NYRA Racing Secretary Doleshel to Appeal Fine

Keith Doleshel, fined $2,000 by the New York Gaming Commission for “failing to conduct business in a professional manner,” will appeal that ruling before the commission, and has retained attorney Drew Mollica to represent him, according to Mollica.

The ruling stemmed from an incident at Saratoga in which an unauthorized agent was allowed to claim a horse this past summer. The New York State rules of racing require that an individual be licensed with the Gaming Commission and registered with The Jockey Club. After the claim, NYRA officials informed the Gaming Commission of the error, and Doleshel was fined on October 20.

The fine was one of four levied upon NYRA employees this year: Doleshel was fined $2,000 in April after a horse not fully registered as a New York-bred competed in two New York-bred races; NYRA Senior Vice President of Racing Frank Gabriel was fined $4,000 for failure to follow proper claiming protocol, and clocker Richie Gazer was fined $2,500 for reporting the half-mile time of a five-furlong workout.

“Keith Doleshel is a valued employee who conducts himself with a high degree of professionalism at all times,” said NYRA's Vice President of Communications Pat McKenna. “He has every right to appeal this decision, and NYRA continues to question the rationale for issuing significant financial penalties for alleged errors that are inadvertent and administrative or clerical in nature.”

“Anyone who knows Mr. Doleshel during his tenure at NYRA knows that he always conducts business in a professional manner,” said Mollica, “and he denies that he has not done so in this case. He has never been able to confront this charge, because he has never been told what he did wrong. As such, the scarlet letter of unprofessionalism cannot stand and we must appeal.”

“Mr. Doleshel had a competent person acting as the claims clerk,” said Mollica. “A mistake may have been made in the office or by The Jockey Club, but it had nothing to do with him acting unprofessionally.”

The post NYRA Racing Secretary Doleshel to Appeal Fine appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

NY Commission Expresses Frustration About Endless Lasix Studies

The New York State Gaming Commission (NYSGC) took a unanimous voice vote on Thursday to request an exemption from the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act Authority (HISA) that will allow the continued use of Lasix in races other than those for 2-year-olds and in stakes.

Asking for the exemption also opts states into a three-year study that will be conducted by HISA that is designed to shape future federal Lasix policies, possibly as early as 2026.

The vote itself was hardly a surprise. Not applying for the exemption would have banned Lasix usage outright in all New York Thoroughbred races starting Jan. 1, 2023, as per the HISA statute.

No state racing commission in the nation has yet to vote against seeking that exemption, and none are expected to, according to discussion among the NYSGC commissioners at the Oct. 27 meeting.

But what was unexpected was the pushback from several commissioners on two fronts: 1) A desire to know when the seemingly endless, decades-long cycle of Lasix studies on racehorses would finally produce conclusive results, and 2) Why shouldn't New York, which has made a concerted effort over the past few years to cut back on Lasix usage with seemingly positive results at New York Racing Association (NYRA) tracks, leap at the chance to go Lasix-free at all levels of Thoroughbred racing statewide?

Commissioner John Crotty, in particular, expressed his frustration. He asked NYSGC equine medical director Dr. Scott Palmer, VMD, who advocated for the board to seek the HISA exemption, how many Lasix studies have been done over last several decades.

Palmer acknowledged that there have been “a number of them,” adding, “I can't give you the exact number off the top of my head. But I can tell you the most convincing one was a study done in South Africa perhaps 10 years ago that found that Lasix did mitigate the impacts of exercise-induced pulmonary hemorrhaging (EIPH) in racehorses.”

When Crotty asked this question, Palmer had just finished summing up his opinion on a study published this week in the Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA) that found that horses racing on Lasix were 62% more likely to die within three days of racing than were horses running without the diuretic.

Palmer had termed that AVMA study “very impressive and comprehensive,” with an “enormous” 4-plus million population of horse starts. But he also noted that “as well as this study was designed and conducted, there are always limitations.”

Among them, Palmer said, were that true causes of sudden deaths can be elusive, even with a complete necropsy examination, and that other drugs besides Lasix were not accounted for in the study.

But Palmer did express optimism that the AVMA study could lead to further insightful research.

Crotty then noted that when the NYSGC held a day-long Lasix summit back in 2015, several work-in-progress studies at that time were anticipated as being the breakthrough research that would give definitive answers. Now it's seven years later, those studies have arrived, new ones have begun, and the NYSGC is being told to expect yet even more studying on the topic.

“What would be, at the end of the day, a conclusive study from your point of view?” a respectfully exasperated Crotty asked Palmer. “Because no study has actually been done to prove anything, that I know of.

“Every time they look at it, they say, 'Well, it's not quite conclusive. You've got to look at this other factor,'” Crotty said. “I assume that the veterinarians and the scientists who are doing this are competent and capable people…. What would be necessary, if HISA's going to do this, to believe that they will do it right, versus all the other broad studies before this?”

Palmer replied that “no study is perfect…and that it's a standard part of the report of the study to list those limitations. So the way you get to the bottom of an issue like this is to do multiple studies with a slightly different approach.

“And I can tell you for sure that one of the most exciting possibilities of this potential research with HISA is that they are now requiring contemporary reporting of all medications given to racehorses. This has never been done before. And for that reason, all of the Lasix studies to date have never been able to list all of the medications given to the racehorse [to] determine whether or not the medications contribute to EIPH or to sudden death.

“So the advantage of a study by HISA would be that they will have a unique database that will include treatment of every single Thoroughbred racehorse in [America], and that data will be in a single database that can be mined for information about what medications racehorses are being actually given,” Palmer said.

And once that three-year study is completed, the prospect looms for–you guessed it–more research.

“With a control group and a study group to get to the bottom of these issues that we're struggling with,” Palmer said.

For the first three years of HISA, a state racing commission may request a no-Lasix exemption so long as it does not apply to 2-year old covered horses or covered horses competing in stakes races.

The NYSGC received commentary from NYRA, the New York Thoroughbred Horsemen's Association, Inc., the Finger Lakes Horsemen Benevolent and Protective Association, Inc., and Finger Lakes track management, all advocating for the exemption.

The stakeholders largely raised concerns that, absent the exemption, New York Thoroughbred racing would be placed at a distinct economic and competitive disadvantage with surrounding states that have sought the exemption.

Commissioner Peter Moschetti, Jr., asked Palmer if, in the nearly two years since NYRA began conducting Lasix-free races for 2-year-olds and stakes horses, there have been any negative consequences. Palmer stated that there was “no evidence” of harms to horses.

“It seems to me that's pretty good evidence, although two years might be a limited period of time,” Moschetti said.

“I would agree that's an accurate statement from what we've seen so far,” Palmer replied.

Then Moschetti asked, “So are we factoring that in in our decision to seek an exemption? We have had this discussion [for] years, going back and forth [in an effort to] remove race-day drugging of horses, right? So what an opportunity New York has now: HISA is going to implement, in January, this rule that would eliminate Lasix use…. Is your recommendation factoring in what has happened in the last two years, where New York kind of led the way [toward] racing horses without Lasix? It's a great opportunity to see what would happen. It appears that nothing bad has happened, right?

Palmer answered that “if we were operating in a vacuum, that would be accurate.” But we're not, he added, noting that if New York doesn't seek the exemption, it will be excluded from what he believes is a greater opportunity: to participate in the HISA study.

“Also there are significant issues with the business model in New York, versus the mid-Atlantic states [that have requested the exemption]. And I think that consistency in a region is really, really important. One of the goals of the entire HISA program is national uniformity,” Palmer said.

“The risk-benefit ratio of allowing Lasix versus the harm that could come from it is, to me, not significant. I think the value is great and the risk is minimal,” Palmer said. “I think the implications of what happens here in New York are profound in terms of horse racing in New York and neighboring states. And I think that all of those factors have to be taken into consideration when you're making this kind of a decision.”

At this point, NYSGC chairman Brian O'Dwyer interjected.

“Dr. Palmer, the commission is well able to determine the competitive nature and to factor that in,” O'Dwyer said. “I'm not asking you that, nor are the commissioners. We are asking you for your medical advice and medical opinion. Not your opinion on the structure of racing, and I would appreciate it if you would confine your opinion to that.”

Palmer then rephrased his argument: “Well, my medical opinion is that there are many advantages to asking for this exemption, to the benefit of the horse, that go far beyond the issue of New York racing.”

After the unanimous voice vote to seek the exemption, both O'Dwyer and Crotty expressed reservations about New York exempting itself from the no-Lasix federal rule.

O'Dwyer said he voted for the exemption with “great reluctance,” but “I've learned in my life that you have to rely on the experts, and that Dr. Palmer is our expert and has asked us to do this.”

Crotty said that from the perspective of seeing totally Lasix-free racing work in other parts of the world and on a limited basis at NYRA tracks, “it's hard to rationalize why [seeking the HISA exemption] is useful. But we're in a big system. It's a conglomeration of states and different interests. So if this is a way to achieve a better outcome, it seems like a reasonable thing to sort of more forward with.

“But,” Crotty added, “to have to exempt out of [Lasix prohibition when you're trying to achieve that goal], it seems like an odd construction.”

As Palmer put it: “The Lasix issue is an issue of competing truths. And competing truths are tough things to deal with. There's no right or wrong about this.”

The post NY Commission Expresses Frustration About Endless Lasix Studies appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

NY Amends Licensing Requirements for Jockey Agents

The New York State Gaming Commission (NYSGC) on Monday unanimously voted to change the licensing procedure for jockey agents by removing the long-standing requirement for an applicant to have been previously licensed as an exercise rider, jockey, assistant trainer or trainer for at least one year.

The change now allows the stewards to determine whether an applicant is qualified based on experience, background and knowledge.

TDN first reported on this restrictive practice in 2020, describing the then-current version of the rule as “arbitrary, insular and protectionist, ensuring that the path of many bright young people trying to get into the sport will be blocked, and that only insiders can play.”

The NYSGC also unanimously approved a second rule change that eliminates the need for jockeys to be weighed with muzzles, martingales and breastplates. Florida, Kentucky, California, and other states had long ago dropped weighing requirements related to that type of equipment.

A voided claim adjudication from the recent Saratoga Race Course meet was also on the Oct. 3 agenda.

Commissioner Peter Moschetti Jr. had been designated by the NYSGC to decide the matter and affirmed that the Aug. 24 decision by the Saratoga stewards to void the $25,000 claim of Lil Commissioner (Field Commission) from the eighth race would be upheld.

The appeal to try and get the claim to stand was brought by Lil Commissioner's then-owners, Sanford Goldfarb and Alan Khan (trainer Philip Antonacci). Lil Commissioner ran fifth, beaten 11 1/4 lengths that day. Neither the testimony at Monday's commission meeting nor the Equibase chart for the race state which owner and trainer had dropped the claim that was voided.

Executive director Robert Williams read into the record that Moschetti determined that the stewards had voided the claim “after personnel at the test barn dismissed Lil Commissioner in the mistaken belief that the horse had not been claimed. Commissioner Moschetti determined that although the appellants were not at fault, the stewards did not abuse their discretion in voiding the claim, since the horse had left the test barn before being examined by a state veterinarian as required…and had been briefly out of the presence of commission officials…”

Although it was not discussed at Monday's meeting, Lil Commissioner subsequently was entered and claimed for $16,000 at Aqueduct Racetrack Sept. 17. He was eased to last in that race, beaten 48 1/2 lengths. Trainer Antonio Arriaga dropped the claim slip on behalf of owner The Players Group.

 

The post NY Amends Licensing Requirements for Jockey Agents appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Rick Dutrow Nearing Return?

Some 9 1/2 years after being handed a 10-year ban by the New York State Racing and Wagering Board, the predecessor of the New York Gaming Commission, trainer Rick Dutrow could be only a few months removed from a return to the racetrack. His last starter came on Jan. 16, 2013 at Aqueduct, meaning that he may be allowed to resume training by mid-January of next year.

“Ricky is doing quite well and he really is in a great frame of mind,” said trainer Tony Dutrow, Dutrow's brother. “He's excited about getting back and he's hopeful that he is going to get back. He's not taking anything for granted, but he is a survivor and he's excited about the possibility of getting back.”

Dutrow's lawyer, Karen Murphy, told the TDN that within the next few months she will start the process she hopes will lead to the Gaming Commission agreeing to restore Dutrow to good standing. While remaining confident that Dutrow will be allowed to begin training early next year, Murphy explained that her client was not suspended, but instead had his license revoked. There is, she said, a difference between the two types of penalties.

“This involves a nuance,” she said. “It was a revocation and not a suspension. A suspension goes from a certain day to a certain day that you must sit out. When it's over, you can come back. With a revocation of a license, something has been taken away and you have to ask for it back. You can ask for it back shortly before the date in question and then a consideration is made so far as whether or not you should receive that license.”

Dutrow, now 62, declined to be interviewed for this story.

Dutrow, whose career accomplishments include wins in the GI Kentucky Derby and GI Preakness S. with Big Brown (Boundary) and in the GI Breeders' Cup Classic with Saint Liam (Saint Ballado), was a controversial figure throughout his training career and had compiled a number of medication violations. His problems intensified when a horse he trained, Fastus Cactus (Cactus Ridge), was found to have butorphanol in his system after winning the third race at Aqueduct on Nov. 20, 2010. Around the same time, Dutrow's barn was searched and investigators claimed to have found in a desk drawer three syringes filled with a muscle relaxer, xylazine.

In 2019, former Gaming Commission steward Stephen Lewandowski alleged that the syringes were planted in the office by investigators.

In October of 2011, the State Racing and Wagering Board announced that Dutrow, due to his history of rules violations and the recent incidents with the syringes and Fastus Cactus, was being fined $50,000 and that his license would be revoked for 10 years.

“New York's racing industry has no place or patience for Mr. Dutrow,” Racing and Wagering Board Chairman John Sabini said in a release after Dutrow had his license revoked. “His repeated violations and disregard of the rules of racing has eroded confidence in the betting public and caused an embarrassment throughout the industry. His self-described 'game' in New York horse racing is over. We will not permit individuals who cheat and sully New York's world-class racing product.”

Subsequent court challenges from Dutrow's legal team kept him in action until Jan. 16, 2013, at which time he began serving his penalty.
Barred from having anything to do with Thoroughbred race horses, Dutrow was lost. With no income coming in, he was forced to sell his house and in 2017 declared bankruptcy. He has spent much of the time away from the track living with his mother in Saratoga and also spends time with his brother, who has a house in Floral Park, NY.

“He's got nothing,” said Murphy, who took up Dutrow's case in 2015 at, she said, the request of prominent owner Michael Dubb.

“I don't know how he has sustained himself through this,” Murphy continued. “For him, there is no other life. You or I, we could shift gears and do something different and be just fine. This is it, all he knows how to do. But he is always positive. Since this all began, he has never stepped out of line or never violated any of the terms of this insidious, onerous, if not unconstitutional, if not unlawful, order which prohibited him from putting a hand on a horse.”

Since taking over the Dutrow case, Murphy tried to get Kentucky to license her client, but was unsuccessful. A petition drive spearheaded by fellow horsemen asking the Gaming Commission to allow Dutrow back, also did not go anywhere. In 2016, Murphy submitted an application to the Gaming Commission, asking them to exercise clemency and reinstate Dutrow's trainer's license. The request was denied. And a 2020 report in the New York Daily News that included Lewandowski's charge that Dutrow, when it came to the syringes, was framed, also led nowhere. With that in mind, Murphy is wary of declaring victory too early. But she believes that changes in state government and at the Gaming Commission will work in Dutrow's favor.

“I am hopeful,” she said. “We have a new governor (Kathy Hochul) and a new member of the Gaming Commission in Brian O'Dwyer. That has to be a plus. It's a big improvement because this is going to be looked at by a fresh pair of eyes.”

If and when Dutrow gets reinstated, he will have to build a stable from scratch. That he was someone who normally won with about 25% of his starters and won at the highest levels of the sport will no doubt appeal to some owners. But others may want to stay away from a trainer with so much baggage. When asked by the TDN whether or not he would give horses to Dutrow upon his return, Dubb, who had been among Dutrow's most important and loyal owners, said it was too early in the process for him to have made that decision.

“There are people out there who do not believe in Ricky, but there are plenty out there that do,” Tony Dutrow said.

“At the end of the day, what matters to owners who really care about the horse is to have a trainer who really cares about the horse and also gets the results that Rick got,” Murphy said. “There will be baby steps at the beginning. But Rick has shown what he can do. I think some of his owners will show up from day one. He may not have Grade I stock starting out but I think he will have Grade I stock in short order.”

Though optimistic, Murphy can only hope that a fight that has lasted more than 10 years is almost over. The goal is to have Dutrow back training at Aqueduct in January. But if that doesn't happen, Murphy said the battle will continue.

“Am I confident? Yes,” she said. “That's because I will never give up. He will train horses again because he has to be training horses again.”

The post Rick Dutrow Nearing Return? appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights