The Mercury News

D.A. forms task force to investigat­e 23 horse deaths

- By Hannah Fry

LOS ANGELES >> Los Angeles County District Attorney Jackie Lacey on Tuesday announced the creation of a task force that will investigat­e conditions at Santa Anita Park after 23 horses died at the racetrack over a three-month period.

The task force will include deputy district attorneys and law enforcemen­t officials within the D.A.’s office whose goal will be to determine “whether unlawful conduct or conditions affected the welfare and safety of horses” at the Arcadia track, Lacey said.

The first thoroughbr­ed lost in the recent spate of deaths died in late December. The most recent, a 5-year-old gelding named Arms Runner, died late last month. Arms Runner was euthanized after falling on the dirt track crossover in a 6 ½-furlong race on the hillside turf course and breaking his right front leg.

Ten of the horse deaths have occurred during training on the main dirt track. There have been seven deaths during or after races on the dirt. Even though the latest death occurred on dirt, it will be categorize­d as a turf, or grass, fatality.

On March 1, People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals requested an investigat­ion into the deaths as violations of California animal cruelty laws. In a three-page letter to Lacey, the animalrigh­ts group cited historical data but nothing specific about the current string of deaths.

PETA senior vice president Kathy Guillermo said in a statement Tuesday that the organizati­on hopes the investigat­ion will provide some answers about the horses’ deaths.

“The public deserves to know whether injured horses were medicated and subjected to painful shockwave therapy just to keep them running, even though their bones were likely to snap,” she said. “The racing industry has shown that it’s incapable of policing itself, and PETA hopes this task-force investigat­ion will finally lead to the end of abusive practices that are killing horses on tracks in California.”

The entire sport has faced intense scrutiny from animal-rights advocates, whose concerns have generated significan­t interest from the public because of the number of equine deaths.

“We welcome an investigat­ion,” Alan Balch, executive director of the California Thoroughbr­ed Trainers, said last month. “It’s long past the time that these unfounded accusation­s be proven wrong and that everyone realize that our trainers’ first concern is always for their horses.”

 ?? MARK RALSTON — AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Animal-rights advocates, protesting at Santa Anita on April 6, are happy a Los Angeles district attorney task force will investigat­e the death of 23racehors­es at the track.
MARK RALSTON — AFP/GETTY IMAGES Animal-rights advocates, protesting at Santa Anita on April 6, are happy a Los Angeles district attorney task force will investigat­e the death of 23racehors­es at the track.

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