Townsville Bulletin

Hopes lose appeal bid on cobalt charges

- MEGAN NEIL, AAP

VICTORIAN father- and- son training partners Lee and Shannon Hope have lost their appeal over cobalt disqualifi­cations.

A judge has found both trainers guilty of administer­ing cobalt to affect the performanc­e of three horses in 2014 races.

Lee Hope was originally banned for three years and his son Shannon for five years by the Racing Appeals and Disciplina­ry Board, but they will now face a fresh penalty hearing in the Victorian Civil and Administra­tive Tribunal.

In finding the trainers guilty, Justice Greg Garde said cobalt- containing substances were administer­ed to Windy Citi Bear, Best Suggestion and Choose on or shortly before race day.

Both trainers were well aware of the unrecorded administra­tion of additional cobalt supplement­s or medication­s and intended the administra­tion to occur, the judge said in a decision released yesterday.

“I am satisfied that Shannon Hope, who had charge of the horses stabled at Seymour, was well aware that he was administer­ing or causing the administra­tion of substances that he should not be administer­ing,” Garde said.

Garde said he was satisfied that Lee Hope was well aware of what Shannon Hope was doing or arranging in terms of the administra­tion of supplement­s and medication­s on race day or close to race day.

The Hopes denied administer­ing cobalt to affect the horses’ performanc­es.

In July they pleaded guilty to a lesser administra­tion charge, blaming their feed and supplement­s regime for an inadverten­t breach of the cobalt threshold.

 ?? Lee and Shannon Hope. ??
Lee and Shannon Hope.

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