TJCIS President Carl Hamilton Retires; Tim Leith Promoted

Carl Hamilton, since 1994 the president of The Jockey Club Information Systems (TJCIS), has retired as of Dec. 31, 2022. Hamilton will remain in role as chairman of BloodHorse and will continue to represent The Jockey Club on a variety of national and international committees related to the International Federation of Horseracing Authorities (IFHA) and the Society of International Thoroughbred Auctioneers (SITA). Matt Iuliano will be nominated for election as president of TJCIS and continue as executive director and executive vice president of The Jockey Club.

“Carl's leadership of TJCIS has been exceptional,” said James L. Gagliano, president and COO of The Jockey Club. “The advancements to our information services and evolution of technology systems to meet the demands of a global marketplace are a tribute to Carl's deep understanding of the industry. Carl will continue to be available as a consultant to the many important initiatives of TJCIS in 2023.”

Hamilton joined TJCIS in 1990 as the vice-president of the consulting division. He previously owned Hamilton Software, a software consulting firm that developed industry-leading farm management software packages and provided consulting services to Thoroughbred-related organizations. When TJCIS acquired a controlling interest in BloodHorse in 2015, Hamilton was appointed chairman.

Tim Leith was promoted to the role of senior vice president of TJCIS this month. Leith will execute short- and long-term plans for the company and continue to oversee product development efforts of the company's growth initiatives.

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Eclipse Finalists To Be Unveiled on FDTV Jan. 7

The finalists in 11 equine and five human divisions for the 2022 Eclipse Awards will be announced live on FanDuel TV Saturday, Jan. 7 at 11:30 a.m. ET, the National Thoroughbred Racing Association, National Turf Writers And Broadcasters (NTWAB), and Daily Racing Form announced Thursday.

Eclipse Awards are voted on by members of the NTRA, represented by member racetrack racing officials and Equibase field personnel, NTWAB, and Daily Racing Form, and are produced by the NTRA. The announcement of the Eclipse Awards finalists on FanDuel TV is sponsored by Keeneland and John Deere.

The Eclipse Awards ceremonies are scheduled for Thursday, Jan. 26, at The Breakers in Palm Beach, FL, and will also be televised by FDTV. The evening will begin with the Keeneland Red Carpet show at 6:30 p.m. ET, hosted by Todd Schrupp and Christina Blacker, followed by the awards ceremony at 7:30 p.m. ET. The ceremony, which will be streamed on additional outlets, will culminate with the announcement of the 2022 Horse of the Year. Finalists in the Horse of the Year category also will be announced earlier that evening.

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Baffert ‘Risks Losing Clients’ Without Timely Hearing On Derby Status

Three weeks after renewing his federal court fight to reverse a corporation's ban on being able to train horses in the GI Kentucky Derby and GI Kentucky Oaks, Bob Baffert on Wednesday let the judge in the case know that time is of the essence in scheduling his hearing on a preliminary injunction, because the races that award significant qualifying points for Derby and Oaks eligibility are quickly approaching.

Baffert's legal team filed a Jan. 4 notice in United States District Court (Western District of Kentucky) explaining that the May 5 Oaks and May 6 Derby “furnish the exigency that warrants a preliminary injunction.”

The filing continued: “Baffert needs to notify his client base whether they will be able to continue using his services for the 2023 Kentucky Derby, the 2023 Kentucky Oaks, and the respective qualifying races.

“As the 2023 Kentucky Derby and Oaks draw closer, Baffert risks losing more clients due to CDI's edict of suspension even if he ultimately prevails on the merits. A hearing date on or about Feb. 1, 2023, is therefore agreeable.”

In June 2021, Churchill Downs, Inc. (CDI), the gaming company that controls the Derby, Churchill Downs, and five other Thoroughbred tracks, ruled Baffert off from its properties for two years in the wake of Baffert's trainee, Medina Spirit, testing positive for betamethasone, a Class C drug, after crossing the finish wire first in that year's Derby.

Citing that drug finding and a spate of other pharmaceutical overages in Grade I races around the same time, CDI told Baffert he would be ineligible to race at its tracks until after the 2023 Derby, and that any horse that raced under his training license would not be eligible to accrue qualifying points to get into the 2022 or 2023 Derbies.

Last February, Baffert fought in federal court to reverse that CDI ban, but because he had to serve a still-under-appeal suspension imposed by the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission, that made the litigation moot for the 2022 Derby. But this fresh motion for an injunction that got filed Dec. 15, 2022, is actually a part of that same lawsuit.

“Points from qualifying races increase substantially beginning in mid-February, with fifty-point races contested at CDI-operated Fairgrounds Racetrack in Louisiana on Feb. 18,” Baffert's filing stated.

“Races carrying the highest number of qualifying points (100 points) begin in March, including at Fairgrounds and CDI-operated Turfway Park,” the filing stated.

If Baffert were to win an injunction to be able to race at CDI's tracks, recent history shows that the likelihood of him sending any Derby or Oaks contenders to race at either Fair Grounds or Turfway is low.

According to DRF's Formulator tool, Baffert has not started a single horse, at any level, at either Fair Grounds or Turfway in at least the last five years, which is as far back as the database goes.

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HBPA Rips HISA’s Request for ‘Emergency’ Court Action

The National Horsemen's  Benevolent and Protective Association (NHBPA) and 12 of its affiliates have filed a legal challenge to a Jan. 3 “emergency” motion made by the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act (HISA) Authority that had asked for the United States Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals to vacate its recent HISA unconstitutionality order.

In essence, the horsemen's opposition to the request for emergency treatment stated that no pressing need or harm exists to speed up what would usually be a full 10 days for the NHBPA and other co-plaintiffs from the underlying lawsuit to respond to the motion to vacate the unconstitutionality order.

In the spring of 2022, the Fifth Circuit court had taken this case on appeal from a Mar. 31, 2022, ruling out of U.S. District Court (Northern District of Texas) that affirmed HISA's constitutionality by stating “the law as constructed stays within current constitutional limitations as defined by the Supreme Court…”

Then on Nov 18, a Fifth Circuit panel overturned the lower court's decision by ruling that HISA was indeed unconstitutional because it “delegates unsupervised government power to a private entity,” and thus “violates the private non-delegation doctrine.”

But on Dec. 29, President Biden signed into law a massive, year-end spending bill that included a small bit of language inserted by HISA supporters in Congress that amended the operative language of HISA to fix the constitutional defect the Fifth Circuit had identified.

The passage of that law prompted the HISA Authority's Jan. 3 motion asking the Fifth Circuit to “vacate its opinion and the judgment of the Court forthwith to prevent the serious harms that mount each day [and to] rehear this case in light of the intervening congressional amendment.”

Later on Tuesday (beyond TDN's deadline for this original story), the NHBPA filed its objection to the “emergency” nature of the motion.

“[T]he Authority Appellees come to this Court–on the very last day of their unusually long window to petition for rehearing–and demand that it reverse its prior decision, vacate its opinion, and issue a new opinion and the mandate 'forthwith,' namely, by Jan. 13, 2023. No crisis or irreparable harm justifies this accelerated treatment or a rushed briefing schedule that shortens Appellants' time to respond to the motion.

“The Authority Appellees have had since at least Dec. 5, 2022, to formulate their legal strategy (that being the first day the potential amendment was publicly reported in the news; it is possible the Authority knew much earlier). They have had since at least Dec. 20, 2022, when the omnibus language was first made public, to work on drafting the particulars of their motion (again, they may have seen it before it was made public, or even had a hand in writing the amendment's language).”

At a later point, the NHBPA filing continued: “[T]his is not a motion that can be dealt with in a quick two or three pages, like a motion for an extension of time to file a brief or hold a case in abeyance. This is a motion that seeks to vacate a published opinion of this Court. Such an important motion, in such an important case no less, deserves the full time authorized for a thoughtful, thorough response.

“Appellees point to no crisis or irreparable harm that justifies shortening the normal schedule. … Appellees do not even try to show 'irreparable harm,' even though this Circuit's rule for emergency motions requires that the motion 'state the nature of the emergency and the irreparable harm the movant will suffer if the motion is not granted.'

“If anything, this entire episode once again prompts the question Appellants have been asking all along: Who is really driving the train here, the Authority or the [Federal Trade] Commission? It is the Authority, not the Commission, that…is now filing the motion to vacate and the petition for rehearing. It is the Authority, not the Commission, asking this Court to take a decision that was briefed, argued, and decided over the course of months and toss it all aside in 10 days.”

The NHBPA's filing summed up: “The entire narrative only confirms that the Commission lacks any independent policy interest in the Act's administration or survival; it sees itself as humble minister of everyone else's will.”

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