HBPA On HISA: This Court’s Job Is To Again Tell Congress ‘No’

With oral arguments tentatively scheduled for the first week in October, the National Horsemen's Benevolent and Protective Association (NHBPA) and 12 of its affiliates told the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit on Wednesday that the rewritten version of the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act (HISA) remains “patently unconstitutional,” and that the Authority overseeing the sport “is basically a private police department” whose sweeping powers equate to “oligarchic tyranny.”

As the appellants in a lawsuit that has persisted in the federal court system for more than 27 months, the HBPA plaintiffs were allowed to file the first briefing in a landmark case for the Thoroughbred industry that has been put on an expedited schedule by the Fifth Circuit.

The defendants, who are personnel from the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and the HISA Authority, have 30 days to craft a reply. They will make their filing knowing that a lower court in Texas has already ruled that an amended version of HISA is constitutionally compliant because it fixed defects that the Fifth Circuit had previously identified. The HISA law has also been upheld as constitutional in a separate lawsuit initiated by different plaintiffs that got validated on appeal to the Sixth Circuit.

In a 72-page brief filed July 5, the HBPA appellants laid out an argument based on the premise that the rewritten HISA statute that got signed into law late in 2022 still doesn't pass the constitutional sniff test.

“This Court has already struck down HISA once before,” the HBPA filing stated. “Then Congress tweaked the law in one respect, giving the FTC a modicum of additional power over the original design. Though it is understandable to desire to applaud 'a productive dialogue' between the branches, this Court's job is not to reward Congress for passing a marginally less unconstitutional law by declaring it constitutional. Laws do not get passing grades for improved effort. Nor is constitutional analysis like horseshoes or hand grenades, where close–or even just slightly closer–is good enough.”

The HBPA filing continued: “This Court's job is to again tell Congress–'No.'”

Central to the HBPA's case is the principle in administrative law that Congress cannot delegate its legislative powers to other entities. In their brief, the horsemen argue that the HISA Authority is a private entity subject to that “private nondelegation” doctrine, and that it is wrong to intentionally grant it powers that evade the safeguards of constitutional design.

“An alternative way to think about private nondelegation is not to ask about the quantity of supervision authorized, but the quality of the powers delegated. This question is not how much surveillance and authority the FTC has, but what type of power the Authority wields,” the HBPA filing stated.

“HISA is directly contrary to the historical understanding of private delegation. Ultimately the corporation is named the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority, and not Advisors or Administrators, because its purpose is not to advise the FTC or perform ministerial tasks. Its purpose is to exercise sovereign national authority [and] giving such governmental authority to a private corporation was and remains 'delegation in its most obnoxious form.'”

The HBPA filing put it this way: “The Authority establishes the programs, drafts the rules, makes policy decisions, exercises enforcement discretion, investigates individuals, seizes evidence, prosecutes industry participants, sits in judgment on them, issues sanctions, decides how much it wants to spend, and then decides how much it will take in taxes to fund that spending.

“It does all of this without appointment of its board members by the president, confirmation of those board members by the Senate, appropriation of its funds or authorization of its fees by Congress, review of its investigatory requests by a federal magistrate, or transparency to the industry and the public through accountability laws like the Freedom of Information Act, Federal Advisory Committees Act, or Government in the Sunshine Act.”

The first time the HBPA plaintiffs attempted to challenge the original 2020 version of the HISA statute in federal court, on Mar. 15, 2021, the suit was dismissed more than a year later, on March 31, 2022.

The HBPA plaintiffs then appealed, leading to a Fifth Circuit Court reversal on Nov. 18, 2022, that remanded the case back to the lower court. In the interim, an amended version of HISA got signed into law on Dec. 29, 2022.

On May 4, 2023, the lower court deemed that the new version of HISA was constitutional. The HBPA plaintiffs swiftly filed another appeal back to the Fifth Circuit, which is where the case stands now.

The HBPA filing stated that, “this Court should approach the amended statute with a clean slate and hold it up to the high bar set for a delegation of government power to a private actor, as enunciated in its prior opinion. If this Court does so, it will see that the act again fails. Even as amended, the statute does not give the FTC pervasive surveillance and control over the HISA Authority.”

At a different point in the filing, the HBPA took umbrage with HISA's funding mechanisms.

“The powers to set taxes and spend tax funds are legislative powers. The Authority has the power to tax–it is empowered by HISA to set a mandatory assessment that either states pay, or if states decline to pay, then covered persons must pay directly. This is a tax….These funds are not voluntary or charitable contributions from covered persons and states–these are mandatory, obligatory fees levied by law. Failure to pay them can result in fines and suspension from racing. Once these funds are collected, HISA allows the Authority to spend them without any FTC oversight.”

Enforcement is also constitutionally problematic for the HBPA.

“The Authority has the power to search and inspect 'offices, racetrack facilities, other places of business, books, records, and personal property of covered persons that are used in the care, treatment, training, and racing of covered horses,' to issue subpoenas, to compel truthful and complete answers to inquiries, to undertake urine and blood tests without advance notice, and to exercise 'other investigatory powers of the nature and scope exercised by State racing commissions,' which the Authority has apparently defined to include the power to seize evidence….

“By contrast,” the filing continued, “if the FTC wanted to conduct a search or seize evidence, it would need a warrant from a magistrate. For the Authority to conduct a search or seize evidence, it doesn't even have to let the FTC know, little less secure the advance approval of a federal magistrate. This is an unconstitutional mutation of executive power. The Authority also has the power to hold administrative hearings, weigh evidence, decide guilt, and issue sanctions. These are also executive powers…

“As a result, under the terms of the statute, horsemen are investigated and subpoenaed and their property is seized with zero pre-clearance from a federal official, little less an independent magistrate,” the filing stated.

The HISA and FTC defendants now have the opportunity to file their own brief with the Fifth Circuit Court by Aug. 4.

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Texas Judge Says No to ADMC Injunction

The Texas judge handling the National Horsemen's Benevolent and Protective Association (NHBPA) constitutionality lawsuit that is trying to halt the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act (HISA) on Wednesday refused to grant an injunction that would delay the May 22 implementation of the Anti-Doping and Medication Control (ADMC) program.

In issuing his order, United States District Court Judge James Wesley Hendrix of the Northern District of Texas (Lubbock Division) pointed out that it is the second time in two weeks that he has informed the plaintiffs in a court order that they have not established a likelihood of success on the merits of their case.

The judge also stated in the May 17 order that the horsemen “misunderstand” the legal standards that apply to the granting of an injunction in this particular instance.

“The Court denies the motion for an injunction pending appeal,” Hendrix wrote. “As detailed in its 55-page Memorandum Opinion and Order [issued May 4], the plaintiffs have not established a likelihood of success on the merits. And even if their proposed standard applied, they have not made a substantial case on the merits given the congressional amendment in response to the Fifth Circuit's opinion…

“Because the plaintiffs have not established a right to an injunction pending appeal under either the correct standard or their preferred standard, the Court denies the motion,” Hendrix wrote.

“The plaintiffs misunderstand the correct standard for a district court considering a motion for injunction pending appeal,” Hendrix continued, adding at a later point, “The 'substantial case on the merits' standard does not apply to injunctions pending appeal.”

The planned appeal to the Fifth Circuit is the latest wrinkle in a lawsuit that has lingered in the courts for over two years.

On Mar. 15, 2021, the NHBPA and 12 of its affiliates sued personnel from the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and the HISA Authority, seeking to keep HISA from being implemented. Judge Hendrix dismissed that suit on Mar. 31, 2022.

The NHBPA plaintiffs appealed, leading to a Fifth Circuit Court reversal on Nov. 18, 2022 that remanded the case back to Hendrix's court. In the interim, an amended version of HISA got signed into law on Dec. 29, 2022. That fix was designed to make HISA compliant with the constitutional defects the Fifth Circuit had identified.

On May 4, 2023, Hendrix validated the newer version of HISA as constitutional. One day later, the NHBPA informed him it is planning another appeal back to the Fifth Circuit, and it wanted the ADMC's rollout stopped while that process played out.

On May 8, Hendrix wrote that, “The Court previously denied injunctive relief, but the plaintiffs again request an injunction, arguing that they will be injured by the ADMC rule during the pendency of an expected appeal.”

Nine days later, on May 17, Hendrix handed down his decision denying that motion, noting that “the Court is not persuaded by these passing references to [cases that the NHBPA cited as precedents], especially when the plaintiffs have not identified any case in which a district court granted an injunction pending appeal after denying a motion for preliminary injunction (much less following a consolidated bench trial).”

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HISA, FTC Link Grim Headlines to HBPA’s Desire for ‘Status Quo’

In two separate court filings Thursday, the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act (HISA) Authority and the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) both sharply criticized the National Horsemen's Benevolent and Protective Association (NHBPA)'s decision to seek an injunction that would delay the May 22 implementation of the Anti-Doping and Medication Control (ADMC) program.

What stood out was that neither the HISA Authority nor the FTC shied from trying to link the NHBPA's desire to maintain the “status quo” to the grim headlines that have dominated the sport over the past week.

“Seven horses died in the lead up to last weekend's [GI] Kentucky Derby,” the FTC's opening line in the May 11 filing stated. “Reporters, not mincing words, observed that the accidents 'overwhelmed' the [D]erby with 'the stench of death.' Congress passed HISA in 2020 to protect horses and prevent these kinds of tragedies, but the Horsemen Plaintiffs have repeatedly challenged the statute and the FTC's implementing rules.”

Drawing similarly from recent adverse events, the HISA Authority's response referenced a May 9 New York Times story that broke the news of Forte's failed New York State Gaming Commission drug test that ran under the sub-headline, “Horse racing is again caught up in a controversy.”

The HISA Authority alleged that, “Plaintiffs' request for 'state regulation' to forestall the federal regulatory scheme Congress mandated would plunge the industry back into the 'existential crisis' of inconsistent regulation [and] recent headlines provide fresh reminders…”

United States District Court Judge James Wesley Hendrix of the Northern District of Texas (Lubbock Division) will now have to weigh those assertions against those filed by the NHBPA in its May 5 request for the ADMC injunction.

The lawsuit initiated by the HBPA to try and derail HISA on alleged anti-constitutionality grounds is now past the two-year mark. The thrice-delayed ADMC is on target to begin in 10 days.

On Mar. 15, 2021, the NHBPA and 12 of its affiliates sued the FTC and HISA Authority personnel, seeking to permanently enjoin the defendants from implementing HISA, bringing claims under the private-nondelegation doctrine, public nondelegation doctrine, Appointments Clause, and the Due Process Clause.

Judge Hendrix dismissed that suit on Mar. 31, 2022. But the NHBPA plaintiffs appealed, leading to a Fifth Circuit Court reversal on Nov. 18, 2022, that remanded the case back to the Lubbock Division. In the interim, an amended version of HISA was signed into law Dec. 29, 2022. That fix was designed to make HISA compliant with the constitutional defects the Fifth Circuit had identified.

On May 6, 2023, Hendrix validated the newer version of HISA as constitutional. Now the NHBPA is planning another appeal back to the Fifth Circuit, and it wants the ADMC's rollout stopped while that process plays out.

The May 5 filing by the NHBPA explained the reasoning behind its request:

“An injunction is necessary because the industry cannot endure 'seismic change' in the short term that is undone shortly thereafter. The courts should not put the industry on a roller-coaster where the ADMC rules are in effect from May 22 to [some future date when] they go out of effect again if the Fifth Circuit finds the amended law unconstitutional.”

Hendrix, in a May 8 order, told the HISA Authority and the FTC that they had to reply to the NHBPA's motion for an injunction within 72 hours, signaling that he did not plan to let this decision linger.

“Plaintiffs are neither entitled to that relief nor to any other remedy,” the FTC's May 11 filing stated. “And the equities–both equine and otherwise–point decidedly against Plaintiffs.”

The FTC alleged that it “makes no difference that Plaintiffs previously prevailed on their nondelegation challenge before Congress amended HISA. And they do not argue about their chance of success on any of their other theories…. Because Plaintiffs stand almost no chance of success, their motion for a stay should be denied on that basis alone.”

The HISA Authority's filing put it this way: “Congress, the Executive, and both federal courts [have] come to the same correct conclusion: the Act is now constitutional. The HBPA Plaintiffs nevertheless ask for the extraordinary relief of an emergency nationwide injunction pending appeal…

“While Plaintiffs' speculation about irreparable harm from the ADMC rules is at best conflicted, an injunction of the ADMC rules would inflict certain injury on Defendants and the public interest,” the HISA Authority's filing stated.

“These final two factors weigh heavily against halting a federal regulatory scheme that has long been planned and that enjoyed substantial compliance in its brief initial rollout…”

“Because Plaintiffs have not shown that their appeal has substantial merit (let alone a likelihood of success) and have not demonstrated that the balance of equities tilts in their favor at all (let alone heavily), the Court should deny Plaintiffs' motion for an injunction pending appeal,” the HISA Authority's filing stated.

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NHBPA Again Goes to Court to Try and Halt May 22 ADMC Launch

With another appeal in the pipeline for its constitutionality lawsuit that is trying to derail the  Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act (HISA), the National Horsemen's Benevolent and Protective Association (NHBPA) has once again asked a federal judge in Texas to grant in injunction that would delay the May 22 implementation of the HISA Authority's Anti-Doping and Medication Control (ADMC) program.

The motion for injunction pending appeal was filed on Friday, one day after United States District Court Judge James Wesley Hendrix ruled that the revamped version of HISA that got signed into law back in December was indeed constitutional, clearing the way for the ADMC's thrice-delayed launch.

On Monday, May 8, Hendrix sped along the litigation process by ordering the defendants in the case, who are personnel from the HISA Authority and the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), to file a response to the NHBPA's injunction request by Thursday, May 11.

“The Court previously denied injunctive relief, but the plaintiffs again request an injunction, arguing that they will be injured by the ADMC rule during the pendency of an expected appeal,” Hendrix wrote.

The May 5 filing by the NHBPA explained the reasoning behind the request this way:

“An injunction is necessary because the industry cannot endure 'seismic change' in the short term that is undone shortly thereafter. The courts should not put the industry on a roller-coaster where the ADMC rules are in effect from May 22 to, say, Nov. 18 (the date of the last Fifth Circuit decision), and then they go out of effect again if the Fifth Circuit finds the amended law unconstitutional.”

The NHBPA filing continued:

“This Court has now considered the case a second time, and again the Court has upheld the act. Though the Court ultimately concluded the Horsemen did not present a winning case, it should conclude that at minimum they presented a substantial case, which is less than successful, but more than non-negligible.

“[The NHBPA] won at the Fifth Circuit last time around, with arguments the Sixth Circuit panel would have also adopted as to the original version [of the HISA law]. They have returned to this Court with a serious case as to the amended version of the statute. Though they did not win, they have at least established a 'fair prospect' or reasonable possibility of success on appeal…”

“Moreover, the Horsemen have presented additional arguments concerning the budget and the original meaning which also plausibly demonstrate that the FTC does not have pervasive surveillance and control over the Authority,” the May 5 filing stated.

Hendrix was the same judge who, back on March 31, 2022, dismissed the NHBPA's underlying lawsuit. The NHBPA plaintiffs appealed that decision, leading to the Fifth Circuit's reversal on Nov. 18, 2022. But the Fifth Circuit remanded the case back to the Lubbock Division for “further proceedings consistent with” the Appeals Court's reversal. Hendrix's May 6, 2023, order validated the newer version of HISA that got amended and passed into law back on Dec. 29, 2022.

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