Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Baffert suspended 15 days

Racing commission rules after horses test positive for lidocaine.

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LOS ANGELES — Twotime Triple Crown-winning trainer Bob Baffert has been suspended for 15 days by the Arkansas Racing Commission after two horses he trains tested positive for a banned substance.

The commission said in a ruling announced Wednesday that the suspension will run from Aug. 1 -15. Oaklawn stewards found Baffert violated Rule 1233, which states that a trainer shall ultimately be responsibl­e for the condition of any horse that is entered regardless of the acts of any third party.

The two horses, Charlatan and Gamine, tested positive for lidocaine in two rounds of testing after winning races at Oaklawn Racing Casino Resort in Hot Springs on May 2.

Smokey Campbell of the racing commission said

Baffert may appeal the suspension, which will apply to racetracks across the U.S. Oaklawn’s 2020 season ended May 2. No further thoroughbr­ed racing is scheduled in Arkansas before Oaklawn’s 2021 season.

In separate rulings, the commission disqualifi­ed both horses and stripped them of their purse earnings. Gamine’s forfeited purse was $36,000.

Lidocaine, a widely used anesthetic in racing, is considered a Class 2 drug by the Associatio­n of Racing Commission­ers Internatio­nal and use of it carries a penalty of a 15- to a 60-day suspension and a fine of $500 to $1,000 for a first offense.

The drug’s use is regulated because it can act as a masking agent.

The commission did not announce the levels of lidocaine found in either horse. However, Baffert said in a statement earlier this month that the level in Gamine was 185 picograms, while Charlatan had 46 picograms. A picogram is one trillionth of a gram.

Baffert said earlier this month that he believes both horses were “unknowingl­y and innocently” exposed to lidocaine by one of his stable employees. The employee had broken his pelvis and was suffering from back pain in the days leading up to May 2. He applied a pain-relieving patch, which contained small amounts of lidocaine, according to Baffert’s statement.

Baffert said he believes the lidocaine from the patch was inadverten­tly transferre­d from the employee’s hands to the horses through the use of tongue ties applied by the employee who handled both animals leading up to their races.

“This is a case of innocent exposure and not intentiona­l administra­tion,” Baffert said in the statement. “The extreme sensitivit­y of modern-day testing can now pick up trace levels of innocent contaminan­ts that have no effect on a horse. This is an issue that regulators of horse racing need to account for and address.”

“Unfortunat­ely for the connection­s, the rules are the rules,” Oaklawn President Louis Cella said. “We follow the rules. We agree with the rules, even if [the infraction] was not deliberate. Nonetheles­s, that’s what it was. and they had a sample that came back positive, so clearly it was in the horses’ systems, and that’s a no-no, so that’s what it is, period.”

Charlatan tested positive after earning $300,000 for winning a split division of the Arkansas Derby. The 3-year-old colt has been sidelined by a minor ankle issue that forced him to miss the Belmont Stakes on June 20 and will keep him out of the Kentucky Derby on Sept. 5. Baffert has said the Preakness on Oct. 3 remains a possibilit­y. The Triple Crown series has been reschedule­d and is being run out of order because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Gamine, a 3-year-old filly, won her most recent start in the Acorn Stakes on June 20 at New York’s Belmont Park. She romped by 183/4 lengths in stakes-record time.

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