Wests Issue Statement Saying They Would Support Redistribution Of 2020 Saudi Cup Purse

Gary and Mary West, owners of 2020 Saudi Cup winner Maximum Security, released a statement late Friday night saying they would support a redistribution of the race's $20-million purse.  The statement was issued via Twitter @Sire Watch, the account of Werk Thoroughbred Consultants, of which the Wests are clients.

Maximum Security won the February 29 race King Abdulaziz Racecourse several days prior to a federal indictment of 27 individuals, including his trainer, Jason Servis, that alleged “widespread, corrupt scheme by racehorse trainers, veterinarians, PED distributors and others to manufacture, distribute, and receive adulterated and misbranded PEDs and to secretly administer those PEDs to racehorses under scheme participants' control.”

Saudi officials froze the $10-million winner's share of the 2020 race's purse as Servis' case went through the legal process.

Servis pleaded guilty to those charges in court Friday and now faces the possibility of four years in prison when he is sentenced May 18, 2023 in U.S. District Court in Manhattan.

“We believe in the justice system and have patiently waited for the legal prosecution to take its course. Now that Jason Servis has entered a guilty plea, we want to make it clear that if the Saudi Cup decides to redistribute the purse, we would support that decision. Hopefully, that action will prevent future conduct of this nature. We believe the decision to take the Saudi Cup purse from Maximum Security and redistribute it is the correct one. There will be no further statements or comments.” The statement was signed Gary and Mary West.

Sid Fernando, of Werk Thoroughbred Consultants, prefaced the Wests' Twitter statement with the note: “WTC clients Gary and Mary West have asked us to release this statement regarding the guilty plea of Jason Servis, who trained the Wests' homebred Maximum Security.”

While the remaining four of the Saudi Cup's top five finishers were paid their share of the purse, the Wests were denied the winner's share when allegations against Servis arose.

Finishing behind Maximum Security in the Saudi Cup was Midnight Bisou in second, Benbatl in third; Mucho Gusto, fourth; and Tacitus, fifth.

“We are sort of in a hold position now waiting for the U.S. authorities to move forward with that case,” said Prince Bandar bin Khalid Al Faisal, chairman of the Jockey Club of Saudi Arabia, at the 2021 Saudi Cup.

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THA Schedules Webinar On HISA’s Anti-Doping And Medication Control Program For Dec. 14

Thoroughbred Horsemen's Association is inviting all horsemen, assistant trainers, and veterinarians to participate in a Zoom webinar that will focus on the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority's Anti-Doping and Medication Control Program, which is currently scheduled to take effect Jan. 1, 2023.

Mary Scollay, Chief of Science for the Horseracing Integrity and Welfare Unit, will be in person on Wednesday, Dec. 14 at NOON ET in the Belmont Cafe in the Belmont Park grandstand.

HIWU, part of Drug Free Sport International, is responsible for administering the ADMC program. Dr. Scollay will make a presentation and then remain for a question-and-answer session that will also be streamed online.

Even though the question of the constitutionality of the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act remains unresolved and is making its way through the courts, it is important to prepare for the ADMC, which includes changes in medication policy and testing procedures.

Horsemen who are not able to attend in person are encouraged to participate in the Zoom session and ask questions via ZOOM.

It is expected the seminar can be used for Continuing Education credits.

Please click here to register for the webinar. Join-in instructions will then be emailed.

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Jason Servis Enters Guilty Plea, Faces Four Years In Prison

Jason Servis, for years one of the top Thoroughbred trainers in the country, pleaded guilty in a New York courtroom Dec. 9 to resolve charges arising from the government's sweeping investigation into horse doping at racetracks across the country.

Servis, 65, faces four years in prison when he is sentenced May 18, 2023, in U.S. District Court in Manhattan. Servis was one of 31 defendants in the case, which garnered national headlines when prosecutors announced indictments nearly three years ago and cast a black eye on the racing industry.

They had been charged with doping horses with various performance-enhancing drugs that were undetectable by racing regulators. Prosecutors said the use of PEDs by greedy trainers corrupted the sport, cheated the betting public, and endangered horses who were asked to perform beyond their natural capabilities.

Servis was the last defendant facing charges.

He pleaded guilty in connection with his role in the distribution of adulterated and misbranded drugs intended for administration on racehorses he trained.

“Servis' conduct represents corruption at the highest levels of the racehorse industry,” Damian Williams, U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York, said in a release. “As a licensed racehorse trainer, Servis was bound to protect the horses under his care and to comply with racing rules designed to ensure the safety and well-being of horses and protect the integrity of the sport.”

Williams added: “Servis abdicated his responsibilities to the animals, to regulators, and to the public. This latest conviction demonstrates the commitment of this Office and of our partners at the FBI to the prosecution and investigation of corruption, fraud, deceit, and endangerment in the racehorse industry.”

“Guilty,” Servis said, as he admitted to a new felony charge of misbranding and adulterating a chemical substance described by prosecutors as similar to the bronchodilator clenbuterol but stronger.

“Guilty,” he said, admitting to another new charge, a misdemeanor, of misbranding and adulterating a compound chemical called SGF-1000.

Servis had been scheduled to go on trial next month on two counts–conspiracy to misbrand and adulterate performance-enhancing drugs and conspiracy to commit mail and wire fraud. He would have faced 25 years in prison on those two counts if convicted.

As part of the plea deal, prosecutors agreed to dismiss those charges and bring new ones.

Also, as part of the plea deal, Servis agreed to forfeit $311,760 and to pay restitution in the amount of $163,932.

Servis showed up in court in a sports jacket and tie. Racing authorities suspended his trainer's license after his arrest in March 2020.

At the time of his arrest, prosecutors accused Servis of administering adulterated and misbranded PEDS, including SGF-1000, to “virtually all of the racehorses under his control.”

Those horses included Maximum Security, who finished first in the 2019 Kentucky Derby Presented by Woodford Reserve (G1) but was disqualified for interference during the running of the race.

Judge Mary Kay Vyskocil brought up Maximum Security's name during a portion of the proceeding that required Servis to admit his guilt by allocuting to the charges. 

At that point, Servis attorney Rita Glavin interjected to say that, yes, her client would admit that Maximum Security had been administered SGF-1000 by a veterinarian for his barn.

Glavin also objected when Vyskocil asked Servis if he was challenging the fact that Maximum Security finished first in the overseas $20 million Saudi Cup in the Middle East in February 2020, a month before his arrest.

After a brief back and forth, Servis conceded that fact.

He also told Vyskocil that he would not challenge other statements to other facts in the plea agreement. 

For instance, he conceded that he continued using SGF-1000 after New York regulators put out an advisory in September 2019 saying that SGF-1000 was a prohibited substance.

He also conceded that SGF-1000 cost $300 a bottle and that vet bills sent to owners disguised the use of SGF-1000 on his horses as “acupuncture and chiropractic.”

In the case of the clenbuterol-like substance, Servis admitted that on May 8, 2019, he shipped it from his barn at Monmouth to Belmont and hid it in a soda bottle concealed in a bucket of poultice, an herbal anti-inflammatory paste.

In court papers, Glavin argued that Servis was not guilty of the charges against him because prosecutors lacked evidence that SGF-1000 was performance-enhancing or contained growth factors. These considerations would make it a PED.

She also argued that none of Servis' horses ever tested positive for clenbuterol misuse.

On Friday, Glavin told Vyskocil that she planned to argue before the sentencing that Servis had been repeatedly told by his vet that SGF-1000 was legal to use.

The plea agreement states that Servis' vet repeatedly assured the trainer that SGF-1000 was “legal and not violative of racing rules as reflected in intercepted calls in June and August of 2019.”

Prosecutors argued in court papers that those who marketed SGF-1000 didn't understand what it was other than that it was undetectable in tests conducted by racing regulators.

They also contend that SGF-1000 does contain growth factors of a variety that were intentionally difficult to detect.

Williams said Servis ordered hundreds of bottles of the drug “SGF-1000,” which was compounded and manufactured in unregistered facilities.

He said Servis obtained the misbranded version of clenbuterol from convicted co-defendant New Jersey trainer Jorge Navarro. He is serving a five-year prison sentence after pleading guilty a year ago.

With Servis' plea, 23 of the 31 individuals charged have pleaded guilty. Two were convicted after trial, and two were offered deferred prosecution agreements.

The defendants included 11 Thoroughbred and Standardbred trainers and seven veterinarians.

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

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Jason Servis Expected To Plead Guilty On Friday

Trainer Jason Servis is scheduled to go before federal Judge Mary Kay Vyskocil in New York City on Friday morning at 11 a.m. ET, when he is expected to change his plea from not guilty to guilty in connection with the FBI probe into illegal horse doping that led to more than two dozen arrests of trainers, veterinarians, and drug manufacturers and suppliers in March 2020.

Servis, 65, had been scheduled to go on trial Jan. 9, 2023, at U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York. A grand jury indicted Servis with drug adulteration and misbranding conspiracy, along with mail and wire fraud. He is the last of those indicted in a multi-state investigation to have their cases resolved. The U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York prosecuted the cases, securing guilty pleas or jury convictions from the others, with the exception of one deferred prosecution agreement and several who had their charges dropped in a superseding indictment..

Specifically, prosecutors alleged Servis and others – from December 2016 through March 2020 – were “engaged in a corrupt scheme to secretly procure and distribute adulterated and misbranded PEDs and administer them to racehorses in a systematic effort to improve race performance.” The indictment said Servis worked with veterinarians Kristian Rhein and Alexander Chan to have SGF-1000 and clenbuterol illegally administered to his horses, including Grade 1 winners Maximum Security and World of Trouble. (Read about SGF-1000 here.)

The indictment included details of an intercepted phone call between Rhein and Servis after Maximum Security had been tested out of competition prior to a June 16, 2019, race at Monmouth Park. Servis was concerned the horse would test positive for SGF-1000, which had been administered shortly before the drug test sample was taken. Rhein assured Servis he had nothing to worry about, saying “They don't even have a test for it … There's no test for it in America.”

Rhein added that SGF-1000 could trigger a false positive for the permitted anti-inflammatory dexamethasone, so Servis arranged to have another veterinarian falsify records to indicate that drug had been administered to Maximum Security.

Rhein was sentenced to three years in federal prison after pleading guilty. Chan, who was scheduled to go on trial with Servis, changed his plea to guilty on Dec. 5 and is awaiting sentencing.

Servis and Navarro discussed their illegal drug use in intercepted telephone conversations and text messages that were included in the federal indictment.

On Feb. 18, 2019, Servis warned Navarro via text message that a racing official was in an area where both men allegedly stored and administered PEDs. If he not been warned by Servis, Navarro said later that day, “He would've caught our asses f–king pumping and pumping and fuming every f–king horse (that) runs today.”

On March 5, 2019, Servis told Navarro during an intercepted phone call that “I've been using it (SGF-1000) on everything almost.” Navarro responded, “Jay, we'll sit down and talk about this shit. I don't want to talk about this shit on the phone, OK?”

Navarro was sentenced to five years in prison.

The son of a jockey and brother of Kentucky Derby-winning trainer John Servis, Jason Servis worked as an exercise rider and jockey valet at Charles Town before taking out his trainer's license in 2001. His first graded stakes win came in 2008 and Firenze Fire became his first Grade 1 winner when he took the 2017 Champagne. Servis added five additional Grade 1 wins – three of them by Maximum Security, who finished first in the Grade 1 Kentucky Derby but was disqualified for interference. Maximum Security also won the $20-million Saudi Cup less than two weeks before Servis and the others were indicted. Saudi officials withheld the first-place purse from that race.

In the years prior to his indictment, Servis won races at eye-opening rates: 45 percent during Gulfstream Park's 2018-19 championship meet and 41% at Monmouth Park in 2018. Navarro had similar strike rates at Gulfstream and Monmouth.

Horseplayers and many of his fellow trainers were skeptical of the successes enjoyed by Servis and Navarro, wondering how they did it.

Now they know.

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