The Cairns Post

Corruption inquiry begins

- LEO SCHLINK

ALMOST 30 weeks after float driver Greg Nelligan was allegedly caught doping Lovani at Flemington, the Racing Appeals and Disciplina­ry Board will today hear the sensationa­l details behind Australia’s biggest racing corruption inquiry.

Group 1-winning trainers Robert Smerdon, Tony Vasil and Stuart Webb, fellow trainers Liam Birchley and Trent Pennuto and former Aquanita employees Greg and Denise Nelligan and Danny Garland face 271 counts of alleged cheating over a seven-year period.

Investigat­ors suspect the 2015 Melbourne Cup could have been compromise­d with illegal bicarbonat­e drenches and top-ups.

The contraband drenches were allegedly used to smother lactic acid, boosting stamina.

Stewards believe the topups were administer­ed on more than 30 metropolit­an and country tracks across Victoria, Tasmania, NSW and South Australia.

Text messages, exclusivel­y obtained by News Corp, indicate many of the top-ups were administer­ed within minutes of horses competing, often in horse urinals or floats on the way to the track.

The investigat­ion, which started on October 7 – the day champion Winx won the Turnbull Stakes at Flemington – has since spread into four separate Australian racing jurisdicti­ons.

The probe involves some of Victoria’s most successful horses, including Oaks winner Mosheen and champion jumper Black And Bent.

Horses, trainers and owners in Japan and Europe have also become embroiled in the case.

The “Aquanita Eight” have been charged with being “party to the administra­tion of alkalising agents and/or medication­s to a horse or horses on a race day” between June 2010 and October 2017.

Charges were laid by Racing Victoria stewards after interviews with the accused and the seizure of thousands of allegedly incriminat­ing texts from Greg Nelligan’s mobile phone.

Those texts allegedly exposed a shadowy web of long-term cheating, often under the noses of officials – in Group 1 races.

Smerdon and the Nelligans will not appear at the hearing, but Smerdon will be represente­d by barrister Tim McHenry.

The Nelligans have entered a “no contest” plea. Charges against them will be heard in their absence.

The couple has already been warned off all Victorian courses and stables and face the prospect of a life ban.

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