Feinstein Seeks Clarification From Stronach Group On Planned Closure Of Golden Gate Fields

Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) on Wednesday called on the Stronach Group to clarify its plan to close Golden Gate Fields racetrack in Berkeley, California.

“As you have noted, your decision will have profound impacts on the livelihoods of the permanent and race-day employees at Golden Gate Fields as well as regional horse owners, trainers, jockeys, and stable personnel that consider it their home track,” Feinstein wrote.

“I appreciate the steps the Stronach Group has taken in recent years to address equine safety and welfare concerns at your tracks and for your ongoing operation of Santa Anita Park. Nevertheless, your decision to close Golden Gate Fields will affect many California residents and merits further explanation.”

Full text of the letter follows:

July 26, 2023

Ms. Belinda Stronach
Chairman and President
The Stronach Group

Dear Ms. Stronach,

Following the announcement last week that you will close the Golden Gate Fields racetrack, I write seeking clarification of your transition plans, including disposition of the land and stadium.

Golden Gate Fields has hosted horse racing since 1941 and is the last remaining full-time horse racing track in Northern California. As you have noted, your decision will have profound impacts on the livelihoods of the permanent and race-day employees at Golden Gate Fields as well as regional horse owners, trainers, jockeys, and stable personnel that consider it their home track. The impending closure has prompted many questions that I request your help in answering:

  • What is your rationale for closing Golden Gate Fields and why did you choose December 2023 as the closure date?
  • Will you help employees of Golden Gate Fields find other work in the horseracing industry or elsewhere? If so, which employees and how? Will you offer them positions at the other racetracks you operate?
  • What are the plans for the land?
  • How will the closure impact the other track you operate at Santa Anita Park?

I appreciate the steps the Stronach Group has taken in recent years to address equine safety and welfare concerns at your tracks and for your ongoing operation of Santa Anita Park. Nevertheless, your decision to close Golden Gate Fields will affect many California residents and merits further explanation.

Thank you for your attention to this matter.

Sincerely,

Dianne Feinstein
United States Senator

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Attorney: Under HIWU Regulations, Trainers On Provisional Anti-Doping Suspensions Can Still Visit The Barn

Since the Horseracing Integrity & Welfare Unit (HIWU) took over drug testing and drug rules enforcement in most of American racing in May, the organization's website has become a hub for publication of pending violations and resolutions. If your local racetrack has a trainer on the list of horsemen provisionally suspended for an anti-doping violation, though, it's possible you may have seen the trainer on the rail as though everything's normal.

Alan Pincus represents provisionally-suspended Parx Racing trainers Mario Dominguez and Joseph Taylor, who multiple sources have confirmed have been in the barn area at the Bensalem, Pa., track since receiving provisional suspensions for alleged anti-doping violations. Taylor is on provisional suspension from HIWU after his runners Classy American and Cajun Cousin tested positive for methylphenidate and clenbuterol in June. Dominguez is on provisional suspension after his horse Petulant Delight tested positive for cobalt in late May.

Pincus said that his understanding from HIWU is that a provisional suspension from the organization has no impact on a trainer's state license status, which means that as far as the state is concerned, that person is not banned from the grounds. The penalty comes from the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority, which mandates the trainer may not work or enter a Covered Horse in a race.

When asked for a statement by the Paulick Report on Wednesday, HISA representatives told the publication they expected to issue clarification on the rules for provisionally-suspended persons on July 27.

Trainers can be in the barn area and can observe horses training, but can't jog or gallop the horse themselves or enter them in a race, Pincus said.

“They can do it. I don't particularly recommend it because you don't want to run afoul of [HISA],” said Pincus.

“The state doesn't care; their licenses are good.”

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Instead, Pincus said he suggests his clients move their horses to West Virginia, Louisiana, or Texas – states where a restraining order is in place, pending the results of a federal lawsuit, preventing HISA or HIWU from enforcing their regulations. Most owners prefer to keep their horses near to their existing base, he said, so many of them are transferring horses to other trainers' names.

Pincus admits it would be challenging to prove whether a trainer was giving feedback on a horse's workouts or providing instructions to former staff in a way that would resemble training. Still, he believes provisional suspensions are dealing a hard blow to trainers because they're removing the trainer's ability to enter in races. Many racing fans may point out that this allows for program training, which was a problem under the previous state-regulated enforcement of medication rules. In 2016, the Paulick Report published an investigation that revealed trainer Marcus Vitali was accessing the backstretch at Gulfstream Park with a visitor's pass while he was unlicensed and his former runners were in the name of someone else. Sources say Vitali was giving instructions to staff while horses worked out in gear bearing his initials. He was eventually excluded from the track.

Still, Pincus said HIWU's provisional suspensions are hugely punishing to trainers, since in anti-doping cases they come prior to the return of a split sample test. In the case of McLean Robertson, Pincus noted that he was provisionally suspended for an altrenogest positive but a split sample cleared him after the testing lab was unable to confirm the original finding. Robertson's last starter was July 2 and he has horses entered July 29, so he missed nearly one month.

In the case of Dominguez, Pincus said the expense of adjudication was a factor in his decision not to contest the provisional suspension in a hearing. According to Pincus, trainers are told they are liable for half the cost of the proceedings, but could be liable for the other half and the expense of HISA's attorneys, which they wouldn't be told until the end of the proceedings. For some, that's too great a financial risk.

Pincus said Dominguez's cobalt case was based on an initial test result of 33 parts per billion in blood – an amount that under ARCI guidelines would have generated a warning but no violation in some states prior to HIWU.

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Then, Pincus said, there's the possibility that some of the cases published by HIWU thus far are the result of contamination – an argument that has been made by several horsemen so far. Pincus also represents John T. Brown and Dennis VanMeter, both of whom were issued anti-doping violations for isoxsuprine. Pincus said Brown had a prescription for a pony horse to be on isoxsuprine and VanMeter shipped a horse into a stall in Brown's barn that had previously been occupied by the pony. Brown has accepted an 18-month suspension and $12,500 and shortly thereafter entered a horse at Mountaineer Park in West Virginia.

Pincus said he believes “VanMeter will succeed” in his attempt to have the anti-doping charge dropped due to contamination. (VanMeter was also issued a controlled medication violation for phenylbutazone in Templement, the same horse who tested positive for isoxsuprine.)

“They're finding little, formerly 15 to 30-day suspension substances and giving you two years,” he said. “Show me the EPO, show me the etorphine. Show me the cheating drugs.

“We're in unknown territory. Trainers used to be happy when they'd win a race. Now they're scared to death.”

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Jason Servis In Tears As Judge Issues Four-Year Prison Sentence Over Performance-Enhancing Drugs

Trainer Jason Servis was sentenced to four years in federal prison in Manhattan July 26, three years on a felony guilty plea and one year on a misdemeanor, running consecutively. The sentence was the maximum allowed per his charges and guilty plea.

He is to serve one year of supervised release after he leaves prison. His surrender date is Nov. 1.

He made a payment in court of $311,760 in forfeiture, and was ordered to pay $$163,932 restitution and a $30,000 fine.

Invited to address the court, Servis, 66, broke down in tears, before later saying, “No words can express how remorseful and sorry I am for the decisions I've made and the hurt I caused my wife and others.”

United States District Court judge Mary Kay Vyskocil suggested she would have imposed a harsher penalty had she been able to do so.

“In my judgment, more than a 48-month sentence might be more appropriate,” she stated.

“I do accept your expression of remorse,” she later added. “Relatively speaking, you're not an old man. You will have a life after you get out of prison.”

A pre-sentencing memo issued by the prosecution last week revealed new evidence that Servis was lying to owners and hiding drugs in shampoo bottles; read more in this Paulick Report story.

Servis' attorneys, in their own pre-sentencing memos, argued that the trainer was misguided by his veterinarian. In one exchange, veterinarian Dr. Alex Chan told Servis, “I'm a stickler to the rules all the time. I came from NYRA … I know all the rules and stuff … I always look out for the best interest of my clients because I'm the one doing the work … all the horses under my care they're covered, it's all legal.”

Chan would later enter a guilty plea to a felony count of adulteration/misbranding of drugs and was sentenced to 30 months in federal prison.

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

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HIWU Weekly Roundup: Trainer Suspended 18 Months Enters Horse In West Virginia

This week's update on punitive actions taken by the Horseracing Integrity & Welfare Unit (HIWU), the enforcement arm of the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority (HISA), includes an 18-month suspension and $12,500 fine for trainer John Brown.

Brown trainee Rollin On Tequila tested positive for isoxsuprine after finishing sixth in a claiming race at Thistledown on May 31. Rollin On Tequila has been disqualified from that placing and all purse money ordered redistributed; the horse is also suspended for 60 days (beginning May 31).

Brown has been training since 2014, primarily in Ohio, and has won 110 races from 1,941 starts in his career. Despite his suspension, Brown has entered a horse to race at Mountaineer Park on July 26; the West Virginia racetrack does not fall under HISA rules (neither do tracks in Texas or Louisiana, thanks to ongoing legal battles).

Also this week, a provisional suspension was dropped against trainer McLean “Mac” Robertson when a split sample did not confirm a reported positive test for the banned substance altrenogest. Altrenogest, approved for use in fillies and mares to suppress estrus and sold under the brand name Regu-Mate, reportedly was detected in the gelding Johnny Up following a June 4 victory in a $7,500 claiming race at Canterbury Park, where Robertson has been a member of the Minnesota track's Hall of Fame since 2011.

Because altrenogest is listed as a banned substance for male horses under HISA/HIWU rules, the positive triggered an automatic provisional suspension of Robertson pending confirmation of the drug in the split sample. Robertson was required to transfer the 70 horses under his care to someone not currently affiliated with his stable during the provisional suspension. Robertson's most recent start was July 2.

Nathaniel Quinonez, a one-time Robertson employee who started 49 horses in his own name from 2016 through May 4, 2023, took over the stable. Quinonez has won eight races from 26 starts at Canterbury and Delaware Park since Robertson was forced to the sidelines, including two stakes on Canterbury's Hall of Fame day July 15.

HIWU released the following statement after Robertson's provisional suspension was released: “The results of the requested B sample of Covered Horse Johnny Up did not confirm the presence of Altrenogest, a Banned Substance, which was indicated in the A sample finding. Accordingly, the Provisional Suspensions of trainer McLean Robertson and Johnny Up have been lifted, the notice of a potential Equine Anti-Doping violation has been withdrawn by the Horseracing Integrity & Welfare Unit (HIWU), and the matter has been closed.”

New Case Resolutions

Several new case resolutions have been confirmed in the past week by HIWU.

Trainers admitting to rule violations early and accepting consequences are Jeffrey Englehart, Juan Quintana, Doug Nunn, and Valrie Smith.

Englehart trainee Bold Victory finished third in an allowance race at Finger Lakes, then tested positive for methocarbamol. Bold Victory has been disqualified and all purse monies ordered redistributed; Englehart will pay a $500 fine and has 1.5 Penalty Points on his record.

Quintana trainee La Castiglione tested positive for phenylbutazone after a workout at Canterbury Park on June 13, 2023. Quintana will pay a $500 fine and has 1.5 Penalty Points on his record.

Nunn will face a 30-day suspension and pay a $5,000 fine for violating the intra-articular injection rule within 14 days of post time with trainee Smithwick's Spice. Nunn has 3 Penalty Points on his record. The horse has been disqualified from his sixth-place finish in a Delaware Park allowance optional claimer on June 9, and all purse money ordered redistributed.

Smith trainee It's Sizzling Time tested positive for triamcinolone acetonide after winning a starter optional claiming race at Parx on June 7. The horse has been disqualified and all purse monies ordered redistributed; Smith will pay a $500 fine and has 1.5 Penalty Points on her record.

A final decision was rendered in the case of trainer Carlos Munoz. Lovielee tested positive for phenylbutazone in a claiming race at Gulfstream Park on June 9 (finished second); she has been disqualified and all purse monies ordered redistributed. Munoz will pay a $500 fine and has 1.5 Penalty Points on his record.

Pending Violations – Controlled Substances

The following cases include pending violations for controlled substances, those that are permitted for therapeutic purposes (new cases in italics at top of list).

  • Trainer Arcadio Lopez – Mo Crazy Blues tested positive for flunixin after winning a claiming race at Finger Lakes on June 13.
  • Trainer Javier Hernandez – two trainees tested positive for salicylic acid
    • Chief Mystique won a claiming race at Belterra Park on June 10
    • Fast Fall won a maiden special weight at Belterra on June 10
  • Trainer Climaco Galindo-Torres – Delaney's Grace tested positive for salicylic acid after finishing eighth in a maiden claiming race at Belterra Park on June 8. The 3-year-old filly was claimed out of that race for owner/trainer John Howard, and has since finished eighth in a maiden special weight race at Belterra on July 8. That claim will be voided under HISA rules.
  • Trainer Dennis VanMeter – Templement tested positive for phenylbutazone in an allowance race at Thistledown on June 7, 2023 (finished sixth after clipping heels at the start). VanMeter is also provisionally suspended as Templement returned a positive test for the banned substance isoxsuprene in the same race.
  • Trainer James Acquilano – Sabreen tested positive for methocarbamol in a claiming race at Finger Lakes on May 31, 2023 (finished second).
  • Trainer Sandino Hernandez, Jr. – Jonas' Dream tested positive for naproxen in a maiden special weight race at Gulfstream Park on May 25, 2023 (finished first).
  • Trainer Wayne Sparling – Banco Medici tested positive for methocarbamol in a maiden claiming race at Finger Lakes on May 24, 2023 (finished first).

Pending Violations – Provisional Suspensions For Banned Substances

The following cases include pending violations for banned substances, those that are not permitted in horses (new cases in italics at top of list).

  • Trainer David Reid – Maligator tested positive for venlafaxine (an anti-depressant and nerve pain medication) after winning a claiming race at Hawthorne on June 25. The 8-year-old gelding has since finished second in a claiming race at Hawthorne on July 16.
  • Trainer Javier Morzan – Lady Liv tested positive for metformin (a commonly used prescription drug that treats diabetes) after finishing third in a starter optional claiming race at Delaware Park on June 24.
    • Moran sent a “Letter to the Editor” to The Blood-Horse this week, writing: “HIWU did not tell me the amount of the medicine found in Lady Liv's blood. They did not give me any possibility of prior defense before being sanctioned. I am simply out of the races in all jurisdictions where the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority has authority. Now I have to face this very difficult moment.”
  • Trainer Mary Pirone – Benny The Jet tested positive for altrenogest after the gelding finished fifth in a claiming race at Emerald Downs on June 24. He was claimed from that race and moved to the barn of trainer Jorge Rosales, and has since won a claiming race at Emerald on July 14. Under HISA rules, the claim will be voided.
  • Trainer Natalia Lynch – Motion to Strike tested positive for altrenogest after the gelding finished fourth in a claiming race at Monmouth Park on June 24. He was claimed from that race by owner/trainer Silvino Ramirez, and has since finished third in a claiming race at Monmouth on July 14. Under HISA rules, the claim will be voided.
  • Trainer Joseph Taylortwo runners have tested positive for both methylphenidate and clenbuterol 
    • Classy American finished second in a starter allowance at Parx on June 20
    • Cajun Cousin finished second in a claiming race at Parx on June 18. The 4-year-old filly has since won a claiming race at Parx on July 12, prior to the positive being called. Cajun Cousin was claimed out of that race by trainer Michael V. Pino for Smart Angle LLP; the claim will be voided under HISA rules.
  • Trainer Dick Clark – two runners have tested positive for methamphetamine
    • Colonel Klink finished second in an allowance optional claiming race at Prairie Meadows on June 19. The 7-year-old gelding has since raced three more times before the positive was called, finishing first in a claiming race on July 3, third in a starter allowance on July 9, and second in a claiming race on July 22.
    • My Heart's On Fire finished first in a maiden special weight race at Prairie Meadows on June 19.
  • Trainer Donald H. Buckner – In the Midst tested positive for clenbuterol after finishing fifth in an allowance race at Thistledown on June 15.
  • Trainer Lorenzo Ruiz – two runners have tested positive for the vasodilator diisopropylamine
    • American Cat tested positive after winning a $16,000 claiming race at Los Alamitos on June 25. The 4-year-old gelding has since finished third in an allowance optional claimer at Los Al on July 9.
    • Facts Matter tested positive after winning a starter allowance race at Los Alamitos on June 23. The 8-year-old gelding has since finished fifth in a claiming race at Los Al on July 8.
    • *** Ruiz is also a multiple stakes-winning Quarter Horse trainer based at Los Al, though he has not started any Quarter Horses since 2022. Since HISA/HIWU have no jurisdiction over Quarter Horse racing, whether or not Ruiz would be able to race Quarter Horses will be up to the state racing commission and/or local racetrack. Ruiz has not started any horses, Thoroughbred or Quarter Horse, since July 9.
  • Trainer Guadalupe Munoz Elizondo – Quinton's Charmer tested positive for metformin, a medication commonly prescribed in humans for type 2 diabetes, on June 11, 2023 (the New Mexico Racing Commission's Izzy Trejo confirmed that the positive test was incurred after a work before the state veterinarian in an attempt to remove Quinton's Charmer from the vet's list).
    • ***Munoz Elizondo is also a multiple graded stakes-winning Quarter Horse trainer. Since HISA/HIWU have no jurisdiction over Quarter Horse racing, Munoz Elizondo will still be able to train and race Quarter Horses in New Mexico. Trejo said that HISA gave guidance last year that jockeys suspended for whip violations on a Thoroughbred could ride in Quarter Horse races, so the NMRC has applied the same logic to a trainer with a HIWU suspension. Thus,  Munoz Elizondo is permitted to participate in Quarter Horse races. Trejo added that the commission is pushing for a state rule that will apply reciprocity at the NMRC level for HISA suspensions, but that isn't in place yet.
  • Trainer Milton Pineda – four runners have now tested positive for the vasodilator diisopropylamine – find more information in this Paulick Report story, including why a supplement may be to blame for the positives
    • Chollima won an $8,000 claiming race at Los Alamitos on June 23, 2023, after which she tested positive, and has since finished second in a $12,500 claiming race
    • Big Splash won a $16,000 waiver claiming event at Santa Anita on June 10, after which he tested positive. Big Splash has since finished third in an allowance optional claiming race at Los Alamitos on June 24.
    • Flatterwithjewels finished second in a $12,500 claiming race at Santa Anita on June 9 and was claimed by Flurry Racing Stables and trainer Phil D'Amato. The claim will be voided under HISA rules.
    • Bella Renella won a $20,000 claiming race at Santa Anita on June 2, after which she tested positive. The 6-year-old mare has since won a starter optional claiming race at Santa Anita on June 18.
  • Trainer Reed Saldana – Ice Queen tested positive for the vasodilator diisopropylamine after finishing third in a starter allowance at Santa Anita on June 16 – find more information in this Paulick Report story, including why a supplement may be to blame for the positives
  • Dr. Luis Jorge Perez, DVM – possession of levothyroxine (violation date June 9)
  • Trainer Dennis VanMeter – Templement tested positive for isoxsuprine after finishing sixth in an allowance race at Thistledown on June 7, 2023 (see above, horse also returned positive test for controlled substance phenylbutazone)
  • Trainer Jeffrey Poole – possession of levothyroxine (violation date June 2)
  • Trainer Jonathan Wong – Heaven and Earth tested positive for metformin after winning a maiden race at Horseshoe Indianapolis on June 1 (Wong told the Paulick Report he has been prescribed metformin, a commonly used prescription drug that treats type 2 diabetes in humans, since last year)
  • Trainer Ray Handal – HIWU has lifted the provisional suspension of trainer Raymond Handal, who was told June 30 a horse in his care tested positive for the banned substance zeranol, but the equine anti-doping notice has not been withdrawn. (Attorney Clark Brewster told the Paulick Report that literature shows mycotoxins found on corn or grain can produce zearalenone. Zeranol is a metabolite of zearalenone.)
  • Trainer Mario A. Dominguez – Petulant Delight tested positive for cobalt after winning a claiming race at Parx on May 24, 2023

Last week's edition of the HIWU Weekly Roundup is available here, and all public disclosures can be found on the HIWU website.

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