’s unlawful conduct, the petitioners have, “suffered harm, including damage caused to Justify’s and Hoppertunity’s reputations, as award-winning Thoroughbred horses.”

But the Oct. 13 court documents do not provide specific details about the exact nature of this alleged harm.

“Unless [the CHRB] is restrained and enjoined from reopening these actions that were previously and rightfully dismissed, Petitioners’ rights will continue to be violated, as they have no plain, speedy, or adequate remedy at law; injunctive relief is the only legal means available to protect their legal rights,” the filing concludes.

The post Justify, Hoppertunity Connections Seek Court Block of CHRB Scopolamine Re-Hearings appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Connections Of Justify, Hoppertunity Seek To Prevent CHRB From Conducting Hearings Into 2018 Scopolamine Positives

The owners of Justify and Hoppertunity, along with trainer Bob Baffert and jockeys Mike Smith and Flavien Prat, have filed filed legal action in Los Angeles Superior Court to prevent the California Horse Racing Board from conducting Oct. 29 disqualification hearings into April 2018 victories by Justify in the Santa Anita Derby and Hoppertunity in the Tokyo City Cup.

The writ of mandate, filed on Oct. 13, claims Aug. 25, 2020, actions by the CHRB to reopen the cases are “void, arbitrary, capricious, unconstitutional, beyond the power of the CHRB, and a prejudicial abuse of discretion.” It alleges the CHRB has violated California Code of Regulations and Government Code as well as the due process rights of the petitioners under the U.S. Constitution.

Justify and Hoppertunity, along with five other unnamed horses, tested positive for scopolamine in 2018. According to the legal filing, the Justify and Hoppertunity cases were investigated by the CHRB's equine medical director, Dr. Rick Arthur, and then-CHRB executive director Rick Baedeker. Both determined the “cluster” of scopolamine positives at Santa Anita in 2018 resulted from hay contaminated with jimson weed, proof of which, the writ of mandate states, is that all horses also indicated the presence of atropine, which it states is a “definitive marker of environmental contamination.”

Arthur and Baedeker recommended to the CHRB members in closed-door executive session that all seven scopolamine cases be dismissed, and the board in place at the time unanimously voted to support that recommendation, according to the action filed Oct. 13. The CHRB has several new members who were not on the regulatory body  in 2018.

It wasn't until a September 2019 report in the New York Times that the positive drug tests and decision not to conduct stewards hearings were revealed. Several months later, Mick Ruis, owner of Santa Anita Derby runner-up Bolt d'Oro, filed suit against the CHRB demanding the case against Justify be reopened. Ruis stood to gain $400,000 in purse money (the difference between $600,000 for first and $200,000 for second) and other possible gains if Bolt d'Oro were declared winner of the Grade 1 race.

The Santa Anita Derby win by Justify in his stakes debut earned the Scat Daddy colt 100 qualifying points for the Kentucky Derby. He went on to win the Kentucky Derby, Preakness and Belmont Stakes, then retired to stud undefeated in six starts after being sold to Coolmore Stud for a reported $60 million.

As part of a settlement agreement with Ruis, the CHRB said it would file a complaint against the owners of Justify and conduct a purse disqualification hearing. The CHRB also filed a complaint against the owners of Hoppertunity, though not against the other five unnamed horses testing positive for scopolamine.

The owners of Justify at the time were WinStar Farm LLC, China Horse Club, Head of Plains Partners LLC and Starlight Racing. The owners of Hoppertunity were Michael Pegram, Karl Watson and Paul Weitman.

Attorneys for he petitioners contend scopolamine was – at the time of the April 2018 victories by Justify and Hoppertunity – a Class 4 drug with a C penalty classification under Association of Racing Commissioner guidelines. As such, they contend, a positive test for scopolamine would not trigger a disqualification.

They also contend the CHRB did not act in a timely manner in reopening the cases.

The legal action accuses the CHRB of violating its own rules and engaging in “unfair, arbitrary and capricious conduct. Petitioners have been intentionally treated differently from others similarly situated and there is no rational basis for he difference in treatment.”

As a result of the CHRB's actions, the writ of mandate alleges, the connections of Justify and Hoppertunity “have suffered damages, including in the form of reputational harm.”

The petitioners are seeking a writ of mandate from the court ordering the CHRB to dismiss the complaints and cancel all hearings related to Justify and Hoppertunity's positive tests. They are also seeking unspecified damages, along with attorneys' fees and court costs.

 

The post Connections Of Justify, Hoppertunity Seek To Prevent CHRB From Conducting Hearings Into 2018 Scopolamine Positives appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Preakness Favorite Authentic, A Book 3 Yearling, Was Worth The Wait

A connection formed with 2018 Triple Crown champion Justify has yielded 2020 Kentucky Derby (G1) winner and Preakness (G1) morning-line favorite Authentic.

Starlight Racing bought into partnerships that were racing Justify, Grade 1 winner Audible and this year's top older horse Improbable before subsequently purchasing yearlings with another partner, SF Bloodstock. During the first year together buying young horses, SF and Starlight picked up Authentic for $350,000 at the Keeneland 2018 September sale.

The patience that was involved with the purchase of Authentic has been rewarded. The colt, now racing for Spendthrift Farm, MyRaceHorse Stable, Starlight and Madaket Stables, has won five of six starts, earned over $2.8 million and tops the field of 11 entered in the Saturday's 145th Preakness (G1) at Pimlico Race Course. Authentic and Thousand Words, both trained by Bob Baffert, are part of a group of Preakness runners that shipped from Kentucky to Baltimore late Tuesday afternoon.

Given the name Authentic by his breeder, Peter Blum, the son of top sire Into Mischief, was not viewed as one of the potential stars of the Keeneland sale, which front-loads talent in its massive catalogue. Jack Wolf, who manages Starlight with his wife, Laurie, recalled that the bloodstock advisors during the initial year of the buying partnership spotted Authentic and were willing to wait for him to reach the ring.

“We didn't buy him until Book 3,” Wolf said. “At the time, the first group of yearlings that we bought we had Donato Lanni, Frankie Brothers, Henry Field doing the short-list work. All three of them liked the horse, especially Frankie and Donato.”

Audible was the last of the 19 colts purchased by SF/Starlight for a total of $9,315,000. Thirteen of the others cost more than Authentic. The partnership purchased its 18th yearling, Ragtime Blues, in the fifth session of the sale and had to wait three days until Authentic, Hip No. 2,616, came to the ring.

“He is typical of the type of horse that those guys look at and buy,” Wolf said. “It's the conformation, the balance. Secondly, would be the pedigree, although this horse has a wonderful pedigree. They look for athletes. Of course, all the horses go to Bob Baffert and Donato has been working with him for years. I don't think Bob was around for Book 3, but Donato knows what Bob likes.”

SF and Starlight are listed as the buyers, but Madaket, managed by Sol Kumin; Fred Hertrich; John Fielding and Golconda Stables, were aboard when Authentic broke his maiden in his debut at Del Mar last November. After he rolled to two stakes wins during the winter in California, Spendthrift Farm stepped up to buy a controlling interest in the colt. Madaket and Starlight stayed in as racing partners. Spendthrift, which owns the breeding rights, sold a piece of its stake to Myracehorse.com, the company that markets in micro shares of horses.

Authentic ended up second to Honor A.P. in the Santa Anita Derby (G1) in his first start for the Spendthrift-led partnership, then won the Haskell (G1) in July and handled Belmont Stakes (G1) winner and heavy favorite Tiz the Law in the Kentucky Derby.

The post Preakness Favorite Authentic, A Book 3 Yearling, Was Worth The Wait appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights