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Old 08-22-2017, 12:41 PM   #1
Andy Asaro
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DRF: Motion ruling could impact absolute-insurer statute



http://www.drf.com/news/motion-rulin...nsurer-statute

LEXINGTON, Ky. -- A state court in Kentucky has ruled that the absolute-insurer rule enforced by the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission violates the state constitution, a determination that could have far-reaching consequences in the regulation of medications and drugs across the United States.

The ruling, signed by Franklin Circuit Court Judge Thomas Wingate on Aug. 15, involved an appeal by the trainer H. Graham Motion of a penalty handed down by the commission for a positive of a trace amount of the regulation muscle relaxant methocarbomol in a horse that raced at Keeneland in the spring of 2015. The ruling’s first sections overturned the KHRC’s imposition of an initial penalty for the positive, but its last section could prove the most contentious due to its assertion that the absolute-insurer rule does not provide a trainer with adequate due-process protections.
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Old 08-22-2017, 01:02 PM   #2
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If it stands it would be terrible for racing. Nothing in Kentucky surprises me, of course.

I will say this. In my mind the trainer responsibility rule is fine because nobody has the right to be a trainer, and because of the compelling interests in protecting horses.

But there are definitely due process and administrative law precedents in some states that, if applied to horse racing, could invalidate it.
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Old 08-22-2017, 01:07 PM   #3
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Graham Motion may have just ruined horse racing.
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Old 08-22-2017, 01:25 PM   #4
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The guy is just sticking up for himself instead of laying down. Everything I know he's one of the good guys. Everyone wants due process for themselves but not for some people.

And it anyone thinks improved testing is gonna work forget it. The people who have the money and know how to cheat with undetectable treatments are gonna keep doing it and getting away with it. Guys like Motion who play it straight are gonna get caught for minor offenses that could be the result of cross contamination, sabotage, or whatever.

It's a problem that won't be solved no matter how much money we spend on testing.
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Old 08-22-2017, 02:30 PM   #5
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The guy is just sticking up for himself instead of laying down. Everything I know he's one of the good guys. Everyone wants due process for themselves but not for some people.
The issue isn't that trainers shouldn't have due process. It's what process is due.

Should a trainer be able to appeal a suspension because the drug test is faulty, or the drugs weren't in the horse's system? Sure. Should there be a process for doing that which is fair and which allows the trainer the right to counsel. Absolutely.

But what the absolute insurer or trainer responsibility rule does is remove one defense that absolutely every dishonest trainer would use if they could, which is "I didn't know how it got there" or "my staff must have put it in".

There are many situations where you are responsible for things because they are deemed to be within your control. Parents have to pay the judgment when their kids commit an intentional tort. If your car rolls down a hill because the parking brake fails, you are responsible for whatever it hits. Manufacturers are strictly liable for manufacturing and design defects in their products, whether or not they were negligent. And employers are basically strictly liable for torts committed by employees in the scope of their employment.

The trainer is supposed to be the caretaker of the horse, who is a live animal. Part of that role is to keep drugs out of the horse's system. Not just the ones the trainer approves, but any drugs that are snuck into the barn by outsiders, or introduced by staff members that the trainer hires.

In my mind, as I said, there's no due process violation here-- just a rule that pins liability on the person most able to prevent drugs from being introduced into the horse.

But i do concede that under some states' due process precedents, the result could be different.
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Old 08-22-2017, 02:35 PM   #6
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And it anyone thinks improved testing is gonna work forget it. The people who have the money and know how to cheat with undetectable treatments are gonna keep doing it and getting away with it.
if you punish hard enough, like they do in Hong Kong, drug cheats would think twice before doing the dirty deed.....I know, lifetime banishment is a hard thing to enforce in a dying US game, but you have to make a final stand on this issue at some point.....Might as well be NOW.
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Old 08-22-2017, 02:45 PM   #7
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Nobody has a workable solution and a precedent setting ruling like this one may be was bound to happen.

IMO Jorge Navarro is about as guilty of cheating as anyone I've ever seen but there is no proof. Most guys just aren't dumb enough to be caught on camera bragging about it.

I don't have a solution but I don't see a workable solution from anyone else either. Between the powers that be making it increasingly difficult for those like me to gamble at retail take and have a chance and the medication debate and the outdated tote system the whole thing has gone from the most fun EVER to constant aggravation. And, there doesn't seem to be any indication that things will get better in the next five years.
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Old 08-22-2017, 02:53 PM   #8
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I honestly think the biggest problem is legal Lasix. Because despite what horsemen claim, it's a big-time masking agent. It's barred in basically every human sport because of that. And it's barred in the rest of the world in racing because of that.

If horsemen couldn't use Lasix, they would suddenly be unable to use a bunch of other things that they are currently using that are masked by the Lasix and don't show up in tests.

I also agree with RR's arguments about length of suspensions. Track and field gives you 2 years for a first offense and a lifetime ban for a second offense. Baseball is weaker but gives you half a season for a first offense and a full season for a second offense.

Consistent application of harsh punishments would change the calculus a lot.
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Old 08-22-2017, 03:43 PM   #9
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The Motion case was more complicated than it may seem from reading the short summaries in the Bloodhorse, DRF or Paulick. This was the full story on the RMTC setting of the methocarbamol standard.

http://halveyonhorseracing.com/wp-ad...23&action=edit

I think even trainers understand the need for an absolute insurer's rule and I can tell you Motion's issue was mainly that he never had a chance to defend himself. As far as I can see, the judge went much farther in terms of a decision on the absolute insurer's rule than Motion was expecting.

If Motion deserved to win the case, it should have been because the methocarbamol standard was arbitrarily low, especially given the flaws in the study used to set the standard. Motion won because the KHRC didn't follow the law that required thresholds to be based on sound science. The court wrote, "In this case, the record lacks for substantive evidence to show any rationale for the imposition of a threshold of 1.0 ng/ml of methocarbomol."

The absolute insurer's rule isn't going away entirely. I have my ideas of what will happen, but I'm anxious to see what the amendments to the rule will look like.
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Old 08-22-2017, 03:56 PM   #10
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I honestly think the biggest problem is legal Lasix. Because despite what horsemen claim, it's a big-time masking agent. It's barred in basically every human sport because of that. And it's barred in the rest of the world in racing because of that.

If horsemen couldn't use Lasix, they would suddenly be unable to use a bunch of other things that they are currently using that are masked by the Lasix and don't show up in tests.

I also agree with RR's arguments about length of suspensions. Track and field gives you 2 years for a first offense and a lifetime ban for a second offense. Baseball is weaker but gives you half a season for a first offense and a full season for a second offense.

Consistent application of harsh punishments would change the calculus a lot.
Isn't Kentucky the same great state that brings us the NCAA rules and regulations? Reading all of this reminds me of the same issues in colleges across America today, insert Coach for trainer.
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Old 08-22-2017, 03:59 PM   #11
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Originally Posted by dilanesp View Post
The issue isn't that trainers shouldn't have due process. It's what process is due.

Should a trainer be able to appeal a suspension because the drug test is faulty, or the drugs weren't in the horse's system? Sure. Should there be a process for doing that which is fair and which allows the trainer the right to counsel. Absolutely.

But what the absolute insurer or trainer responsibility rule does is remove one defense that absolutely every dishonest trainer would use if they could, which is "I didn't know how it got there" or "my staff must have put it in".

There are many situations where you are responsible for things because they are deemed to be within your control. Parents have to pay the judgment when their kids commit an intentional tort. If your car rolls down a hill because the parking brake fails, you are responsible for whatever it hits. Manufacturers are strictly liable for manufacturing and design defects in their products, whether or not they were negligent. And employers are basically strictly liable for torts committed by employees in the scope of their employment.

The trainer is supposed to be the caretaker of the horse, who is a live animal. Part of that role is to keep drugs out of the horse's system. Not just the ones the trainer approves, but any drugs that are snuck into the barn by outsiders, or introduced by staff members that the trainer hires.

In my mind, as I said, there's no due process violation here-- just a rule that pins liability on the person most able to prevent drugs from being introduced into the horse.

But i do concede that under some states' due process precedents, the result could be different.
In talking with Motion, I don't remember him ever suggesting trashing the AI rule. He clearly admitted he had dosed the horse with methocarbamol, but that something must be wrong with the standard if seven days wasn't enough to meet an RMTC standard that was supposedly based on a 48 hour clearance time.

I believe the due process issue was that he was not allowed to speak in his own defense, nor was he allowed to offer any expert testimony.

Last edited by HalvOnHorseracing; 08-22-2017 at 04:01 PM.
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Old 08-22-2017, 04:06 PM   #12
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I'm not surprised. There’s a lot of blame that can go around as far as who is responsible for the sport going from the third most popular in the country (behind baseball and boxing) , to one that’s just behind girls high school field hockey, but, I would put Kentucky at the top of that list. This is the same state that banned Lasix-free races. Here is a quote by Frank R. Scatoni from his book “Six Secrets of Successful Bettors”: “Kentucky is so liberal in their drug laws that people don’t even need to cheat to change a horse’s performance dramatically. They got approximately 16 drugs that are legal there that aren’t legal elsewhere, and they always defend it fiercely when anybody tries to do anything that’s better for the horse. But they don’t consider that they have bettors out there that find their races too difficult to bet and won’t bet their races. The last thing that racetracks ever think about is the customer, the bettor, and Kentucky is number one area in the country that says to hell with the bettor.”
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Old 08-22-2017, 04:36 PM   #13
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If Motion though the standard was too low, he should have challenged it BEFORE the race.

There's no reason to allow people to gamble they won't get caught and then challenge th threshold after they do. That procedure incentivizes doping.
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Old 08-22-2017, 07:36 PM   #14
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I understand the Absolute Insurer idea but if the penalty was say a lifetime ban, would that encourage others to do something nefarious to get a certain trainer out of the way?

For example, if trainer A had 70% of the horses for a prominent owner and trainer B had 30% of the remaining horses for that owner (and assume not the higher quality), wouldn't it behoove him to have trainer A "out of the way" to increase his pipeline of good horses?

I know that is tinfoil-hat thinking but is it such a stretch to think someone affiliated with trainer B couldn't sneak into a the barn of trainer A and inject a horse with something?

How do you protect against that?
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Old 08-22-2017, 08:26 PM   #15
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I understand the Absolute Insurer idea but if the penalty was say a lifetime ban, would that encourage others to do something nefarious to get a certain trainer out of the way?

For example, if trainer A had 70% of the horses for a prominent owner and trainer B had 30% of the remaining horses for that owner (and assume not the higher quality), wouldn't it behoove him to have trainer A "out of the way" to increase his pipeline of good horses?

I know that is tinfoil-hat thinking but is it such a stretch to think someone affiliated with trainer B couldn't sneak into a the barn of trainer A and inject a horse with something?

How do you protect against that?
The basic answer is that if that becomes a problem, AT THAT TIME you consider a modification to the rule. Or you create a narrow exception for that situation.

Or you might even not change it at all, and tell Trainer A to hire security guards and put cameras in the barn.

The problem is, the far, far, far more common scenario is a doping trainer who claims that someone drugged the horse, rather than your scenario. And therefore, making your scenario the central situation to be avoided would just empower the dopers and cheaters.
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