Former Owner of Top Canterbury Stable Imprisoned for 4 1/4 Years for ‘Ponzi’ Fraud

Jason Dodd Bullard, who was accused of perpetrating an eight-year “Ponzi” scheme that bilked friends and investors out of $3.1 million that he spent, in part, on building a 24-horse Thoroughbred stable based at Canterbury Park, got sentenced to 4 1/4 years in federal prison Oct. 12. The order out of United States District Court of Minnesota also includes a mandate that Bullard repay what he stole from his victims.

Bullard's stable, Empire Racing, LLC, was the co-winningest owner in terms of victories at Canterbury in 2019. The outfit finished third in wins there in 2021 even though the Minnesota State Racing Commission suspended his license that September when the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) charged Bullard with felony wire fraud. A judge subsequently ordered the Empire horses to be placed under receivership.

Bullard, 59, admitted in a pre-sentencing report that he once lived “high on the hog” on the money of as many as 200 victims.

But, Bullard wrote, since pleading guilty and entering into a consent judgment that has already paid back $1 million, he now “lives in a small apartment in Louisville, hundreds of miles away from his wife and kids, trying to make a small transportation business work.” He added that he wants to pay back to victims the full court-ordered $3.1 million amount, and “do what he can to right his wrongs.”

Federal prosecutors depicted Bullard differently in their own pre-sentencing report filed with the court:

“For several years before 2014, Jason Bullard engaged in what he described as foreign currency investing. There is a lack of clear evidence what he was actually doing, but there is no doubt that the returns he reported to investors were illusory by the time 2014 arrived,” the feds stated.

“By all accounts, Bullard's outward lifestyle reflected success; the investors sure thought so,” the prosecution's report continued. “But in 2014, Bullard made a fateful choice: instead of coming clean and telling his investors that his program did not work, he took the easy and greedy way out. He continued to tell investors a lie–that his foreign currency program, which no longer existed, was successful. And he continued to accept investments based on this lie.

“Bullard's scheme did not end because he got a conscience or ran out of investors,” the feds stated. “It was an investigation by the SEC that brought his reckless and unlicensed scheme to a close.

“Bullard spent their money on virtually everything but what he said he would,” the feds stated. “He and his family spent hundreds of thousands of dollars to support a comfortable lifestyle, financed a horse racing stable among other things, and in 2015 bought a large, beautiful house across from a lake in Shakopee,” the city where Canterbury is located.

Ponzi-styled fraud is named after the 1920's con artist Charles Ponzi, although the concept itself is centuries old. It involves a swindler luring investors with claims of being able to deliver outrageously fantastic returns on opaque or difficult-to- understand business deals, with the fraudster initially paying back investors only by recruiting new speculators and their money into the scheme in a “robbing Peter to pay Paul” fashion.

Similar to a “pyramid scheme,” once the pool of available suckers dries up, the operation crumbles and the deceit becomes evident to investors left with nothing. Yet Ponzi bilking often goes unreported to law enforcement, primarily because investors can be embarrassed about admitting they were suckered into a swindle.

Bullard's ownership stats on Equibase date to 2014, but Empire Racing didn't come into being until 2016, when the feds stated that the Ponzi scheme had already been operational for two years.

Empire had a 147-132-106 record and amassed $2,446,965 in earnings from 734 starts. The stable was ranked 56th in North America for victories in 2021, 30th in 2020, and 24th in 2019.

Beyond being a seasonal mainstay at Canterbury, Empire Racing also competed at tracks in the southwest, the mid-Atlantic, and in Florida.

The Facebook page for Empire Racing remains active, but it hasn't been updated since its last horses raced at Canterbury in 2021.

“Our goal at Empire Racing is to give everyone who wants to invest with us, a unique and memorable experience,” one Facebook recruitment pitch stated.

Bullard must report to prison Dec. 12.

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Horse Racing Women’s Summit Videos Available

Video recordings from the 2023 Horse Racing Women's Summit are now available. Access to the videos is available by making a contribution to the HRWS “Pay It Forward” scholarship program, which provides tickets to upcoming HRWS events to those who would not otherwise be able to attend. A contribution of at least $25 is suggested. To access the recordings, please visit the HRWS home page at www.womeninracingsummit.com.

The second annual Horse Racing Women's Summit was held Sept. 28-30 at Santa Anita Park and hosted women and men from around the country to connect and empower women in the horse racing industry.

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Pound for Pound to Blue Star Racing

Multiple stakes winner Pound for Pound (Redding Colliery–Buttercup's Song, by Unbridled's Song) has joined the stallion roster at Blue Star Racing in Scott, Louisiana. The 8-year-old stallion, who was named Louisiana's champion 2-year-old in 2017, was a three-time stakes winner at Fair Grounds. On the board in 20 of 29 starts–including 10 stakes races–he won nine times and earned $507,958.

“We are thrilled to add a local Louisiana legend and Champions Day classic winner to our stallion roster,” said Dex Comardelle of Blue Star Racing. “With new legislation raising purses across the state, along with breeders' awards boosted to 25%, now is the time for breeders to invest in Louisiana.”

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Arcangelo to Lane’s End on Retirement

Blue Rose Farm's Arcangelo (Arrogate–Modeling, by Tapit), a likely favorite for the upcoming GI Breeders' Cup Classic, will enter stud at Lane's End Farm at the conclusion of his racing career. The gray went to the head of the sophomore division with victories in the GI Belmont S. and GI Travers S. He also captured this year's GIII Peter Pan S.

“It has been a surreal experience to own a horse of this magnitude,” said owner Jon Ebbert. “The day I laid eyes on him at the yearling sale, I said to myself that this is the most beautiful horse I have ever seen. I'm so blessed the way everything unfolded and so appreciative of my team. To win the Belmont, the Travers and looking as the possible favorite in the Breeders' Cup is incredible. From the beginning of this journey, I tried to make every right decision for this horse, and now I have another important one to make. Upon his retirement, I've chosen Lane's End as the perfect fit for his stallion career.”

Trainer Jena Antonucci, who became the first woman to saddle the winner of a Triple Crown race when Arcangelo captured the Belmont, added, “Having the opportunity to steward Arcangelo thus far in his racing career has been the absolute blessing of a lifetime, for which I will be eternally grateful for. Watching him grow into his mental and physical greatness has been remarkable. We will be excited to see the talent of his progeny and watching Arcangelo pass along his innate ability, talent, and desire to be a champion.”

By champion Arrogate, the sire of five Grade I winners in his brief career at stud, Arcangelo was bred by Don Alberto Corporation. His dam Modeling, a $2.85-million Keeneland November broodmare purchase, is a half-sister to Streaming (Smart Strike), winner of the GI Hollywood Starlet S. She hails from the family of broodmare of the year and prolific producer Better Than Honour, the dam of back-to-back Belmont winners Rags to Riches and Jazil.

“Arcangelo's historic 3-year-old campaign fits a profile that we are very familiar with on our stallion roster,” said Lane's End's Bill Farish. “There's no doubt that Arrogate's brief career at stud has had a major impact on racing and the opportunity to stand a Classic-winning son of his with such a deep pedigree makes Arcangelo an exciting and unique prospect for Lane's End.”

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