108-1 Winner of G3 Turf Monster Tests Positive For Levamisole

Hollywood Talent, the 10-year-old gelding who posted a 108-1 shocker in the Grade 3, $300,000 Turf Monster Stakes at Parx Racing on the Pennsylvania Derby undercard in Bensalem, Pa., on Sept. 25, has tested positive for levamisole, the Pennsylvania State Horse Racing Commission has confirmed. Hollywood Talent is trained by Juan Vazquez and owned by King Star LLC.

Levamisole, a Class 2 drug with Category B penalties under the Association of Racing Commissioners International guidelines, is found in commercial dewormers for cattle, pigs and sheep and can be used as an immunostimulant in horses or for treatment of Equine Protozoal Myelitis. The drug can metabolize to aminorex, a potent stimulant.

A split sample has yet to be tested. If the drug's presence is confirmed in the split sample, stewards will conduct a hearing on the matter to consider sanctions against the horse and his trainer.

Graded stakes placed at age 2 and third in the 2019 Turf Monster, Hollywood Talent, came into the five-furlong Turf Monster with 11 wins from 51 lifetime starts. He was claimed for $8,000 in September 2020 out of what was his most recent victory. The Pennsylvania-bred Talent Search gelding was transferred to the barn of Vazquez a few months later and posted a second- and third-place finish from five starts. Far back early under Ricardo Santana Jr., Hollywood Talent rallied late to win the Turf Monster by 1 1/4 lengths over California invader Beer Can Man, paying $219.20 on a $2 mutuel.

While any subsequent disqualification would not affect the pari-mutuel payoffs, the owners of Beer Can Man – Little Red Feather Racing and Sterling Stables – would stand to gain an additional $112,000 in purse money should their 3-year-old Can the Man colt be elevated to first place. The Turf Monster was not a Breeders' Cup Win and You're In Breeders' Cup Challenge Series race, but Beer Can Man's connections have indicated the Mark Glatt trainee will be pre-entered in the G1 Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint Nov. 6 at Del Mar, where he won the G3 Cecil B. DeMille Stakes last November.

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Broberg: Possible ‘Career Ender’ Turned Out To Be False Positives From LSU Laboratory

Leading North American trainer Karl Broberg is calling for a change in the testing laboratory in Louisiana after learning that split samples from a horse in his barn that originally tested positive for three drugs – including a Class 1 that he said would have been a “career ender” for him – all came back negative.

Broberg, ranked first or second in North American wins each year since 2013, was notified by stewards at Delta Downs in late December that Tiz One Fee, a 7-year-old Louisiana-bred mare who was one of four winners he saddled on opening night at the Vinton, La., track on Nov. 24, tested positive for the Class 1 drug oxycodone, Class 2 drug levamisole and Class 2 drug citalopram. The classifications are defined by the Association of Racing Commissioners International, with Class 1 being the most severe drug category in racing.

The Equine Medication Surveillance Laboratory at the Louisiana State University School of Veterinary Medicine reported 0.143 ng/ml of oxycodone in plasma, 0.515 ng/ml of citalopram in plasma and 0.148 ng/ml of levamisole in plasma. Oxycodone is an opioid pain reliever, citalopram is used as an anti-depressant and levamisole is used as a dewormer in livestock and as an immunostimulant.

Notified on Dec. 28, Broberg sent a check for $3,750 on Jan.  12 to the testing laboratory at the Kenneth L. Maddy Equine Analytical Chemistry Laboratory at the University of California at Davis to have the split samples tested for confirmatory purposes.

On Monday, Broberg said, the Louisiana State Racing Commission notified him all three tests from the Maddy Lab came back negative.

“They were false positives,” Broberg said. “That horse was in my barn for a couple of months and I knew there was no way.”

Broberg said stewards did not conduct a barn search before or after stewards told him Tiz One Fee had tested positive for three different drugs at the state's official lab at LSU.

“That's the most ludicrous part of the whole thing,” he said. “If someone is with a Class 1, 2 or 3, they're searching that barn prior to the trainer being notified. That never happened.”

In addition to being out the $3,750 for the split sample, Broberg said the false positives cost him an opportunity to run Tiz One Fee in the $50,000 Premier Lady Starter Stakes at Delta Downs on Feb. 10. “She would have been 2-5 in that spot,” Broberg said. “I haven't been able to run that horse since they said she tested positive. I begged and pleaded and offered to send off hair samples (for testing) on this horse and said, 'You can not be this punitive.'”

Tiz One Fee did run once after the Nov. 24 race but before the original test came back positive.

“There's no way they can keep whatever contract they have with that laboratory,” Broberg said. “I know another trainer has a positive for one of the drugs, because he called me saying 'What is this? I heard you're dealing with some craziness.'”

The LSU laboratory is ISO 17025 accredited for technical competence but has never applied for accreditation with the Racing Medication and Testing Consortium. The lab at UC Davis is fully accredited with the RMTC.

Broberg, leading trainer by North American wins from 2014-'19 and with 3,883 career wins from 15,911 starts since 2009, said he has never been suspended for any medication violation. His record at www.thoroughbredrulings.com does show a number of medication violations that resulted in fines, the most recent for the Class 4 drug dextromethorphan in July 2019 in Louisiana. Broberg maintains stables in multiple states and said this case had potentially devastating consequences.

“Two months with no sleep,” he said. “This could have been a career ender. Shit like this needs to be brought to light.”

Broberg said he is considering taking legal action. “A hundred percent. I'd be foolish not to,” he said.

Officials at the Louisiana State Racing Commission could not be reached for comment.

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Sharp To Appeal Kentucky Levamisole Rulings

Days after the publication of stewards' rulings for five levamisole positives, counsel for trainer Joe Sharp says Sharp will be appealing those rulings. Attorney Clark Brewster told the Paulick Report Wednesday that the stewards erred when they wrote a series of decisions declaring the drug to be a Class B substance according to Kentucky's regulations.

“I found it to be extraordinarily unfair and damaging to Joe,” Brewster said. “It's just the intransigence of the stewards not having the courage to recognize the truth and to say, 'Ok, we're sorry about that. Let's get it right.'”

Levamisole is approved by the FDA for use in cattle, sheep, and goats as a dewormer. Brewster said Sharp had been advised to use it as a dewormer for his stable as part of an effort to switch between different anti-parasitic products. He purchased the product over the counter at Tractor Supply.

Managers and trainers have been advised for years not to use the same deworming products too frequently because there is a growing drug resistance among the most common parasites impacting horses. Most veterinarians have discouraged dewormer use according to schedule and instead suggest deworming based on fecal egg counts. The levamisole product used by Sharp came in a powder form and was mixed with water and given orally. Brewster said Sharp preferred this administration because he felt his horses got more complete doses of the drug than from traditional paste dewormers.

Sharp was hit with the levamisole positives in Kentucky around the same time he encountered issues with it in Louisiana, where eight horses were disqualified for post-race positives for the substance between Dec. 1 and Dec. 28, 2019. Sharp was later fined $1,000 for each violation there but was not issued a suspension. Louisiana regulates medication based on guidelines from the Association of Racing Commissioners International, which considers levamisole a Class 2 drug with a B penalty class. ARCI's schematic requires a minimum 15-day suspension and $500 fine for the first violation in the B penalty class.

Kentucky stewards ruled earlier this week to issue a $500 fine for each Kentucky positive and a 30-day suspension to be served concurrent for all five violations. The ruling cited mitigating circumstances, pointing out that he hadn't been notified of the first positive when the subsequent ones occurred.

Kentucky does not follow ARCI's classification guidance for medications and penalties, although there are many similarities between the two.

An important difference to Brewster is the history of changes of levamisole's classification. At one point, the drug was considered a Class A drug (the most serious category) and was later made a Class B. Then, in 2015, commissioners for the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission unanimously agreed to remove levamisole from the drug classification scheme altogether after they detangled the association between levamisole and another drug called aminorex. Aminorex is a stimulant which has the potential for performance enhancement and was the primary substance of concern, they concluded. Initially it had been unclear whether one was a sign that the other had been administered, but Brewster said it's now generally accepted that levamisole can metabolize into aminorex, but not the other way around.

(Read more about the challenges of regulating levamisole and aminorex in this 2018 feature.)

There is a provision in Kentucky's regulations allowing for some flexibility beyond the drug classification chart that's in the states regulations. If a substance comes up in a post-race test that isn't rated on the drug schedule — particularly a new designer drug — the commission can establish an appropriate classification after consulting with ARCI or the Racing Medication and Testing Consortium and call the positive.

But Brewster said this provision shouldn't allow the commission to declassify a drug, only to have stewards call it by its old classification and penalty years later.

“What about Panacur or ivermectin? The horsemen rely on the commission to tell them what they can and can't use. Why couldn't this man rely on what the commission tells him?” said Brewster. “I certainly believe if there's cheating going on or something to gain an advantage or mask pain when a horse shouldn't be running, let's get the classification schedule right, let's take action and police the sport in the most rigorous and fair way possible. This is a situation where somebody's made a terrible mistake and it's really impacted the trainer and they don't have the courage to retreat and do the right thing.”

He also said he notified the stewards of all this at the time of Sharp's hearing in December 2020 and was frustrated to see the ruling state levamisole as a Class B violation anyway. He questioned whether the stewards realized the drug had been delisted five years before.

“This is truly beyond the pale of regulation,” he said. “[The positives were] all over the news. Joe couldn't get stalls at Fair Grounds for a while. People pulled their horses, including one that ran in the Kentucky Derby (Art Collector). He was completely pilloried in the press, all on the basis that the stewards just didn't read the list.”

If the commission wanted to add levamisole back onto the drug classification schedule, Brewster believes the regulatory body should have gone through the usual rule-making process to do so.

“If that's the case, wouldn't we have an opportunity to say why it shouldn't be listed?” he said. “Wouldn't it be listed at a public hearing in the same fashion where it was delisted? But they just quietly wouldn't respond.”

The Kentucky Horse Racing Commission declined comment on Brewster's arguments, citing a policy of not commenting on active cases.

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Joe Sharp Handed 30-Day Suspension, Will Appeal

Trainer Joe Sharp has been hit with a 30-day suspension and fined $2,500 by the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission (KHRC) after five horses he trained tested positive for the medication levamisole during a 16-day period at Churchill Downs in November, 2019.

Sharp has said that the levamisole was found in an over-the-counter dewormer he purchased and used to treat his horses. He said he consulted with veterinarians before using the product and was told that it complied with pertinent racing and medication regulations.

In addition to the Kentucky positives, eight Sharp-trained horses tested positive at the Fair Grounds around the same time. For the Louisiana violations, Sharp was not suspended, but did have to pay a $1,000 fine for each horse.

The Kentucky commission could have suspended Sharp 150 days, or 30 days for each positive, but decided not to do so because Sharp was not notified of the initial positive before the others occurred.

Sharp's suspension is scheduled to run from Feb. 12 through Mar. 13. However, his attorney, Clark Brewster said that an appeal will be filed and he expects to get a stay of the suspension before Feb. 12.

According to the Association of Racing Commissioners International (ARCI) website, levamisole is a Class 2 drug and carries a B penalty. With Class B medication violations, the minimum penalty suggested by the ACRI is a 15-day suspension and a $500 fine for the first violation.

Brewster's defense will rest on his contention that levamisole itself is not a banned substance in Kentucky. Brewster said that levamisole is only prohibited when it metabolizes into a more serious drug, aminorex, which, he said, did not happen in the case of Sharp's horses. Aminorex is a stimulant and, under ARCI classifications is a Class 1 drug.

Brewster also cited a 2015 cause in which the KHRC suspended trainer Daniel Werre for a full year after a levamisole positive. The suspension was reversed by the Franklin Circuit Court, which cited its finding that the KHRC had improperly classified the drug at the time. Werre was eventually given a seven-day suspension.

“The stewards sent out this notice saying [levamisole] is a class B drug,” Brewster said. “Not only is it not a class B, it's not listed at all. They held a hearing where I strongly urged them to dismiss this and they got real quiet. Then they returned a suspension of 30 days and fines. It was truly astonishing, We expect public servants to apply the law based on what is set forth.

Brewster continued, “He was initially denied stalls at the Fair Grounds and owners pulled horses from him. That's all because the stewards issued a notice of positives on him and didn't even understand what was and was not on their list. Once they took that course, they weren't courageous enough to look back and make the right call.”

The five Sharp-trained horses who tested positive in Kentucky are Street Dazzle (Street Sense), Blackberry Wine (Oxbow), Chitto (Into Mischief), Zero Gravity (Orb) and Art Collector (Bernardini). All five have been disqualified. Blackberry Wine and Art Collector won the races in questions, Art Collector was later taken away from Sharp and turned over to Tom Drury. He went on to win the GII Blue Grass S. and the Ellis Park Derby.

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