Watch The TRF Second Chances Program Horse Show On Oct. 21

Join us at 8 p.m. ET on Oct. 21 to “come inside” the program at Lowell Correctional Institution. Our global audience will See, Hear and Feel the magic of the horses who are changing the lives of the women who love them. This special livestream of the Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation Lowell 20th Anniversary “Horse Show” will present the horses and the women of the Second Chances program as they work together, every day, to care for one another and to build brighter futures.

Prepare to be inspired! For more than two decades, thanks to extraordinary support from the Thoroughbred industry and the Florida Department of Corrections, this unique program has been “Saving Horses and Changing Lives”. With the success of each graduate, the ripple effect on friends, family, colleagues and neighbors in society is beyond measure.

Read more about the impact of the Lowell program in this week's edition of our In Their Care series. Writer Tom Pedulla spoke with women say their lives were altered (or in one case, saved) by their powerful bonds with off-track Thoroughbreds.

Paulick Report News Editor Chelsea Hackbarth met a successful graduate of another, similar program at the Blackburn Correctional Facility in Lexington, Ky. That TRF program gave Joshua Ison the job skills he needed to launch a new career after completing his sentence. Read more here.

The livestream is set to begin at 8 p.m. ET and will be available in the embedded video player below.

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TRPB: More Than 35,000 Thoroughbreds Now Have Digital Tattoos

Less than three years after announcing a transition from the legacy lip tattoo system to a more efficient and accurate horse identification method, the Thoroughbred Racing Protective Bureau (TRPB) announced today that over 35,000 Thoroughbreds have now been Digitally Tattooed.

The Digital Tattoo is an electronic authentication confirming the identity of a horse by a trained TRPB technician.

“Every racing 2-year-old, every 3-year-old and a significant share of 4-year-olds have Digital Tattoos and by the end of 2021, we estimate that 75 percent of Thoroughbreds will enter the racetrack paddock with a Digital Tattoo,” said J. Curtis Linnell, executive vice president, TRPB. “We have 56 TRPB Technicians under contract throughout the United States and Canada and even with the COVID-19 pandemic, they have been able to inspect, document and authenticate the identity of Thoroughbreds before their first lifetime start.”

The Digital Tattoo process begins when the technician scans the horse's microchip and if correctly reported, the microchip number hyperlinks to The Jockey Club electronic registration information viewed on a tablet.

Using the foal pictures as a reference, each markings description is compared to the horse's physical markings. After the markings, color and sex of the horse are verified, the technician documents the horse by taking 12-14 digital photos. These pictures are uploaded to The Jockey Club's Registry database thus becoming part of the horse's digital record.

The TRPB technician then affixes a TRPB logo on the electronic certificate of registration. This seal indicates that the TRPB has verified the identity of the horse and certified that the Thoroughbred is digitally tattooed in the breed registry's database.

“The new system has been well received not only by horsemen but also by racing office personnel and regulatory officials,” Linnell said. “We were thrilled to see that this year's 14-race Travers Day card at Saratoga Race Course featured every horse on the card, with one lone exception, sporting a Digital Tattoo.”

Even with the success and widespread adoption of the new system to date, the TRPB is striving for improvement in two areas: increased awareness and deployment of the InCompass Solutions Digital Identifier mobile app for race day horse identification; and broader utilization by the entire horse racing industry of Digital Tattoo information.

The accuracy of the identification process starts with the breeder reporting the microchip number as part of the foal's registration.

“We can't overemphasize the importance of getting the microchip reported correctly,” said TRPB's manager of technician operations, Teena Appleby. “This is the only way our technician can start the process of authenticating the horse's identify. A microchip sitting in a desk drawer isn't helping anyone.”

“The use of the Digital Identifier mobile app is the only way to identify horses on race day,” according to Appleby.

With a username and password provided by InCompass, horse identifiers, race office personnel, barn area security and other racetrack officials may automatically access the digital tattoo file that includes the photo of the horse's face, photos of every marking, the name of the horse, the horse's color, and the certificate of foal registration from The Jockey Club.

“These individuals now have immediate access to the horse's picture ID, which is akin to a passport or driver's license and with more identification tools than they've ever had available previously,” Linnell said. “A Thoroughbred should never have to be scratched from a race because of an identification issue, or have an incorrect horse be permitted to start in a race.”

TRPB Agent Rachael Mant, based at TRPB Headquarters in Maryland, makes a weekly visit to the Fair Hill Training Center to digitally tattoo Thoroughbreds. Trainers there have embraced the new system.

“This system has been working out great,” said Mike Trombetta. “The days of lip tattoos are in the rear-view mirror.”

Trainer Keri Brion believes: “the digital ID system is way better because you can always see them. It's much easier and I much prefer it.”

Trainer Arnaud Delacour said: “Tattoos in older horses can be very hard to read and it's a big plus if we don't have to flip the lip before a race.”

Trainer Graham Motion says he wishes the Digital Tattoo system had been adopted 10 years ago.

“This system is much more up to date. It's a clearer version of identifying horses and keeping tabs on them. It's much more organized and much easier.”

Lori Wydick, paddock horse identifier for two Ohio race tracks, said: “I prefer to see the horse's identifiable markings in the photos of the horses in the Digital Identifier program. The program has current photos from their Digital Tattoos as well as the registration photos of the horses. Photos are undeniable forms of identification. Photos of cowlicks, night eyes, and any other identifiable marking is invaluable.”

The TRPB is an investigative agency formed in 1946 by the Thoroughbred Racing Associations of North America to protect the integrity of the sport.

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Jockey Mario Pino Achieves 7,000-Win Milestone At Presque Isle Downs

Jockey Mario Pino recorded his 7,000th career victory on Wednesday at Presque Isle Downs in Erie, Penn., guiding Enjoy the Music to victory for trainer S. Matthew Kintz. Pino entered Wednesday with 6,998 wins and seven mounts; the jockey won the second race aboard Gucci Gal for win number 6,999, and captured the milestone win in race four.

Pino, 60, is the 10th-leading rider in North American history, having surpassed Jorge Velazquez for that ranking in 2017. He is now 57 wins shy of the next-winningest rider, the retired Angel Cordero, Jr.

Ahead of Wednesday's card, Pino told yourerie.com he was considering retirement: “I'm a little excited and on the other hand I'm a little pressurized you know because it's coming to the last two and they always say the last one or two are the hardest ones, but yeah I'm real excited and I've had that goal for a long time.”

Born in Delaware, Pino grew up on a farm surrounded by horses. His father trained show horses for the local jumping circuit, and the farm took in client horses to board as well. Pino and his siblings were raised caring for the animals, cleaning stalls and doing all the chores necessary to keep a family farm running smoothly.

By the time he was 13 years old, Pino knew he wanted to be a jockey. He found jobs exercising Thoroughbreds at Delaware Park and later Penn National before a friend of his father took him to Belmont Park. There, he found a job working for Joe Cantey, trainer of champion Temperence Hill and multiple Grade 1 winners Majesty's Prince and Cox's Ridge.

Pino rode his first winner in January of 1979 at Bowie Race Course in Maryland, then got his next two winners in quick succession the following day. He was hooked.

Over the course of his career, Pino earned both the George Woolf (2013) and Mike Venezia Awards (2016), both of which are based on character and sportsmanship.

Other than his impeccable character, Pino may be best-known as the regular rider for Hard Spun, second in the 2007 Kentucky Derby and Breeders' Cup Classic.

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Harness Trainer, Alleged Navarro Co-Conspirator Oakes Pleads Guilty To PED Charges

Harness trainer Christopher Oakes pled guilty to one count of misbranding and drug adulteration with intent to defraud or deceive on Wednesday, when he appeared before federal judge Mary Kay Vyskocil via teleconference. According to the Thoroughbred Daily News, Oakes is the 10th of the original 27 indicted in March 2020 to plead guilty in a scheme to use performance-enhancing drugs in racehorses.

Oakes was allegedly overheard on wire taps speaking to Jorge Navarro (who was also indicted and pled guilty) about the distribution and use of performance-enhancing drugs to Thoroughbreds. Specifically, the TDN reported that Oakes and Navarro were overheard making plans to administer performance-enhancing substances to X Y Jet, who later died suddenly.

Navarro changed his plea from not guilty to guilty this summer, but has not yet been sentenced.

Oakes told Vyskocil on Wednesday: “I purchased medications from Dr. Seth Fishman and Dr. Gregor Skelton and his assistant Ross Cohen and administered the medications to the horses in my care to gain an unfair advantage.”

Oakes will be sentenced on Feb. 17, and faces up to three years in prison.

Read more at the Thoroughbred Daily News.

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