Kentucky Commission: Hidden Scroll Was State’s First Epistaxis Case Since 24-Hour Lasix Ban

Hidden Scroll, who pulled up after crossing the wire seventh in Saturday's Grade 3 Commonwealth Stakes, is the first case of epistaxis from exercise-induced pulmonary hemorrhage (EIPH) in Kentucky since the state implemented new furosemide administration rules in 2020. The Brad Cox trainee went off at odds of 2-1 for his first start without the race day medication, which is commonly known by its trade name of Lasix or Salix.

Kentucky began a partial phaseout of race day furosemide last year, beginning with 2-year-old races and expanding to include stakes races this year. The drug may now be given no closer than 24 hours before post time in those contests.

Dr. Bruce Howard, equine medical director for the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission, confirmed that Hidden Scroll's case of epistaxis (visible bleeding from the nostrils) due to EIPH was the first on record since the new rules were implemented. EIPH can occur without visible bleeding from the nostrils and is often detectable only on endoscopic examination; more severe incidents may result in epistaxis.

A frustrated Joe Orseno, who trains multiple graded stakes winner Imprimis, told media immediately after the horse's runner-up effort in the G2 Shakertown that he believed his horse also suffered from epistaxis due to EIPH. Orseno said he could see blood on the horse's nose at the finish, where he was just edged by Bound for Nowhere.

“You're not allowed to run on Lasix anymore,” said Orseno. “They're taking the best horses in the country and they're penalizing them. My horse bled today, visibly. Blood coming out of his nose. How is that good for the public's perception of Lasix? Somebody needs to answer that question. It's not fair to take a horse like this and make 'em bleed. It's just not fair. I wish you'd print every word of that, because it's total bullshit.

“My horse didn't have to bleed. Let him run on Lasix … I care about my horse and his physical condition.”

Orseno pointed out that a bleeding event from EIPH can knock a horse off its training schedule.

“I was supposed to run him in two months, now it's going to be four,” he said. “So I've got to tell the owners, forget the Jaipur, now maybe Saratoga, maybe not, because who knows. I don't know. You never know the damage it does to horses.”

The full interview, courtesy of the Kentucky Horsemen's Benevolent and Protective Association's Jennie Rees, is available here, following comments from Bound for Nowhere trainer Wesley Ward:

Howard said that besides Hidden Scroll, there was one other incident on Saturday's card related to blood on a horse's nose, but it wasn't a result of EIPH.

“I think the other one which might have been commented on was a horse who broke through the starting gate before the start,” said Howard. “It was examined and reloaded, and ran its race. Post-race, there was a small amount of blood noted in a nostril. The horse was examined in the test barn and a small abrasion or laceration was noted. The private veterinarian came and scoped the horse and there was no bleeding noted in the lower airways.”

Imprimis broke through the starting gate before the start of the Shakertown.

Kentucky's commission voted unanimously for the partial furosemide phaseout in December 2019 and racetracks implemented house rules preventing the administration of furosemide less than 24 hours before a race for 2-year-olds beginning in spring 2020, as a stopgap until the new rule worked its way through legislative approval and became law. The Kentucky HBPA took the tracks and commission to court over the house rules and commission regulation changes. A judge ruled in favor of the tracks and commission in November 2020.

Kentucky does keep records of epistaxis events, and is also participating in a multi-jurisdiction study to administer scopes post-race on horses subject to the 24-hour furosemide rule. The academic study, led by Washington State University, will compare scope results from jurisdictions with a variety of furosemide administration times. Data collection is ongoing and the university is not expected to release results until analysis is complete. Howard was unable to comment on the data collected from Kentucky.

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Jockey Club Responds To Suit Over Stud Book Limits, Calling It ‘A Hodgepodge Of Speculative Claims’

The Jockey Club has filed its response to a federal civil suit brought by Spendthrift, Ashford, and Three Chimneys over the impending stud book cap of 140 mares per stallion each breeding season.

The plaintiffs had alleged the rule violated antitrust laws, which The Jockey Club's response indicates is incorrect because antitrust is designed to “protect competition, not competitors” and that the rule does not harm competition.

The suit also alleged it was illegal for the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission, as a state entity, to allow The Jockey Club, as a private entity to decide what legally constituted a Thoroughbred horse. The breed organization's response points out that the Kentucky General Assembly decided in 1960 to statutorily reference The Jockey Club's standing as the breed registry, and that there is no constitutionally-protected “right to race” anyway.

Plaintiffs' hodgepodge of speculative claims lacks plausibility and suffers from Plaintiffs' fundamental misunderstanding of the facts, law, and relevant statutory regime,” read part of the response, according to a summary provided by the Thoroughbred Daily News.

The stud book cap is due to be enforced starting with stallions born in 2020.

The Jockey Club, along with two defendants associated with the commission, requested the case be dismissed.

Read more at Thoroughbred Daily News

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Kentucky Commission Veterinarian John Taormina Passes At Age 57

Dr. John Philip Taormina, D.V.M. passed away in Lexington, Ky. on Tuesday, March 16, at the age of 57.

Dr. Taormina served as a Racing Veterinarian for the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission at both Thoroughbred and Harness tracks across the state.

Prior to his tenure as a KHRC vet, Dr. Taormina was a private veterinarian specializing in equine care out of Bowling Green, Ky.

Kerr Brothers Funeral Home on Harrodsburg Rd. is handling arrangements.

We are devastated to hear about Dr. John Taormina passing away. He was such an amazing friend to all of us horsemen, he…

Posted by KentuckyHarness HorsemensAssociation on Wednesday, March 17, 2021

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Stud Farms Sue Over 140-Mare Cap, Allege ‘Blatant Abuse of Power’ by The Jockey Club

Spendthrift Farm, Ashford Stud and Three Chimneys Farm are suing The Jockey Club in federal court over the “stallion cap” rule that went into effect in 2020, alleging that the 140-mare breeding limit now being phased in amounts to a “blatant abuse of power” that acts as an “anti-competitive restraint” and threatens to disrupt the free-market nature of the bloodstock business.

The plaintiffs contend that the stallion cap “serves no legitimate purpose and has no scientific basis” while alleging that the nine stewards of The Jockey Club who voted to adopt the rule change purportedly did so based more on a desire to satisfy their own “conflicting economic interests” rather than their organization's stated purpose of “facilitating the soundness of the Thoroughbred breed.”

Two Kentucky Horse Racing Commission (KHRC) officials are also named as defendants in the complaint, which was filed Tuesday, Feb. 23, in United States District Court, Central Division, in Lexington, Kentucky.

Although KHRC chairman Jonathan Rabinowitz and KHRC executive director Marc Guilfoil were not directly involved in The Jockey Club's decision to impose the cap on matings (known as Rule 14C), the suit contends that in their official KHRC capacities, those two are responsible for overseeing how the state delegates Thoroughbred registration authority to The Jockey Club.

So by extension, the suit alleges, if The Jockey Club in the future refuses to extend registration privileges to foals produced by matings that are considered over the cap limit, the KHRC will be barring those horses from competition, thus “effectively eliminating the economic viability of any such foals.”

The suit contends that in this instance, “The Jockey Club is not fulfilling an administrative function of merely identifying and registering, for the KHRC, those horses that qualify as purebred Thoroughbred horses; instead, The Jockey Club is making its registration decisions, and rejecting actual Thoroughbred horses, based on whether its Stewards approve of the breeding decisions of the horse's owners.”

The suit also states that The Jockey Club Stewards' “have conflicting economic interests-owning and/or representing various competing racing and breeding private entities,” and that their “economic interests will be served by the Stallion Cap.”

At the time the decision was announced in May, 2020, the stewards were Barbara Banke, Michael O'Farrell Jr., Everett Dobson, C. Steven Duncker, Ian Highet, Stuart Janney, William Lear Jr., John Phillips, and Vinnie Viola.

It is not immediately clear based on the complaint why the KHRC officials were singled out for inclusion in the litigation. In fact, the suit makes a point of stating that “the effect of the new Jockey Club Rule 14C is the same outside of Kentucky, as all other racing jurisdictions in the United States condition a horse's eligibility to enter a Thoroughbred race on registration by The Jockey Club.”

The farms are seeking an unspecified amount of compensatory and punitive damages against The Jockey Club (but not the KHRC). The plaintiffs are demanding—without stating exactly why in the suit—that those amounts be tripled. However, the Clayton Antitrust Act empowers private parties injured by violations of the Act to sue for treble damages under Section 4 and injunctive relief under Section 16.

As such, the plaintiffs are asking for “an injunction requiring The Jockey Club to repeal its Rule 14C or, in the alternative, permanently prohibiting The Jockey Club from enforcing its Rule 14C and from denying registration on account of the number of mares covered by any horse's sire.”

The suit also demands “an injunction requiring the KHRC, through its Chairman and Executive Director, to permit Thoroughbreds to race in Kentucky regardless of their inclusion in The Jockey Club registry.”

The suit also wants a court declaration stating that the alleged property rights breaches by the defendants are “arbitrary and capricious and violate their due process and equal protection rights guaranteed by the Kentucky and the U.S. Constitutions…” The suit also argues that the rule violates the Sherman Antitrust Act and suppresses competition.

“As a result, the highest quality Thoroughbred horses will be bred less times than market economics would otherwise dictate,” the complaint contends. “Hundreds of millions of dollars of stud fee revenues will be impacted; all owners of mares will pay higher prices to breed their mares; and less well-connected owners of mares will be precluded entirely from access to high quality stallions.

“In addition, owners of the premiere Thoroughbred stallions and stallion prospects will potentially move or sell their horses out of Kentucky to other countries whose Thoroughbred registries do not impose any Stallion Cap,” which the suit states is “every other country in the world besides the U.S.”

A press release circulated by the group Tuesday morning charges that, “Membership of The Jockey Club is by invitation only, and the decision was made by its Board of Stewards without discussion or a vote at the Club's Annual General Meeting. The Jockey Club Stewards making the decision had clear conflicts of interest given they also represent or own various breeding and racing entities who stand to benefit now that owners of mares are being denied their first-choice stallion.”

Tuesday afternoon, The Jockey Club issued the following statement:

“In May 2020, The Jockey Club board of stewards announced that it had adopted a final rule limiting the annual breeding of individual stallions. The rule reflects The Jockey Club's goal to preserve the health of the Thoroughbred breed for the long term. The rule applies prospectively to stallions foaled in 2020 or later; it does not apply to stallions already out to stud. The Jockey Club publicly proposed a draft rule in September 2019 and received many thoughtful comments, which the stewards carefully considered in formulating a rule that will promote diversity of the Thoroughbred gene pool and protect the long-term health of the breed. Because the rule applies only to stallions born in 2020 or later, any effect on future stud fees or breeding economics is speculative. The Jockey Club stands by the rule and its purpose, which is to preserve the health of the Thoroughbred breed for the long term. The Jockey Club will continue to maintain the Principal Rules and Requirements of The American Studbook in keeping with its mission to ensure the health of the Thoroughbred breed.”

Sherelle Roberts-Pierre, a KHRC spokesperson, wrote in an email that “The KHRC is aware of this lawsuit, and our legal team looks forward to addressing these issues in the litigation process. We have no additional comment at this time, due to the KHRC's policy about not commenting on pending litigation.”

Cap Background

Citing the significant, decades-long decline in the North American foal crop and concerns “with the narrowing of the diversity of the Thoroughbred gene pool,” The Jockey Club announced on Sept. 6, 2019, that its board of stewards was considering a per-stallion breeding limit of 140 mares that would be phased in over a multi-year period.

The proposed cap was met with a hazy mixture of consternation and support within America's bloodstock community. At the time, The Jockey Club President and C.O.O. James Gagliano wrote in response to a TDN query that “We neither expect nor see a basis for a legal challenge.”

When the cap was voted in by The Jockey Club's stewards and announced as effective on May 7, 2020, the new 14C rule drew support for its attempt to broaden the stallion base and to spread the wealth, so to speak. And The Jockey Club's seemingly conciliatory grandfathering-in of existing stallions also appeared to provide a welcome degree of a time buffer by phasing in the changes.

But the cap was still criticized by some industry stakeholders for creating a two-tier system of different rules that will now apply to different stallions based on age.

And some members of the bloodstock community just plain didn't like being told how to manage their matings.

According to the new version of Rule 14C, for stallions born in 2019 and earlier, there remains no limit to the number of mares reported bred in the United States, Canada, and Puerto Rico. For stallions born in 2020 and later, the maximum number of mares covered will now be 140. To enforce compliance, The Jockey Club simply will not register any foals that are not the product of the sire's mating with the first 140 mares to which that stallion was bred in any given year.

According to The Jockey Club's Report of Mares Bred, 42 stallions bred over 140 mares in 2020.

Of that total, 16 of those 42 stood at either Spendthrift, Three Chimneys or Coolmore/Ashford.

Those 16 stallions bred a total of 1,088 mares over what will be the new cap of 140: Spendthrift (576), Coolmore (429) and Three Chimneys (83).

Nine of the top 10 highest-covering stallions stood at Spendthrift or Coolmore; 13 of the top 15 stood at the three farms bringing the suit.

It's still too early to try to put a hard-dollar prognostication on future financial implications of the stallion cap. But the farms' complaint tries to do so retroactively and makes several ballpark projections.

According to the suit, “If Rule 14C had been applied in 2019, the breedings of 43 stallions would have been restricted and over $85 million in stud fee revenues would have been impacted for that year alone. Similarly, if Rule 14C had been applied in 2020 to stallions born before 2020, the breedings and stud fee revenues would have been similarly restricted.

“Moreover, as a result of the foregoing, new Jockey Club Rule 14C has already diminished the value of the 2020 weanlings acquired by Plaintiffs, whose future productivity as stallions will be artificially limited by that Rule, and it has already diminished the value of Plaintiffs' current crop of stallions as the potential productivity of the foals they produce will be limited by that Rule,” the court filing states.

Institutional Clout vs. Private Property

The farms' suit is not shy about portraying The Jockey Club as an influence-wielding entity that is allegedly rife with factionalism.

In one instance the suit states that the organization “has also leveraged its power over the North American Thoroughbred industry by unlawfully conspiring with other registries throughout the world to expand the geographical reach of its rules.” In another section, it states, “Indeed, at least one Jockey Club Steward has publicly acknowledged that economic protectionism—rather than any interest in curtailing inbreeding among Thoroughbreds—is the real purpose behind the Rule.”

It also contends that, “The Jockey Club has leveraged the commercial power it exercises as the State sponsored registry of Thoroughbred horses into numerous other related profit-making ventures.”

But while enumerating a list of alleged conflicting business interests among The Jockey Club's stewards might make for splashy headlines, the legal meat of the case appears to rest on the contention that “Plaintiffs' interests in their Thoroughbred horses and their right to generate fees from the breeding and sale of such horses are protected property rights under the Fifth Amendment of the U.S.Constitution, as made applicable to the states by the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S.Constitution.”

As applied in Kentucky, the suit alleges that Rule 14C “does not tend to protect or preserve health or safety; instead, its sole purpose is economic protectionism; it is designed to protect the economic interests of owners of second-tier stallions who will usurp the breedings that would, under free market conditions, have otherwise gone to the first tier stallions but for the imposition of that Rule.”

“Moreover,” the suit states, the rule “violates the dormant commerce clause because it is aimed at economic protectionism and it imposes a burden on interstate commerce that is clearly excessive in relation to the putative benefits that it claims to promote. In addition, Defendants' actions in imposing and abiding by the Stallion Cap constitute an impermissible taking of Plaintiffs' property interests.”

The suit continues: “Plaintiffs had a reasonable expectation that they could continue to conduct their Thoroughbred breeding business in accordance with the recognized standards for production of Thoroughbred foals…. Defendants have offered no compensation for the loss of Plaintiffs' protected interests nor any means of seeking such compensation.”

Commenting on behalf of the plaintiffs in a prepared statement, Spendthrift Farm owner B. Wayne Hughes said: “The introduction of the Stallion Cap by The Jockey Club is a blatant abuse of power that is bad law, bad science and bad business. A handful of individuals from a private club in New York have been allowed to make a decision that will negatively impact the future of Thoroughbred racing and breeding both in Kentucky and the whole country.

“We have filed this complaint to defend the industry from anti-competitive, un-American and arbitrary decision making that is not based on scientific evidence.

“If they can limit the number to 140, what's to stop them from limiting it to 100 or 80 or any other number down the road? What if your mare isn't one of the 140? We are really concerned about the small breeder's ability to survive this.”

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