NYRA: Hearing For Marcus Vitali Scheduled For March 1

A scheduling conference on Oct. 13 revealed that NYRA-appointed hearing officer Robert Smith has set March 1, 2022 as the date for trainer Marcus Vitali's disciplinary hearing to begin, reports bloodhorse.com.

The New York Racing Association issued a statement of charges and notice of hearing to both Vitali and trainer Bob Baffert on Sept. 10, 2021. The charges include both conduct detrimental to the best interests of racing and conduct detrimental to the business interests of NYRA.

NYRA's public statement from that day reads, in part: “NYRA contends that Mr. Baffert and Mr. Vitali have engaged in conduct that is detrimental to the best interests of the sport of Thoroughbred racing or potentially injurious to the health or safety of horses or riders. Further, as detailed in the respective statements of charges, this conduct warrants revocation or suspension of their right to train horses, enter races, or engage in any racing-related activity at all NYRA properties including Aqueduct Racetrack, Belmont Park and Saratoga Race Course.”

Vitali raced just one horse at a NYRA track this year, sending out Red Venus to finish last of seven in the fourth race on July 22 at Saratoga. After not starting any horses from July 21, 2019, until Jan. 4, 2021, Vitali has saddled 14 winners in 2021, primarily racing at Turf Paradise, Lone Star, and Presque Isle.

NYRA's statement of charges against Vitali begins: “From between in or about 2010 and in or about 2020, Respondent amassed an extensive record of medication violations, lengthy suspensions, improperly using 'program' or 'paper' trainers during suspensions and obstructing an investigation into alleged wrongdoing. In the past five years, Respondent was denied entry, ejected and/or had license applications denied by regulators of Thoroughbred racing in Florida, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, New York and Delaware; and was sanctioned by the Jockey Club for violating a racing statute, rule or regulation relating to prohibited or restricted drugs, medications or substances seven times in a single year.”

Vitali has made headlines many times over the years, first for numerous therapeutic medication violations, then for avoiding sanctions for positive post-race drug tests by turning in his license in FloridaIn 2016, reporting by the Paulick Report revealed Vitali was training horses at Gulfstream Park under the name of Allan Hunter; Vitali and Hunter were subsequently barred from the entry box there and at Tampa Bay Downs. Vitali reapplied for a trainer's license in Florida, where state officials credited him with time served for his medication overages.

The Jockey Club denied Vitali Stud Book privileges for two years, starting January 1, 2017, for being determined to have violated on seven occasions a racing statute, rule or regulation relating to prohibited or restricted drugs, medications or substances in a Thoroughbred on seven occasions within a 365-day period.

Vitali sent out just 29 starters in 2017, mostly at Gulfstream and Gulfstream Park West, but returned with a stronger hand in 2018, with 334 starters, also mostly in South Florida.

In 2019, Vitali's license was suspended for one year when he interfered with a search conducted by Delaware Park security of his employee's dorm, bursting into the room and absconding with an object which was never recovered. Vitali claimed the object was a container of marijuana. His employee at the time said it was an unlabeled vial containing a clear liquid of some type which Vitali asked her to keep in her refrigerator. He has completed that suspension.

In 2020, the Maryland Jockey Club told the Paulick Report that it had given trainer Wayne Potts one week to vacate his barn at Laurel Park, where he keeps 30 horses, after track officials say they discovered Potts was program training for Vitali. Vitali reportedly could not get stalls at racetracks in the area. Maryland officials said they discovered the connection between the two when horses based at Rising Sun Training Center in New Jersey were entered under Potts's name at Laurel and turned up with health certificates that had been altered to white out Vitali's name. A cluster of horses appeared at Rising Sun around that time from longtime Vitali clients, primarily from Florida. That cluster included Be Gone Daddy.

After Potts was told to vacate Laurel, Vitali applied for a training license in Illinois afterwards but was unsuccessful in receiving one. The horses formerly based at Rising Sun ran at Arlington Park and Hawthorne under trainer Dino DiZeo. Many of the same group from Rising Sun posted workouts at Turf Paradise in the days before Vitali saddled his first runner there.

The post NYRA: Hearing For Marcus Vitali Scheduled For March 1 appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

108-1 Winner of G3 Turf Monster Tests Positive For Levamisole

Hollywood Talent, the 10-year-old gelding who posted a 108-1 shocker in the Grade 3, $300,000 Turf Monster Stakes at Parx Racing on the Pennsylvania Derby undercard in Bensalem, Pa., on Sept. 25, has tested positive for levamisole, the Pennsylvania State Horse Racing Commission has confirmed. Hollywood Talent is trained by Juan Vazquez and owned by King Star LLC.

Levamisole, a Class 2 drug with Category B penalties under the Association of Racing Commissioners International guidelines, is found in commercial dewormers for cattle, pigs and sheep and can be used as an immunostimulant in horses or for treatment of Equine Protozoal Myelitis. The drug can metabolize to aminorex, a potent stimulant.

A split sample has yet to be tested. If the drug's presence is confirmed in the split sample, stewards will conduct a hearing on the matter to consider sanctions against the horse and his trainer.

Graded stakes placed at age 2 and third in the 2019 Turf Monster, Hollywood Talent, came into the five-furlong Turf Monster with 11 wins from 51 lifetime starts. He was claimed for $8,000 in September 2020 out of what was his most recent victory. The Pennsylvania-bred Talent Search gelding was transferred to the barn of Vazquez a few months later and posted a second- and third-place finish from five starts. Far back early under Ricardo Santana Jr., Hollywood Talent rallied late to win the Turf Monster by 1 1/4 lengths over California invader Beer Can Man, paying $219.20 on a $2 mutuel.

While any subsequent disqualification would not affect the pari-mutuel payoffs, the owners of Beer Can Man – Little Red Feather Racing and Sterling Stables – would stand to gain an additional $112,000 in purse money should their 3-year-old Can the Man colt be elevated to first place. The Turf Monster was not a Breeders' Cup Win and You're In Breeders' Cup Challenge Series race, but Beer Can Man's connections have indicated the Mark Glatt trainee will be pre-entered in the G1 Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint Nov. 6 at Del Mar, where he won the G3 Cecil B. DeMille Stakes last November.

The post 108-1 Winner of G3 Turf Monster Tests Positive For Levamisole appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Department Of Homeland Security Orders Halt To Mass Worksite Immigration Raids

Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas on Tuesday directed the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP), and U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) to stop mass worksite raids and to take actions to promote a fair labor market by supporting more effective enforcement of wage protections, workplace safety, labor rights and other employment laws and standards.

In accordance with a memorandum issued by Secretary Mayorkas, ICE, CBP, and USCIS will develop and update policies to enhance the Department's impact in supporting the enforcement of employment and labor standards. The agencies must also develop strategies for prioritizing workplace enforcement against unscrupulous employers and, through the exercise of prosecutorial discretion, facilitate the participation of vulnerable workers in labor standards investigations. The memorandum also calls for broader and deeper mechanisms for coordination with interagency partners to enforce worker protections.

“This is welcome news for the many horse industry businesses and employers, including trainers who pay close attention to labor laws,” said NTRA President and Chief Executive Officer Alex Waldrop.

The complete text of the memo can be found here.

The post Department Of Homeland Security Orders Halt To Mass Worksite Immigration Raids appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Sam Houston Boosts Purse For Houston Ladies Classic To $400,000 In 2022

Sam Houston Race Park will kick off its 2022 live racing season on Thursday, Jan. 6 with an expanded 50-day Thoroughbred meet.

The 2022 Thoroughbred Stakes schedule will offer $2,275,000 in purses. Its Houston Racing Festival is set for Sunday, January 30 headlined by the Houston Ladies Classic (G3) and the John B. Connally Turf (G3).  Inaugurated in 2013, the Houston Ladies Classic was formed to serve as the marquee racing event for Sam Houston's Thoroughbred meet. Now in its tenth running, the mile and one-sixteenth Houston Ladies Classic continues to produce exceptional champions that make an impact on the national radar throughout the year.

St. George Stable's Letruska continues to deny her rivals in graded stakes competition across the United States. Following her commanding victory in the Houston Ladies Classic, the 5-year-old mare by Super Saver has won five stakes, including four Grade 1 titles. She currently ranks second in the NTRA Top Thoroughbred Poll, a weekly salute to the ten leading Thoroughbreds in North America and will compete next in the Grade 1 Breeders' Cup Distaff at Del Mar.

The purse for the Houston Ladies Classic has been raised from $300,000 to $400,000 for the coming year and officials are hopeful that the North American Graded Stakes committee will boost its status from the Grade 3 level when announcement is made later this year.

The Houston Racing Festival also includes the Grade 3, $200,000 John B. Connally Turf Cup, the $100,000 Pulse Power Turf Sprint, the $75,000 Jersey Lilly Turf Stakes and $75,000 Stonerside Sprint. The $200,000 Texas Turf Mile for three-year-olds has attracted full field for the last two years and has been renamed as the Bob Bork Texas Turf Mile.

Bob Bork was a respected racing executive who joined Sam Houston Race Park as senior vice president and general manager in 1995 and was promoted to president in 2002. He passed away peacefully at his home in Houston on June 11, 2021 at the age of 83.

Dwight Berube, who worked for Bork throughout his Sam Houston Race Park tenure, is now the racetrack's vice president and general manager.

“Bob Bork set a tremendous foundation for the growth of Sam Houston Race Park when he was hired in 1995,” said Berube. “Throughout his 12-year tenure, he was admired by horsemen, horseplayers and employees and initiated many programs that have been emulated by racetracks across the country. We look forward to honoring him on the premier day of our upcoming racing season.”

Opportunities for Texas-breds will be plentiful in the upcoming meet with 14 Texas-bred stakes. All seven stakes races on Texas Champions Day will run with purses of  $100,000.

Frank Hopf, who was recently promoted to Sam Houston Race Park's Assistant General Manager, is eager for racing to return in January.

“Over the past three years, we have received tremendous support from all of the stakeholders in Texas and the horseplayers have responded to the improved racing product,” said Hopf. “The goal is to build on the positives from 2021 and continue to enhance Texas racing.'

Additionally, Hopf also announced that both the Houston Ladies Classic (G3) and the John B. Connally Turf (G3) will run Lasix-free in 2022.

2022 Sam Houston Race Park Thoroughbred Stakes Schedule

Thursday, January 20, 2022             Clarence Scharbauer, Jr. Texas Stallion Stakes Series

$75,000 My Dandy – 3yo – 5 ½ Furlongs

$75,000 Darby's Daughter – 3yo F – 5 ½ Furlongs

Sunday, January 30, 2022                            Houston Racing Festival – Over $1,000,000 in Purses

$400,000 Houston Ladies Classic (G3) – 4&up F&M – 1 1/16 Mile

$200,000 John B. Connally Turf (G3) – 4&up – 1 1/2 Mile (T)

$200,000 Bob Bork Texas Turf Mile- 3YO -1 Mile (T)

$100,000 Pulse Power Turf Sprint – 4&up – 5 Furlongs (T)

$75,000 Jersey Lilly Turf – 4&up F&M – 1 1/16 Mile (T)

$75,000 Stonerside Sprint – 4&up – 6 Furlongs

Saturday, February 19, 2022                       Texas Preview Day for Texas-breds

$75,000 Jim's Orbit – 3yo – 6 Furlongs

$75,000 Two Altazano – 3yo F – 6 Furlongs

$75,000 H-Town – 4 YO & up 7 Furlongs

$75,000 Miss Bluebonnet Turf – 4&up F&M – 1 Mile (T)

$75,000 Houston Turf – 4&up – 1 1/16 Miles (T)

Saturday, February 26, 2022                       Texas Arabian Night

$30,000-added Texas Six Shooter (G3) – 4 &5 yo – 7 Furlongs

$30,000-added Yellow Rose (G3) – 4 &5 yo F&M – 7 Furlongs

Saturday, March 19, 2022                            Darley Night

$30,000 Darley Distaff – 4 yo & up F&M – 7 Furlongs

$30,000 Darley Sprint – 4 yo & up – 7 Furlongs

Saturday, March 26, 2022                            Texas Champions Day for Texas-breds

$100,000 Bara Lass Stakes – 3yo F – 6 Furlongs

$100,000 Groovy Stakes – 3yo – 6 furlongs

$100,000 Richard King – 4&up – 1 1/8 Mile (T)

$100,000 San Jacinto – 4&up F&M – 1 1/16 Mile (T)

$100,000 Spirit of Texas – 4&up – 6 Furlongs

$100,000 Yellow Rose Stakes – 4&up F&M – 6 furlongs

$100,000 Star of Texas – 4&up -1 Mile

James Leatherman will serve as racing secretary for the Thoroughbred live racing season and the 25-day Sam Houston Race Park Quarter Horse meet which will run from Friday, April 22 through Saturday, June 18. Stall applications for the upcoming Thoroughbred season are due by Wednesday, November 3.  The Sam Houston Race Park barn area will open on Friday, December 3 with training hours set to commence on Monday, December 6. The first condition book is available on equibase.com and further information about the season can be accessed at shrp.com.

Sam Houston Race Park is Houston's premier racing and entertainment facility, located just 15 miles from downtown Houston.  The Park offers a variety of attractions including a Suite Level featuring luxurious suites overlooking the racetrack and accommodating groups from 20 to 300 people, The Pavilion Centre, and award-winning dining options at the Winner's Circle Restaurant and the Jockey Club.  For more information on upcoming live racing, shows, events and tickets, please visit www.shrp.com.

The post Sam Houston Boosts Purse For Houston Ladies Classic To $400,000 In 2022 appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights