Big Purses, Sore Horses, and Death
By JOE DRAPE, WALT BOGDANICH, REBECCA R. RUIZ and GRIFFIN PALMER
Published: April 30, 2012 NY TIMES http://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/30/us/casino-cash-fuels-use-of-injured-horses-at-racetracks.html
Large payouts to owners make it profitable for owners to field thoroughbreds that are past their prime, sometimes with fatal results. As he trained for his first race, at Aqueduct Racetrack in Queens, the 3-year-old thoroughbred Wes Vegas galloped on the track most mornings and had two timed workouts. But his handlers also prepared him in another way: In the month before the race, records show, he received 10 intravenous injections of potent drugs for pain, one the day before he ran; two injections of a drug for joint disease; corticosteroid injections in his two front ankles; a sedative; and an ulcer drug.
For all the preparation, that first race, on March 3, turned out to be his last.
As he approached the first turn, Wes Vegas broke a leg
and had to be euthanized.
A week earlier, another horse, the 4-year-old Coronado
Heights, who records show had “early degenerative joint disease,” suffered a
fatal breakdown at Aqueduct after receiving 13 injections for pain and
cartilage damage in the month before his race.
Since a casino opened at Aqueduct late last year,
offering vastly richer prizes, 30 horses have died racing there, a 100 percent
increase in the fatality rate over the same period the previous year. Like Wes
Vegas and Coronado
Heights, many had been
injected repeatedly with pain medication in the weeks before their breakdowns,
according to a review of veterinary records by The New York Times.
Pain medication during training is legal as long as it does not exceed
certain levels on race day. But the prevalence of drugs is a graphic
illustration of how the flood of casino cash has created powerful and dangerous
incentives to run sore, tired or otherwise unfit horses in pursuit of that big
score.
“If the public knew how many medications these horses
were administered after entry time, I don’t think they would tolerate it,” said
Dr. Rick Arthur, equine medical director of the California Horse Racing Board.
Amid the uproar over the Aqueduct death toll, Gov.
Andrew M. Cuomo of New York
ordered an investigation to “ensure against needless
injuries to horses and to riders.” Experts are examining various factors — not
just drugs, but issues like track conditions and pre-race inspections.
But what is indisputable is that casinos opening at
Aqueduct and a growing number of racetracks have recalibrated the age-old
economic equations of the horse-racing game.
To survive amid a riot of new, technologically advanced
gambling options, track owners have increasingly succumbed to the gambling
industry’s offer to sweeten racing purses with slot machine revenue. But if
casinos promise to prop up a struggling sport, they can also erode the loyalty
that owners and trainers feel toward their horses, turning them, in the words
of Maggi Moss, a leading owner, into “trading cards for people’s greed.”
The casinos’ impact is greatest at the sport’s low end,
the so-called claiming races, a world away from the bluegrass pageantry of
Saturday’s Kentucky Derby. In the claiming ranks — where some of the cheapest
horses fill starting gates at tracks like Aqueduct, Penn National, near
Harrisburg, Pa., and Evangeline Downs in Louisiana — the casino money has upset
the traditional racetrack balance of risk and reward.
“It’s strictly self-centered greed of not thinking
about the horse but thinking about maybe I can get one more race out of him and
get a piece of the game,” said Dr. Tom David, until recently the chief
veterinarian for the Louisiana Racing Commission.
To better protect the horses, some industry experts
say, purses should be limited so the potential winnings in any race do not
exceed the value of the horses running in it. That way, the incentive for the
owner is to care for the horse over the long haul, rather than risking it for a
single payday. A prominent veterinarians group, the American Association
of Equine Practitioners, recommends that no purse exceed a horse’s value by
more than 50 percent.
Yet that recommendation is widely ignored, The Times
found.
At Aqueduct, horses worth $7,500 — at the lowest level
of competition — recently raced for a $40,000 purse, nearly four times the
recommended maximum. Two of them broke down and had to be euthanized. Both had
been given pain medication in the days leading up to the race. In all, 19 of
the 30 Aqueduct deaths occurred in races where the veterinarians’ standard was
violated.
Nationwide, 57 percent of thoroughbred claiming races
at casino tracks exceeded that 50 percent standard, and horses broke down or
showed signs of injury at a 29 percent higher rate in those races, according to
a Times analysis.
In a statement, the New York Racing Association said
“it would be inappropriate and irresponsible of The New York Times to speculate
on the reasons for breakdowns and injuries” before the governor’s task force
has finished its inquiry.
Big purses have destabilized the racetrack economy in
another way. Every claiming race is essentially a marketplace, with all horses
for sale at a fixed price. But the casino money has set off a frenzy of horse
trading at Aqueduct, with owners eager to buy and also to sell to slake the
surging demand. Since the casino opened late last fall, nearly 500 horses and
$10.7 million have changed hands, more than double the previous year, records
show.
Again, the incentive is to push horses, fit or not, out
onto the track.
“If horses don’t win, people just get rid of them,” Ms.
Moss said.
The turmoil at Aqueduct over the last six months caught
many in the industry by surprise. But a cautionary tale played out two years
before at Penn National, where nine horses belonging to a single owner died
while racing, prompting a boycott by jockeys. State investigators discovered
evidence of serious problems in the owner’s operation: trainers and other
employees injecting horses with illegal drugs and administering other illicit
treatments at an off-track training center.
When the Hollywood Casino arrived in 2008, Penn
National became part of a casino expansion that now encompasses more than a
third of the nation’s thoroughbred racetracks. Gambling companies, state
budgets and some horse owners have benefited, but the spread of casinos has left
many people wondering if in the long run, casino gambling is hurting racing and
the horses themselves.
“In spite of what they say, and they are my friends
whom I love dearly, they do not care about horse racing,” William Koester, of
the Ohio State Racing Commission, said recently of the casino industry. “They
care about gaming. That is their mission.”
Lame and Still Racing
Melodeeman, a 10-year-old thoroughbred, had earned a
rest.
He raced gallantly for six owners. He set a track
record at Aqueduct for the fastest five and a half furlongs and earned more
than $250,000 in his career. He raced even after a broken leg was put back
together with three stainless-steel screws.
But by the evening of Jan. 21, 2010, Melodeeman had hit
the bottom of the racing world. As the temperature hovered near freezing at
Penn National, he prepared to compete among the lowest quality thoroughbreds.
In a different time, Melodeeman might have skipped this
race, or retired altogether. Not now. Not here. Profits from the track’s casino
had fattened the purse to $18,000, far more than the $4,000 for which each
horse could be purchased, or claimed — precisely the kind of cost disparity
that prominent veterinarians had warned against.
Eager to get in on the action, three people filed
claims to buy three horses in the race.
No one tried to buy Melodeeman.
According to one exercise rider who saw the horse well
before the race, Melodeeman was clearly lame. But Melodeeman raced anyhow that
evening.
Turning for home, his front legs buckled, sending his
jockey, Angel Quinones, flying. Melodeeman had snapped his right cannon bone
and was euthanized at the track, almost four years to the day after he set his
Aqueduct record.
State regulators were suspicious. Other horses
belonging to the same owner, Michael Gill, had been breaking down in large
numbers, and jockeys were complaining.
A subsequent necropsy revealed that Melodeeman not only
had degenerative joint disease in the lower part of his two front legs, but
that his fatal fracture occurred next to the earlier break mended with three
screws. The examiners were concerned enough to have snapped a color photograph
of the screws.
A prohibited sedative, fluphenazine, was also found in
Melodeeman’s brain, according to records obtained by The Times. Fluphenazine
can calm a horse that becomes agitated because of discomfort or injury,
according to two veterinarians.
Melodeeman’s fatal breakdown was not quickly forgotten
by jockeys on the backside at Penn National. A revolt was brewing.
Jockeys Fight Back
Mr. Gill made his fortune in the mortgage brokerage
business before becoming one of the nation’s most successful — and
controversial — thoroughbred owners. He was a winner of the Eclipse Award as
the nation’s outstanding owner, but tracks in several states denied him stable
space because of brushes with regulators over his treatment of horses. He set
up a training center in Chester County,
Pa., giving him easy access to
three casino tracks, among them Penn National.
Although the casino there does a steady business, the
track itself seems almost an afterthought. It sits behind the parking garage,
barely visible from the gambling floor. On many nights, the few racing fans who
show up outside buy programs from a vending machine and beer at a single
counter.
But there was no secret why Mr. Gill had made Penn
National the hub of his operation: the hefty purses.
Now, Melodeeman’s death threatened to upend it all.
The next morning, Thomas Clifton, a veteran jockey,
complained to the state racing commission’s office at Penn National that Mr.
Gill’s horses were unsafe. He had been making similar complaints for a month.
“The horses go perfectly sound right up to the second
they snap their leg off,” Mr. Clifton said. The following day he came back with
a warning: “If we have one more horse break down, we are going to have a major
problem on our hands.”
That night, riding in the fifth race, Mr. Clifton heard
a bone snap and saw another jockey, Ricky Frazier, vaulting off a horse named
Laughing Moon. Mr. Clifton yanked his own mount, but they still went soaring
over Laughing Moon.
Within minutes, Mr. Frazier was in an ambulance and a
veterinarian was administering a lethal injection to Laughing Moon, the ninth
Gill horse to die racing in 10 months.
That is when the jockeys decided to take a stand: They would not ride in any race
with a Gill-owned horse.
Their boycott cast a harsh light on the Pennsylvania
Racing Commission and Penn National Gaming, which owns the track.
“It wasn’t the commission or the racetrack or anyone
with any responsibility for horses and riders who took action,” said George
Strawbridge, a prominent breeder and owner. “It was the jockeys who feared for
their life. That’s not a shame. That’s a disgrace.”
Track officials and regulators had ample reason to
question the integrity of Mr. Gill’s operation well before the boycott.
Regulators did not have the authority to monitor the
treatment of horses on Mr. Gill’s ranch, but three months before the boycott,
the commission and track security officers searched a van delivering Mr. Gill’s
Lion’s Pride, who was scheduled to race that day. They found four syringes, and
Lion’s Pride tested positive for a corticosteroid used to treat joint
inflammation.
Lion’s Pride was not allowed to race that night. But on
Dec. 18, 2009, after running barely a quarter of a mile, he suffered a fatal
breakdown.
By then, an employee of Mr. Gill’s ranch had already
told state police investigators that horses were being injected with drugs on
race day, which is illegal. Investigators later heard accounts of snake venom
injections and other performance enhancing treatments on race day, according to
records obtained by The Times.
Dr. Jerry Pack, a former veterinarian for the racing
commission who now works for Penn National, told the police that he suspected
Mr. Gill’s horses received an illegal performance enhancing substance. He also
said trainers were using shock wave therapy, which can mask injury. “This is
also dangerous to the welfare of the horse,” he told investigators.
Suspicions were heightened by the backgrounds of some
employees of Mr. Gill, including two trainers, Cole Norman and Darrel
Delahoussaye.
Mr. Norman had been fined or suspended 30 times in four
states for drugging horses. The authorities had accused him three times of
administering an illegal “milkshake” — a concoction of baking soda, sugar and
electrolytes delivered through a tube down a horse’s throat to combat fatigue
by breaking up lactic acid. Mr. Norman was also incarcerated for killing a driver in a head-on collision while
under the influence of prescription painkillers.
In 1984, Mr. Delahoussaye lost his Louisiana
training license after a conviction for check fraud, and Ohio later suspended him for possessing
syringes and drugs and for using a makeshift electric cattle prod on a horse.
Mr. Gill himself had once been suspended from racing after syringes and needles
were found in his barn at a New
Hampshire racetrack.
A grand jury in Dauphin
County, Pa.,
investigated reports of horse doping and other corrupt acts. But Mr.
Delahoussaye was the only one charged, with doping. A plea agreement kept him
out of jail — and out of racing in Pennsylvania.
In the face of the boycott, the racing commission
ejected Mr. Gill and his racing manager, Anthony Adamo, from Penn National.
They filed a federal lawsuit, saying that they were
expelled for no valid reason and without a hearing. A trial took place last
week and a decision is expected soon.
Alan Pincus, a lawyer for the men, said that they have
been unfairly tainted with “all kinds of innuendo and lies for over two years,”
and that the testimony showed that their ejection “was not based on any
culpable wrongdoing.”
Mr. Gill said that he rarely visited Elk Creek Ranch,
his Pennsylvania
training center, and that he never instructed anyone to break racing rules.
Chris McErlean, vice president of racing at Penn
National, said the investigation of Mr. Gill and the enforcement of racing
rules was the responsibility of the state racing commission, which declined
repeated requests for an interview.
Since the jockey boycott, change has come slowly at
Penn National. The track began doing pre-race inspections of horses — routine
at most racetracks in North America — only
last October.
The track’s owner has declined to seek accreditation or
to contribute to a fund for jockey benefits.
In September, an injured filly had to wait more than an
hour to be euthanized because Penn National had no licensed veterinarian on
duty during morning training. The company said it was not the track’s
responsibility, though it is a requirement of accreditation.
“There’s cost issues and there’s problems we have with
the process,” Mr. McErlean said of accreditation. “They are making racetracks
solely responsible, presenting it as a racetrack-only issue. They don’t
accredit horsemen, or breeders.”
For the complete article please go to: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/30/us/casino-cash-fuels-use-of-injured-horses-at-racetracks.html there is a lot more to read.
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