Kentucky Commission Approves Asmussen’s 30-Day Suspension Over 2018 Ace Positives; No Dates Set

On Monday, the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission approved hearing officer Eden Davis Stephens' recommendation for a 30-day suspension to be issued to Hall of Fame trainer Steve Asmussen, according to the Daily Racing Form. The suspension deals with a pair of positive tests in Asmussen-trained runners which raced in 2018.

Two Asmussen trainees tested positive for metabolites of the sedative Acepromazine: Thousand Percent after winning the second race at Churchill Downs on June 28, 2018; and Boldor after winning the sixth race at Keeneland on Oct. 25, 2018.

In late 2019, following a formal hearing before the stewards, the KHRC issued Asmussen a 30-day suspension and total $3,500 fine. An additional 30 days were stayed due to mitigating circumstances (number of violations due to overall record), pending no further violations for 365 days. Asmussen subsequently appealed.

A hearing on that appeal was conduced in August last year by hearing officer Jim Howard, who left the Public Protection Cabinet before making a recommendation. Hearing officer Eden Davis Stephens succeeded Howard, and based on the existing record she recommended a 30-day suspension for Asmussen in October of 2022.

Monday's KHRC decision to approve the hearing officer's recommendation did not come with a set date for Asmussen to serve the 30 days; the KHRC order did note that the action could be appealed in civil court.

Read more at the Daily Racing Form.

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Eclipse Awards Will Be Broadcast Live On FanDuel TV, RTN This THursday

The National Thoroughbred Racing Association (NTRA), Daily Racing Form, and the National Turf Writers and Broadcasters (NTWAB) announced Monday that the 52nd Annual Eclipse Awards will air live on FanDuel TV and Racetrack Television Network (RTN) on January 26 from The Breakers Palm Beach in Florida. The Keeneland red-carpet show will begin at 6:30 pm ET, with the ceremony following at 7:30pm ET. The evening will culminate with the announcement of the 2022 Horse of the Year.

In addition to FanDuel TV, the ceremony will air on Racetrack Television Network (RTN) and be streamed live on multiple outlets including: NTRA.comamericasbestracing.netbloodhorse.comequibase.com, and NTRA's Youtube channel.

The event will be hosted by Britney Eurton, Scott Hazelton, and Maggie Wolfendale-Morley, with Caton Bredar serving as the announcer throughout the awards ceremony.

Presented by John Deere, Keeneland and The Jockey Club, the Eclipse Awards will honor the 2022 human and equine Champions of Thoroughbred racing. All finalists were announced live on FanDuel TV on Saturday, January 7, and the full list can be found here. Named after the great 18th-century racehorse and foundation sire Eclipse, the awardds will be presented in 17 categories. Media Eclipse Award winners, the National Horseplayer of the Year, and the FanDuel Racing-NTRA Moment of the Year as voted on by fans also will be honored at the awards ceremony.

To stay up to date on the 52nd Annual Eclipse Awards and for more information, visit https://www.ntra.com/eclipse-awards/.

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CHRB: Catastrophic Injuries In California Down 10 Percent In 2022; Golden Gate, Humboldt Fair Remain At Stalemate

The California Horse Racing Board conducted a meeting on Thursday, January 19, 2023, at Cal Expo. Chairman Gregory Ferraro chaired the meeting, joined by Vice Chair Oscar Gonzales and Commissioners Brenda Washington Davis, Thomas Hudnut, and Wendy Mitchell.

The audio of this entire Board meeting is available on the CHRB Website (www.chrb.ca.gov) under the Webcast link. In brief:

  • Executive Director Scott Chaney (ED) reported that “in 2021, there were 71 total catastrophic injuries at California regulated facilities.  In 2022, that number was 64 for a decrease of 10 percent.  Since calendar-year 2019, total catastrophic injuries have decreased 50 percent. To put 2022 in context, of the 64, less than half, 30, were musculo-skeletal injuries, the rest being sickness, accidents, and sudden deaths.  For further context, there are approximately 30,000 runners (starts) each year in California and 70,000 workouts.  On any given day, there are approximately 4,000 horses at CHRB regulated facilities and around 8,000 to 10,000 unique horses at our facilities in any given year.  I believe California to have the best safety record in the country.  Of course, there is still work to be done, and several more regulations that the Board has passed will go into effect this year.”
  • Dr. Jeff Blea, the CHRB equine medical director (EMD), elaborated on racing safety in his report to the Board. “The Inclement Weather Policy ( found on the CHRB Website) is used when nature changes course,” he explained. “Cancelations at Santa Anita, Golden Gate Fields, Los Alamitos, and Cal Expo have occurred this month due to the heavy amount of rainfall – with safety of horses and riders paramount. Credit to track management, track maintenance superintendents and their crews, and horsemen for their diligent efforts to focus on safety during the inclement weather.” He also credited the Board for implementing the policy. “If you look back 20 years ago,” Dr. Blea continued, “you ran on mud, you ran on slop, but now, when you see those weather forecasts, the safety of horses and riders comes first.”
    After hearing the ED and EMD reports, Commissioner Davis commented, “We have really turned the corner…with everyone going in the right direction.”
  • Northern California stakeholders reported that despite continuing discussions, they remain at a stalemate over a disputed week of racing involving the Humboldt County Fair and Golden Gate Fields. The Board already has allocated dates for the rest of the northern racing calendar. A motion to deal with the impasse failed for lack of a majority (four votes required). The matter will come back to the Board at the March 16 meeting in Arcadia. (The full schedule for 2023 Board meetings is posted on the CHRB website.)
  • The Board approved changes to the retirement plan for licensed California jockeys in order to comply with new federal regulations.
  • The Board renewed the license for Sammy's in Lake Forest to continue accepting wagers as a minisatellite wagering facility.
  • The Board authorized the Executive Director to perform certain administrative actions on behalf of the Board, including approving requests by racetracks to cancel a scheduled racing program (usually due to inclement weather) and to run that program on a different, previously unscheduled day.

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‘I Hurt The Sport I Love’: Surick Sentenced To Five Years And Two Months In Federal Prison

Prominent harness racing trainer and Thoroughbred owner Nick Surick was sentenced Jan. 19 to five years and two months in prison for his involvement in what the Justice Department says is the biggest horse-doping investigation in its history.

The sentencing took place in U.S. District Court in New York, where prison sentences have been meted out to 18 other defendants in the case. Prosecutors have charged 31 individuals since March 2020.

Surick, 34, of Jackson, N.J., wore a suit and tie to court and showed no reaction as the punishment was handed down by Judge Mary Kay Vyskocil. It was one of the harshest sentences to come out of the FBI probe. Probation officials recommended a sentence of six years.

Surick agreed to plead guilty to three felonies as part of a cooperation deal with prosecutors. He began cooperating shortly after his arrest nearly three years ago with most of the other defendants. He told Vyskocil it was tough to provide incriminating information about close friends and business associates but said it was the right thing to do.

He said he was sorry for the crimes he committed. “I hurt the sport I love,” he said.

He apologized to “hardworking” trainers, “the horses themselves,” and regulators.

“I owe an apology to the public,” he added. “They were gambling on a product that was not true.”

Surick added, “I was caught up in this crazy competition to be the best. I lost my way.”

Even though Surick ratted out others in the racing industry, federal prosecutors declined to provide him with a so-called 5K1 letter recommending leniency.

“The Government has concluded that the defendant has not provided substantial assistance in any investigation or prosecution,” prosecutor Sarah Mortazavi wrote in court papers last week ahead of the sentencing.

“This decision was precipitated by the defendant's inaccurate recounting of a pivotal event involving the doping of a particular horse, Northern Virgin, which was included in a superseding charging instrument on the basis of Surick's description,” she said.

Mortazavi said Surick told prosecutors that co-defendant Dr. Rebecca Linke, a veterinarian, had personally injected Northern Virgin with the banned substance Epogen in December 2018 when in fact Surick had injected the horse himself. Linke received a deferred prosecution agreement from the prosecution.

In court Mortazavi said that Surick's incorrect version of what happened so compromised his credibility that prosecutors were unable to use the information he provided to charge anyone else.

Still, she said prosecutors did not believe Surick lied and that it did not warrant ripping up the cooperation agreement. She said Surick still deserved credit for attempting to cooperate at an early point in the case.

In court Surick said to Vyskocil that he had no reason to lie. He blamed a faulty memory for what happened.

“It's an honest mistake that destroyed the 5K,” he said.

Surick choked up as he asked the judge to sentence him to home confinement.

“I just want to keep going straight,” he said. “I am hoping and praying you give me the chance.”

“This case is somewhat unique, and for the court a difficult case,” Vyskocil said. But she said it was necessary to sentence Surick to prison for what his crimes.

“By plying horses with PEDs you endangered horses, other horses, jockeys, and drivers,” Vysckocil said. She said he cheated regulators and the betting public.

“You impugned the integrity of the sport,” the judge told Surick.

She said Surick was different from other defendants because he had been charged with obstruction for impeding New Jersey Racing Commission investigators from testing Northern Virgin after he had been doped with Epogen.

Surick and prosecutors memorialized the cooperation agreement in October 2020 when Surick appeared before Vyskocil and pleaded guilty to two counts of conspiracy to misbrand and adulterate drugs and one count of obstruction. The maximum penalty for those three charges is 30 years in prison.

One of the conspiracy counts related to the doping of horses trained by Jorge Navarro, who is serving a five-year sentence in the case.

The other conspiracy count related to Surick's doping of his own horses.

Surick was the one prosecutors say was captured on a wiretap claiming to have made horses that Navarro “killed…disappear.”

“You know how many f—— horses he (Navarro) f—— killed and broke down that I made disappear,” Surick was quoted as saying to co-defendant trainer Michael Tannuzzo in February 2019. “… You know how much trouble he could get in…if they found out …The six horses that we killed.”

Mortazavi wrote that during the proffer sessions with prosecutors, Surick minimized his conversation with Tannuzzo.

Surick attorney Timothy Donohue of West Orange, N.J., said about the conversation that it concerned how “broken-down horses” were disposed of by selling them to purchasers in Pennsylvania.

In 2017 Surick trained the 1,000th winner of his career at Freehold Raceway, according to reports. Two years later, he won 367 races in 2019, ranking second in wins among North American harness trainers.

As a Thoroughbred owner, from 2014 to 2019, Surick raced horses in 25 races at Gulfstream Park and Monmouth Park. He won seven of those races. He sent most of the horses he owned to Navarro and Tannuzzo.

Prosecutors say the defendants avoided detection by racing regulators because the PEDs they used were not detectable in post-race testing.

Last month prominent trainer Jason Servis pleaded guilty to a felony crime and a misdemeanor crime. He admitted to shipping two banned substances.

Prosecutors had accused Servis of doping virtually all the horses in his stable, including champion Maximum Security, who was disqualified from first in the 2019 Kentucky Derby (G1) for interference. Servis is scheduled to be sentenced May 18 and faces four years in prison.

The Thoroughbred industry's leading publications are working together to cover this key trial.

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