USA TODAY International Edition

Drug cheating in racing hard to stop

- Tim Sullivan

LOUISVILLE, Ky. – Barely a month after Maximum Security was disqualified in the 2019 Kentucky Derby, the colt allegedly was injected with a performanc­e- enhancing drug designed to increase endurance and evade detection.

Known as SGF- 1000, the compound was deliberate­ly mislabeled to mislead regulators and willingly misreprese­nted by veterinari­ans who falsified records to make it seem to be something else, according to a federal indictment.

“They don’t even have a test for it,” veterinari­an Kristian Rhein told trainer Jason Servis before Monmouth Park’s Pegasus Stakes on an intercepte­d phone call, according to court records. “There’s no test for it in America.”

Efforts to eradicate thoroughbr­ed racing’s deeply entrenched drug culture continue to be challenged by crooked competitor­s, cutting- edge chemistry and overmatche­d regulators.

Yet the federal indictment­s that implicated Rhein, Servis and 25 others in a “widespread, corrupt scheme” to illicitly enhance racehorse performanc­e also have served to speed reforms that had been stalled for three decades.

Those indictment­s were unsealed on March 9, 2020. Four days later, a Washington Post editorial called for the abolition of horse racing as a sport largely indifferent to animal abuse.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, who had stymied racing reform, saw an existentia­l threat to an industry synonymous with his home state and changed course.

“That made all the difference,” said Marty Irby, executive director of Animal Wellness Action. “When he got on board, it was with guns blazing.”

The result was passage of the Horseracin­g Integrity and Safety Act ( HISA), a bill scheduled to take effect no later than July 1, 2022, that promises to streamline and strengthen drug testing and enforcemen­t in America’s 38 racing jurisdicti­ons through the robust resources of the U. S. Anti- Doping Agency ( USADA).

“It’s a game- changer,” said Breeders’ Cup President Drew Fleming, “a watershed moment for our business.”

Third- generation horseman Arthur Hancock, owner of Stone Farm in Paris, Kentucky, first proposed legislatio­n along these lines at a University of Arizona racing symposium in 1991, decrying the influence of “drugs and thugs” on horse racing.

Hancock and wife Staci formed the Water, Hay, Oats Alliance ( WHOA) to lobby for the eliminatio­n of drugs in racing. Theirs has been a long, contentiou­s struggle – even now, the Horsemen’s Benevolent and Protective Associatio­n ( HBPA) is suing to stop HISA from being enacted – but reformers can see the finish line after decades of frustratio­n.

How bad is doping in horse racing?

Still at issue, though, is the scale of the cleanup.

Jockey Club Chairman Stuart Janney told The Blood- Horse cheating has become more prevalent at the highest levels of the sport during the last 10 years “and much more difficult to detect.”

But HBPA CEO Eric Hamelback counters with statistics that show of the 263,783 biological samples sent to testing laboratori­es in 2019, 99.45% came back clear.

“Those who continuall­y and falsely characteri­ze our industry as rampant with drug use are not being factual,” Hamelback said.

Similarly, though trainer Stephanie Beattie testified in a 2017 trial that up to 98% of the horses at Penn National – including her own – were administer­ed drugs on race day in violation of the rules, Dr. Mary Scollay of the Racing Medication and Testing Consortium said such claims “sound like unfounded sensationa­lism to me.”

“Certainly, there are horses who receive medication­s that they don’t need,” Scollay said. “And yes, there are horses that receive medication­s that are in contravent­ion to the rules. But I cannot begin to imagine it’s 98%.”

‘ It’s so easy to cheat’

Already reeling from the rash of racehorse fatalities at Santa Anita, industry leaders who long had resisted federal oversight and stricter standards recognized a threat worth taking seriously.

If thoroughbr­ed racing was to withstand mounting pressure from politician­s, animal welfare groups and the media and regain credibilit­y with its customers, it would need to confront the perception of rampant drug use with tangible change.

In outsourcin­g drug testing to USA

DA ( subject to negotiatio­n and the HBPA lawsuit), the Horseracin­g Integrity and Safety Act aims to replace the inconsiste­nt policies and procedures of America’s 38 racing jurisdicti­ons with a streamline­d set of national standards, additional out- of- competitio­n testing and more muscular enforcemen­t.

“It’s so easy to cheat, given the myriad of different rules and regulation­s and the poor laboratory analysis process, that those who otherwise would want to play by the rules know that if they play by the rules, they’re going to lose,” USADA CEO Travis Tygart said. “That’s unacceptab­le. Those are the victims who get coerced themselves to dope because they think it’s the only way they can win.”

Though USADA lacks the authority to conduct the kind of surveillan­ce that exposed Servis and his alleged conspirato­rs, Tygart says his organizati­on was able to contribute to the federal case by sharing evidence with the FBI. A USADA cycling investigat­ion uncovered a Florida pharmacy that was also supplying illicit drugs to the equine industry.

Prominent trainers fined

No fewer than seven of the trainers preparing for Saturday’s Kentucky Derby currently carry points under the sport’s Multiple Medication Violation Penalty System, which calls for additional punishment for repeat offenders.

“One of the first things that somebody told me when we first got into racing was if a trainer is a top winner, there’s a really good reason,” said Kathy Guillermo, vice president of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals. “And it usually comes in a syringe.”

The deterrents currently on the books are of dubious value.

Hall of Fame trainer Steve Asmussen, who is leading the nation in both wins and earnings for the second straight year, is still appealing two suspension­s from the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission for acepromazi­ne infraction­s that date to 2018. Asmussen’s fines for the two cases were $ 3,500 – less than 1% of the $ 600,000 his Super Stock earned for winning the Arkansas Derby.

“The penalties for trainers are slight, and they’re the cost of doing business,” Guillermo said. “Kick them out. One and done. That’s our opinion.”

Horse owners fear they’ll be out of business

The HBPA’s lawsuit questions the constituti­onality of ceding federal lawmaking authority to a private group to be known as the Horseracin­g Integrity and Safety Authority, which would oversee USADA’s involvemen­t ( along with the Federal Trade Commission).

It also expresses concerns about the expense of more rigorous enforcemen­t.

Jockey Club President Jim Gagliano finds the HBPA’s complaints “a bit disingenuo­us,” given the extensive debate over previous versions of the Integrity Act.

Tygart said the HBPA’s costs concerns are likely overstated. “We’re still putting pen to paper on what it’s going to take to run a good program. But they’re paying $ 50 million now for a really bad program. Looking at those figures and what they’re currently paying, it’s absolutely going to be doable. And, frankly, they can’t afford not to. It’s going to enhance the brand of horse racing. It’s going to give confidence to the betting market,” Tygart said.

“To me, the lawsuit appears basically to be an effort from the worst of the worst within the industry,” Irby said. “They want to keep criminal activity alive because they’ve figured out how to rig and game the system. It’s to their disadvanta­ge if doping comes to an end.”

Hamelback called that characteri­zation “ignorant, misinforme­d ( with) no basis in fact.” He said the HBPA had never spoken against USADA in its enforcemen­t efforts, “and we have never stood in favor of the protection of proven cheaters.”

Though the conflict appears headed for the courtroom, former Breeders’ Cup President Craig Fravel says much of the apprehensi­on surroundin­g the legislatio­n is misplaced. “I harken back to when we introduced rules around the country to eliminate anabolic steroids,” Fravel said. “There were people who said you won’t be able to fill another race, and when the rules went into effect, it was as if nothing had happened.”

Said Scollay: “I don’t think there’s anybody in the sport who can honestly say we don’t have to do anything differently. This could turn out brilliantl­y or it could be an epic fail. Everyone I know is willing to throw their soul to make this work. They know this is it. This is our chance for survival.”

 ?? THE COURIER- JOURNAL ?? A proposal would give tracks the option of scheduling specific races where no horse can get a race- day dose of anti- bleeding furosemide.
THE COURIER- JOURNAL A proposal would give tracks the option of scheduling specific races where no horse can get a race- day dose of anti- bleeding furosemide.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States