NJ Harness Driver Fined $5,000, Suspended 20 Days for Whipping Prior to 3-horse Spill

A harness driver in New Jersey–where whipping a horse to make it run faster is prohibited in Thoroughbred racing but permitted with restrictions in Standardbred races–has been fined $5,000 and suspended 20 days for whipping his pacer so indiscriminately during a race last month that the judges deemed his actions caused a three-horse spill that injured one rival horse so severely it had to be euthanized.

According to a ruling posted on the New Jersey Racing Commission (NJRC) website, driver Joe Bongiorno was in the bike behind Pat Stanley N in the seventh race on May 29 at the Meadowlands when he “failed to keep the lines reasonably taut during the race [and] displayed exaggerated movement with the whip, using more than wrist action and raising his whipping arm to a level above shoulder height.

“Mr. Bongiorno continued to use the whip to urge his horse after the horse was no longer responding,” the ruling continued. “The culmination of these actions, each of which is a violation of [New Jersey's whipping rules] placed Mr. Bongiorno in a position of being unable to respond when [his] horse stumbled and fell, unseating Mr. Bongiorno as well as two other drivers.”

According to a post-accident Twitter posting by the track, one of the horses affected by Bongiorno's actions had to be euthanized. The two others suffered scrapes, but walked back to the paddock. US Trotting News reported Bongiorno himself was evaluated at a local hospital but reportedly had no fractures.

When crafting the state's new whip rules last year, the NJRC explained in a statement why there would be distinctions between breeds:

“Jockeys who ride horses have more methods to encourage and control horses than do drivers, as the jockey is in close proximity to the horse and a jockey's hands and feet are in contact with the horses. Drivers, who have no contact with the horse, have no method to encourage a horse other than with the use of the whip. As a result, the Commission does not believe it can eliminate the use of the whip entirely as the Commission is proposing for Thoroughbred racing.”

The commission did, however, prohibit shoulder and elbow action in Standardbred races.

It was not immediately clear if Bongiorno is appealing the ruling.

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Interstatedaydream Becomes Fourth Winner for Classic Empire

1st-Belmont, $90,000, Msw, 6-25, 2yo, f, 5 1/2f, 1:05.75, ft, head.

INTERSTATEDAYDREAM (f, 2, Classic Empire–Babcock, by Uncle Mo) was backed down to 3-5 favoritism for this unveiling off a speedy string of works at Keeneland and Churchill Downs. The bay kept a close eye on the leaders from a two-wide third through a :22.95 first quarter. Wearing down the pacesetters in the lane, she was confronted by Miss Interpret (Street Sense) on her outside and the pair battled to the line with Interstatedaydream getting up by a head. She is the fourth winner for her freshman sire (by Pioneerof the Nile). The winner's dam Babcock is a half-sister to two-time Sovereign Award winner Uncaptured (Lion Heart) and MGSW Dancing Raven (Tomahawk). Babcock's only produce since the winner is a yearling filly by Broken Vow. Sales history: $105,000 Ylg '20 KEEJAN; $130,000 Ylg '20 KEESEP; $175,000 2yo '21 OBSAPR. Lifetime Record: 1-1-0-0, $49,500. Click for the Equibase.com chart or VIDEO, sponsored by TVG.

O-Flurry Racing Stables LLC; B-William D. Graham (ON); T-Brad H. Cox.

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Presque Isle Takes HBPA to Court to Keep ADW ‘Money Grab’ from Arbitration

Federal court documents filed June 24 show that Presque Isle Downs and Casino (PID) and the Pennsylvania Horsemen's Benevolent and Protective Association (PAHBPA) have been locked in an ongoing dispute over the revenue sharing of advance-deposit wagers (ADW).

The disagreement centers on allegations by the PAHBPA that over the past several years, PID–whose corporate parent is Churchill Downs, Inc., (CDI)–has been steering on-track patrons to make bets through ADW platforms like TwinSpires that are controlled by another CDI-owned entity, the Churchill Downs Technology Initiatives Company (CDTIC).

Allegedly, PID is not treating those on-property bets that come through CDTIC platforms as “on-track wagers” that would provide greater revenue for purses.

Additionally, the PAHBPA is arguing that the source market fee (derived from ADW bets made by in-state residents) that PID agreed to with CDTIC is too low in comparison to industry standards.

Because of this, according to court documents, the PAHBPA is seeking “in excess of $75,000 beyond the contractually negotiated and agreed on percentage of revenue sharing as to source market fees.”

On Feb. 3, 2020, the PAHBPA's attorney, Jan Budman II, sent a “demand for arbitration” letter to PID in an attempt to settle the matter.

“PID has breached and is currently breaching [sections of] the Live Racing Agreement as a result of patrons located at PID placing wagers through PID's 'racing vendor' and corporate affiliate CDTIC as opposed to in the racetrack enclosure at PID,” Budman wrote. “PID has perpetuated these breaches through messages and other marketing encouraging patrons to place wagers through PID's corporate affiliate CDTIC instead of in the racetrack enclosure, which, incidentally, also violates [the Pennsylvania Horse Racing Industry Reform Act].”

Although the two sides organized grievance committees to try and hash out a solution during 2020, now, more than 16 months after that demand letter was written, PID has filed a federal lawsuit that seeks to block the PAHBPA's “unsupported allegations” from going to arbitration.

According to PID's civil complaint initiated Thursday in United States District Court (Eastern District of Pennsylvania), PID also wants the PAHBPA to pay for the legal costs the racino is incurring to have the court assert in a declaratory judgment that “there is no claim(s) to submit to arbitration under the narrow arbitration clause agreed to by the parties in the Live Racing Agreement.”

“PAHBPA's asserted allegations of breach are nothing more than a money grab without legal merit,” the complaint contends. “Rather than raising questions as to PID's compliance with the terms of the Live Racing Agreement, PAHBPA's asserted allegations are an attempt to renegotiate through arbitration a long standing contractual provision, that with the benefit of hindsight and changed circumstances, they now disfavor. In essence, PAHBPA alleges that the source market fee received by PID from the collateral agreement is too low.”

The complaint continues: “PAHBPA's asserted allegations take issue with PID's collateral agreement, but the Horsemen never negotiated into the Live Racing Agreement any consent or veto rights concerning the source market fee flowing to PID from the collateral agreement. Further, the Live Racing Agreement does not set a required rate or amount for source market fees that PID must receive from a vendor….

“[P]rior to the collateral agreement, PAHBPA received no money whatsoever from a source market fee under the Live Racing Agreement. In contrast, what PAHBPA did negotiate into the Live Racing Agreement was that if PID received a source market fee from a vendor, then PAHBPA would get a fixed percentage of that source market fee. PID has paid to PAHBPA that contractually negotiated percentage of the source market fee it receives from the collateral agreement.”

It's important to note that the original version of the live racing contract between the two parties was inked 12 years prior to CDI's 2019 purchase of PID, although that document has since been amended seven times, most recently on May 1, 2021.

A TDN email to Budman seeking comment on the lawsuit on behalf of the PAHBPA did not yield a reply prior to deadline for this story.

However, in his 2020 demand letter that PID included in its court filing as an exhibit, Budman wrote that PID was not dealing in good faith with specific regard to the track and its ADW provider both being controlled by the same corporate parent.

Budman wrote that PID “attempted to exploit the language of the Live Racing Agreement by agreeing with its own corporate affiliate CDTIC to terms in the Vendor Agreement that would deprive PAHBPA benefits under the Live Racing Agreement. The payment terms under the Vendor Agreement are clearly not commercially reasonable and were not the result of good faith or arms' length negotiations…”

“[I]nstead, the Vendor Agreement is a self-serving intercompany transaction between closely related entities that was clearly designed to enrich CDI (the common parent of PID and CDTIC) at the expense of PAHBPA and its members.”

In its lawsuit, PID countered that “PID does not own the majority of CDTIC. CDTIC is a separate legal entity from PID.”

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Moonlight d’Oro on Comeback Trail

Moonlight d'Oro (Medaglia d'Oro), taken off the GI Kentucky Oaks trail with a knee chip following a visually impressive score in the GIII Las Virgenes S. at Santa Anita Feb. 6, is aiming for a return to Hall of Famer Richard Mandella's barn later this summer with an eye on a fall campaign.

“The surgery went well,” said Joe Mishak, MyRacehorse's Racing Operations Manager. “She's been doing great, filling out and looking really good. Just biding her time, which is standard operating procedure [following surgery], especially for the Mandella barn. The last 30 days or so she's been out at Bonnie Acres [in California] getting treadmill therapy building up her fitness. Hopefully in a couple of weeks if all things remain on course, she should go to an offsite facility to start training and get that foundation at the track. Then a month after that, she'll head back to the Mandella barn in early-to-mid August once she has the fitness.”

Campaigned in partnership with Spendthrift Farm, the $620,000 KEESEP yearling buy earned her diploma at third asking in her two-turn debut with a career-high 87 Beyer Speed Figure at Los Alamitos Dec. 13, then doubled up with a powerful last-to-first tally in the Las Virgenes.

Bred in Kentucky by Stonehaven Steadings, Moonlight d'Oro is a half-sister to the juvenile graded stakes-placed Olive Branch (Speightstown). Moonlight d'Oro's winning dam Venetian Sonata (Bernardini) is a full-sister to GSW Wilburn and SW & GSP La Appassionata and a half-sister to GSW Beethoven (Sky Mesa).

Any intended targets penciled in for Moonlight d'Oro's return to the races?

“We'll see where she is with her training, but it's kind of an awkward time of the year [for a 3-year-old filly to return],” Mishak said. “The surgery went well, but a little bit of extra caution gave her 120 days off rather than 90. Hopefully, she'll be coming back in the October timeframe, and at that stage, I think you're just looking for the right type of race to return in.

Mishak concluded, “She showed early in the year that she was the best 3-year-old filly on the West Coast. When she won the Las Virgenes, she didn't even have her best that day. It was rather exciting to get her to that level. I don't know if we'll make the Breeders' Cup this year–it's probably too close–but we'll have all of next year to have a really top filly in training.”

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