Kentucky Derby Museum: Launch Party For New Secretariat Exhibit Set For April 20

Tickets are now on sale for the Kentucky Derby Museum's Secretariat Bourbon Dinner, presented by Fifth Third Bank, happening April 20. Guests at this launch party will have several exclusive experiences and opportunities, including being the first to explore the new exhibit, Secretariat: America's Horse, before it opens to the public April 21.

At the dinner, guests will view never-before-seen video of Secretariat's connections. Along with a seated dinner, guests will enjoy a pour of the rare Double Double Oaked Woodford Reserve, while learning from Woodford Reserve Master Distillers Chris Morris and Elizabeth McCall.
VIP tickets cost $250 each, and Dinner Party tickets cost $200 each.

Dinner guests will also have a guaranteed opportunity to purchase one Secretariat Woodford Reserve Double Oaked Personal Selection Box Set. Guests will also have the exclusive opportunity to have their bottle signed by Woodford Reserve Master Distillers Chris Morris and Elizabeth McCall.

Secretariat Bourbon Box Sets now available for purchase

While securing a seat to the Secretariat Bourbon Dinner is the only way to guarantee a chance to purchase a Secretariat Bourbon Box Set, the Museum is providing two additional releases to give the public opportunities to secure the highly unique collector's item.

The Museum's two personal barrel selections are the only Personal Selection picks from Woodford Double Oaked for all of 2022. The yield from the selections allowed for the creation of only 400 Bourbon Box Sets. The sets include a beautiful collector's box, a Secretariat 50th Anniversary Medallion with signature of jockey Ron Turcotte, a Secretariat 50th Anniversary Julep Cup, and a Secretariat 50th Anniversary Tac Pin.

Each Box Set costs $750 plus sales tax. Bourbon experts and writers have already regarded these boxes as extremely valuable collector's items.

First Release: As of March 9, a limited number of Bourbon Box Sets are now available for purchase at the Derby Museum Store and on the Store's website. Several customers were lined up at the Museum's front doors Thursday morning as early as 6:45 A.M. to be the first to purchase box sets in-person at the Kentucky Derby Museum Store when it opened at 9 A.M.

Second Release: Once the first round of Box Sets are sold out, a second round will be released for purchase exlusively for Secretariat Bourbon Dinner guests.

Third Release: The third and final release will include the remaining Box Sets, available for purchase on April 21 in the Derby Museum Store and on the Store's website.

Box Sets will not be available for purchase over the phone. Due to Kentucky State law, Bourbon Box sets cannot be shipped and must be picked up in person at the Kentucky Derby Museum Store.

Secretariat Bourbon Lottery Winners

Kentucky Derby Museum is thrilled to announce two winners of the Secretariat Bourbon Box Sets have been selected at random. Lottery winners William Sedlock III and Ginger Bennett have been notified for their chance to purchase Bourbon Box Set #73 from Batch I and Bourbon Box Set #73 from Batch II.

More details related to the Museum's Secretariat celebrations can be found here: DerbyMuseum.org/Secretariat

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HBPA Conference: Testing Levels Based On Science Key To Integrity

Screening levels based on science for post-race testing are essential for the integrity of the horse-racing industry — as is public information about how such policy is made.

While fleas and dogs got (separately) into the discussion, that was the major takeaway from the Kent Stirling Memorial Medication Panel on Wednesday's second day of the National Horsemen's Benevolent & Protective Association conference at the Hotel Monteleone.

With today's super-sensitive testing capabilities, the National HBPA has long advocated for scientifically-developed screening and threshold levels used to determine if a positive finding is a legitimate rules violation, or if a negligible amount was inadvertently transferred to a horse or by contamination with no pharmacological impact on the animal's performance. The topic has added urgency with the Horseracing Integrity & Safety Authority (HISA) taking over control of equine-testing policy and enforcement as early as March 27.

HISA CEO Lisa Lazarus has said trainers will not be penalized nor horses disqualified for irrelevant trace levels of substances readily found in the environment. However, there is nothing in HISA's proposed medication and drug rules that state that. Lazarus' comments also seem at odds with what has been said by Dr. Mary Scollay, chief of science for the organization contracted to implement and enforce HISA's rules.

“The scariest thing for me is when somebody who is in a position of authority — a regulator, a prosecutor — says 'Just trust me. I know what I'm doing. Just trust what I'm doing,'” said El Paso attorney Daniel Marquez, whose law practice includes representing horsemen in the Southwest. “OK. I've been there, been that person. I don't trust me. There needs to be accountability.

“… (If) you can support and justify your judgment, that makes you a good regulator, a good enforcer of the rules. Unless you can provide the information for others to look at, to critique, to scrutinize, your justification can never be challenged. That is something about which we all should be very wary of.”

What a bufotenine finding in a horse has to do with a female flea

Bringing sensitivity into sharper focus, drug-testing and toxicology expert Dr. Steven Barker — now an Emeritus Professor at Louisiana State University after retiring following years as head of its state equine drug-testing lab — used an example of bufotenine, which can be detected in horses' post-race tests if (among other things) they ate hay with reed canary grass in it, and a flea.

First, a couple of explanations about metric measurements: Barker said a small paper clip weighs a gram. A microgram is a unit of mass equal to one-millionth of a gram. A picogram is equal to one-trillionth of a gram.

Barker cited three horses in the Mid-Atlantic in whom bufotenine was detected at the extremely low levels of between 34.5 and 56.6 picograms per milliliter in blood and between 731.5 and 1,964.5 picograms/ml in urine. If those sound like big numbers, Barker said to consider that “the weight of a new-born female flea, prior to its first blood meal, is 450 micrograms. The blood volume of a horse is approximately 50,000 milliliters.

“So if a horse has 56 picograms per mil of bufotenine in a sample, the total amount of bufotenine in the entire horse is 2.8 micrograms – which would be 0.62 percent of a female flea,” Barker said. “So you imagine a 500- kilogram animal that has 0.62 of a female flea distributed throughout its entire body, what do you think the drug effect would be? Zero to nothing. And this is the case in a lot of the positives being called now.

“… If HISA is going to do its job, these kinds of positives have to be given scientific consideration. Not 'Oh, we found it, we confirmed it, you're guilty.' I've seen that way too much. Are they going to worry about the integrity of the industry, worried about giving the industry a black eye for all these positives? When really the more important thing is the integrity and reputation of trainers, owners and the horses affected.

“What if it had been a horse that won the Kentucky Derby?” Barker added mischievously, having been an expert witness for trainer Bob Baffert in the appeal of Medina Spirit's disqualification of his 2021 Kentucky Derby victory for a medication overage. “So, using science, coming up with reasonable levels to call positives that really do meet their mandate, is what HISA should be doing. I don't know that they will. I certainly hope they do.”

How U.S. horse-racing testing numbers stack up with human sports

Dr. Clara Fenger, a Central Kentucky-based veterinarian and racehorse owner with additional degrees in internal medicine and equine exercise physiology, started off the panel with some statistics. She said in 2021, the World Anti Doping Agency reported 0.77 percent positive tests out of the 241,430 athletes tested worldwide, with 40 percent of the violations being for illegal anabolic steroids. A very small amount are from inadvertent environmental contamination, she said.

In the United States in 2020, out of 243,627 racehorse tests, only 0.43 percent were declared post-race positives. Of those, 28 percent were for Class 1 substances, and most of those could reasonably be considered inadvertent environmental transfer, such as with methamphetamine and morphine, she said.

But while violations in human sports were down 1.19 percent from 2013, U.S. horse racing rose to that 0.43 percent of positive findings from 0.34 percent in 2013, Fenger said. While that still reflects very few “true” attempts to cheat, in her words, she said the bump in horse racing is explained by labs using their increased sensitivity to find irrelevant minuscule levels of substances that would not be called positives in human testing.

“Has the increase in positive tests in horse racing indicated that HISA is necessary to reverse the trend?” Fenger asked, then answering no. “HISA doubles down on calling violations for environmental contamination and insignificant trace levels.”

Fenger: Labs will be allowed to vary how low they call a positive finding

Fenger said labs that will enter into contracts to do testing for HISA must be able to detect substances down to a specified minimum level, known as Minimum Required Performance Levels (MRPL). However, the lab can elect to call a positive finding at any level below that minimum, she said, adding that that flies in the face of HISA's mission of bringing uniformity across all racing jurisdictions.

“For substances that reflect actual cheating, this is a great system,” Fenger said. “Because if one lab can find it really, really low, they can share their methods with other laboratories and they can all find it better…. But for therapeutic medication, this represents a huge difference in regulations state to state, depending on the laboratory doing the testing.

“Not one existing or proposed HISA regulation could have stopped the federal indictments (in 2020 of trainers Jason Servis, Jorge Navarro and 25 others for conspiring to dope horses). Not one…. HISA's screening levels are not based on science, making some therapeutic medication violations essentially impossible to avoid.”

Prescription transfer: Human to horse – and now dog to horse

Dr. Thomas Tobin — the longtime consultant to the National HBPA who is a veterinarian and renowned expert in equine pharmacology and toxicology at the University of Kentucky's Gluck Equine Research Center — shared a couple of unusual cases that illustrate how minute levels of substances can transfer to a horse without direct administration.

One came amid a rash of positive findings for the seizure and shingles drug Gabapentin in Ohio, which has an “in-house” screening level of eight nanograms (parts per billion) per millimeter of plasma, Tobin said. The finding of 89.4 ng/ml in a horse's post-race test was traced to the groom, who had a prescription for Gabapentin and urinated in the horse's stall. Three other drugs prescribed for the groom were found in the horse — the largest known number of human prescription medications transferred together to a horse to date, Tobin said.

In another case, the urinating culprit was … a dog.

The Irish Times reported that a racehorse owned by a veterinarian was disqualified from a victory after the post-race test revealed the presence of Gabapentin. That result was determined to have come from the family dog, who was being treated with Gabapentin and had access to the horse stalls.

“It's now official in the published domain that you can dose a dog with Gabapentin and it can turn up in a racehorse,” Tobin said.

Tobin said he was asked to work on a plasma cutoff for fentanyl for equine testing, below which there would be no pharmacological effect, because of the street drug's widespread availability. (He said he's in the process of publishing a recommended screening level of 50 picograms per milliliter of plasma.)

El Paso attorney fears losing transparency, accountability

Daniel Marquez, the El Paso attorney joining the pharmacology experts on the medication panel, said his experience as an active-duty judge advocate with the U.S. Marine Corps formed his philosophy “and the perspective in which I look at the current state we see with respect to the federal regulation within the horse-racing industry.

“… The bedrock concept of what curb regulators is the fact that there's transparency, there's accountability. And HISA lacks that.”

Alluding to Tobin and Barker noting their research benefits from data acquired through open-records requests, Marquez said, “That's accountability, that's transparency. With the addition, the inclusion of private entities into the HISA rule-making and policy adoption, we threaten that accountability, that transparency.”

Marquez said there was a rash of corticosteroid overages in 2018 after New Mexico switched testing laboratories. Information gathered through open-record requests documented the difference in methodology between the two labs, with the courts ultimately holding trainers blameless for their horses' positive findings.

“But it had to be pushed,” Marquez said. “This had to be fought in court to get to that point. And those decisions were not appealed. Why is that important? Without that ability to go and get that information, individuals may have been held liable for something that was not their fault.

“With HISA and the reliance on individual labs, some of which are private, we lose part of that arm of accountability. Private labs are not subject to those (Freedom of Information Act) laws or state open-record laws.”

“… As you heard from the panel, the scientific basis for many of these MRPLs or threshold substances, that's information that needs to be known… With the challenges coming now with the new HISA proposed rule-making, those are matters we need to take into consideration…. We need to be sure these regulators are following the rules, that they're being the people in the white hat.”

The conference's panels and presentations conclude Thursday.

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Still Searching For ‘Viable Solutions’: Maryland Racetrack Redevelopment Project Faces Nearly-Doubled Cost Thanks To Three-Year Delay

Inflation, rising interest rates, supply chain issues, and seemingly-endless site redesigns have effectively halted progress on the 2020 plans for redeveloping Pimlico and Laurel Park racetracks in Maryland, reports MarylandMatters.org. Now, the many stakeholders are trying to develop a new plan that would likely mean closing one of those tracks.

Whereas Laurel Park was initially seen as the prime property for horse racing, attention is now focused on Pimlico, the home of the Preakness. One reason for that is that The Stronach Group, owner of the Maryland Jockey Club which operates the two tracks, would be subject to an altered tax code that would cost TSG approximately $40 million if it accepts state money for improvements at Laurel. TSG is expressing a desire to sell Laurel Park and receive compensation for that venue, Maryland Matters reports.

Of course, that solution would leave another issue on the table: 450 more stalls would need to be built, along with a training facility, to house the state's current horse population. One option is the old U.S. Naval Academy Dairy Farm in Gambrills, which could house as many as 1,150 stalls, but the cost of compensating TSG for the property is another limiting factor.

Lawmakers' initial plan in 2020 was to authorize $375 million in bonds for the Racing and Community Development Financing Fund — $180 million to Pimlico and $155 million to Laurel. A legislative budget analysis shows that the delay in bond sales and rising interest rates has cost more than $80 million in potential proceeds; overall, the estimated redevelopment cost would now be between $535 million and $725 million.

“You know, I remain convinced today that we will find a way through this,” said Bill Cole of the Maryland Stadium Authority, which is tasked with overseeing the redevelopment. “I do believe that there are solutions. I mean, we're working through every possible scenario … working collaboratively to make certain that we leave no stone unturned on a viable solution.

“I would say at this point, you know, every scenario is being thoroughly vetted.”

Read more at MarylandMatters.org.

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HISA Answers Frequently-Asked Questions About Anti-Doping And Medication Control Program

With the anticipated March 27 implementation of the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority's (HISA) Anti-Doping and Medication Control (ADMC) Program approaching, it's increasingly important for all racing participants to understand how the Program will work. The following are HISA's answers to five frequently asked questions about the ADMC Program.

1. How will the new HISA ADMC Program impact the lives and workflow of horsemen?

The ADMC Program is designed to create centralized testing and results management processes and apply uniform penalties for violations efficiently and consistently across the country. Its rules will institute uniformity across jurisdictions, consistency in how laboratories test for substances, and swift and efficient adjudication practices.

Under HIWU, all sample collection personnel will receive in-person training on HIWU's uniform chain of custody process and digital data collection technology. The HIWU app that sample collectors will use will significantly reduce the previously required paperwork involved in the testing process and enable horsemen to receive electronic receipts of their horses' sample collection.

For the first time, labs across the country will be testing for the same substances at the same levels. The ADMC rules establish separate categories for Prohibited Substances that are allowed outside of race day and other specific periods (i.e., Controlled Medications) and substances that are never allowed to be in a horse (i.e., Banned Substances). This system is meant to appropriately penalize those who use Banned Substances, while being sensible and proportionate when it comes to Controlled Medication violations.

In addition to in-competition testing at racetracks, HIWU will introduce a strategic Out-of-Competition testing program that will incorporate intelligence and data analysis in the selection of Covered Horses. Responsible Persons (i.e., trainers) of Covered Horses selected for Out-of-Competition testing will have the option of either having their horse tested wherever it is currently located, or at another mutually agreed upon site as long as the Covered Horse is made available for testing within six (6) hours of notification.

To support its Investigations Unit, which will work to identify bad actors through intelligence gathering from industry participants and data analysis, HIWU will launch anonymous whistleblower platforms to enable individuals to anonymously submit concerns regarding suspected violations of the ADMC Program.

2. Who is in charge of HIWU, the organization tasked with implementing the ADMC Program?

The Horseracing Integrity & Welfare Unit (HIWU) was established by Drug Free Sport International (DFSI) to be the independent enforcement agency of HISA's ADMC Program. HIWU is independent from, but in frequent communication with, HISA on the implementation of the ADMC Program. HISA's ADMC rules are ultimately vetted and approved by the Federal Trade Commission (FTC).

HIWU is led by Executive Director Ben Mosier, who has overseen anti-doping programs for the NBA, the PGA Tour, MLB's Minor League Program, and NASCAR.

HIWU's chief of operations, Kate Mittelstadt, previously served as director of the Anti-Doping Program for IRONMAN and has held multiple roles with the World Anti-Doping Agency and Association of National Anti-Doping Organizations. Mittelstadt was also one of the first employees hired by the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency.

HIWU's general counsel, Michelle Pujals, was a member of the NBA's legal department for more than 20 years, where her duties included results management for, and investigations related to, the NBA's various drug programs and allegations of player and staff misconduct. Before joining HIWU, she was the owner and principal of Tautemo Consulting, LLC, a legal and sports consulting firm.

HIWU Chief of Science Dr. Mary Scollay was most recently the executive director and chief operating officer of the Racing Medication & Testing Consortium, prior to which she worked for more than 30 years as a racing regulatory veterinarian, including 11 years as the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission's equine medical director.

3. How does the ADMC adjudication process work and what happens if someone is charged with a violation?

Violations under the ADMC Program are categorized as Anti-Doping Rule Violations (ADRV), which involve Banned Substances and Methods, or Controlled Medication Rule Violations (CMRV), which involve Controlled Medications and Methods. There will be harsher penalties associated with ADRVs.

ADRV cases will be heard by an Arbitral Body chosen and appointed to cases by JAMS, a world-renowned arbitration and mediation provider with a panel of retired lawyers and judges who are experienced in anti-doping and sports adjudication. Before selecting individuals to hear cases, JAMS will ensure that there are no conflicts of interest between potential adjudicators and the Covered Person(s) involved.

CMRV cases will be heard by appointees to the Internal Adjudication Panel (IAP), a group of 15-20 members selected by HISA and HIWU based on their previous equine regulatory experience. The IAP pool includes state stewards, who are only permitted to hear cases that do not originate in the state in which they are employed, and others with equine regulatory experience. IAP members will be appointed to hear specific CMRV cases on a rotating basis following conflicts-of-interest checks.

All members of both the Arbitral Body and IAP must undergo initial training and continuing education on the ADMC regulations to be eligible to hear and decide cases.

When charged with an ADRV, Covered Persons and Horses will usually be issued Provisional Suspensions, during which time they will be ineligible to train or race until the matter has been resolved and associated penalties have been served. Covered Persons subject to Provisional Suspension are not permitted to be involved in any activity involving a Covered Horse at a racetrack or public training facility. They can, however, request a timely Provisional Hearing to advocate for lifting the Provisional Suspension.

For most alleged CMRVs, Provisional Suspensions will not be issued unless the Controlled Medication was used within a period of Ineligibility defined in the Prohibited List.

For both ADRV and CMRV cases, Covered Persons are entitled to the opportunity to provide written submissions and present evidence on their behalf to the assigned adjudicator(s).

HIWU is required to publicly disclose the resolution of an ADMC Program case within 20 days of (1) a final decision, (2) a resolution between HIWU and the Covered Person, or (3) the withdrawal of a charge by HIWU. Final decisions of the Arbitral Body and IAP can be appealed to a federal Administrative Law Judge.

ADMC violations that arise from a Post-Race Sample or that occur during the Race Period automatically lead to the disqualification of race-day results. For ADRVs, any other results that the Covered Horse obtained from the date the ADRV first occurred will also be disqualified.

If a horse is disqualified due to an ADRV or CMRV, all purses and other prizes will be forfeited and redistributed accordingly. When possible, the purse for the Covered Horse involved in the alleged violation will be withheld until a resolution has been reached.

While the purse will be affected by ADMC violations and disqualifications, the wagering payouts that are published after a race is declared official on race day are the final payouts, regardless of any disqualifications subsequently issued.

4. How are HISA and HIWU preparing the sport for implementation of the rules?

HIWU staff have so far visited all racetracks that will be racing on March 27 and met with local test barn staff, veterinarians, stewards, and other personnel to observe current practices, evaluate test barn facilities, and help prepare personnel on the ground for the implementation of the ADMC Program. HIWU will visit each racetrack prior to their next meet start date after March 27 and hold in-person training events for test barn personnel prior to collections being conducted at each location. Over the last several months, the HIWU team has also met with industry stakeholder groups in-person and virtually to discuss the ADMC Program and answer questions.

HIWU plans to visit numerous tracks ahead of the expected March 27 implementation date to talk to stakeholders and encourages industry organizations interested in hosting informational sessions where members can speak with the HIWU team to email info@hiwu.org to request to schedule a virtual or in-person meeting. Visits and outreach will continue after implementation, as well.

The HIWU website is also home to educational material on the Prohibited List, Detection Times and Screening Limits, test types, results management, and more. Additional educational materials will continue to be published and shared broadly with the industry.

5. How will the ADMC rules improve racing and help the sport grow?

The ADMC Program is central to HISA's mission to ensure the integrity of racing to the benefit of participants, fans, and bettors. HISA's rules are designed to improve the safety and welfare of horses and restore public trust in the sport.

Bettors will be able to trust that the product on the track is fair and that cheaters are not welcome in Thoroughbred racing. All signs indicate that the enforcement of consistent, national ADMC rules will ultimately lead to broader public interest, including from younger audiences, and increased wagering.

Importantly, besides making the sport safer and fairer, the ADMC Program will also make the jobs of many horsemen easier as the patchwork of state-by-state rules are replaced with a unified, streamlined anti-doping regulatory system.

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