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What was the name of the horse, trainer, owner?
HEY COOP IF U DONT STOP FCKIN WITH PA,,THEY GONNA THROW U AND MEL MARA OUTTA THE STATE
Brett Revington belongs in jail for fraud and obstruction. If I got beat by that horse, I would be on my phone to a lawyer immediately.
What did I do wrong?Not allowed to share an articleWtf is this North Korea?
Don Harmon should pursue a lawsuit against Brett Revington for wrongful termination. When the facts come out Harmon may get a ton of money and Revington may be bagging groceries (maybe in jail if bribes were accepted). This sounds as bad as it gets when it comes to integrity.
Thursday’s Paulick Report, in a story written by former Indiana Horse Racing Commission executive director Joe Gorajec, is reporting that a positive test for the Class 1 drug oxycodone found in a horse that raced in the $252,000 Pennsylvania Sires Stakes championship for 2- year-old colt trotters on Sept. 11, 2016, resulted in no action taken.The race was won by the John Butenschoen-trained Giveitgasandgo by 1 ½ lengths in 1:56, with the Chris Beaver-trained Moonshiner Hanover second. Butenschoen also picked up a third and a fifth with Affair Of Honor and Dover Dan, respectively, while the George Ducharmetrained Muscles Jared, who was the 3-5 betting favorite, finished fourth.***Weekend Preview contacted all three trainers Thursday afternoon and they all responded that they were never informed nor had any reason to believe any of their horses received the Class 1 positive. All PASS championships that night were raced out of a detention barn.***Gorajec spoke to former Harrah’s Philadelphia presiding judge Don Harmon, who gave him the timeline of the positive test, which was revealed by the Pennsylvania Equine Toxicology and Research Laboratory (PETRL) 10 days after the race. Harmon told Gorajec that until May 31, 2017—eight months later—the information was not given to himself or the Pennsylvania Bureau of Standardbred Horse Racing.Pennyslvania Bureau of Standardbred Horse Racing director Brett Revington confirmed in an email to Gorajec the circumstances regarding the positive test. In the email, Revington noted: “On May 31, 2017, I became aware that there was a test result by PETRL on a particular sample for the 9th race of September 11, 2016 that had not been called. At the time, the Commission and the Bureau were in a state of transition in a few key personnel areas and unfortunately, this test result was not timely addressed. When we discovered the PETRL test result approximately nine months later, we concluded, in consultation with our legal department, that due to the unusual length of time between the race date and our discovery date, we decided that we could not properly proceed with the matter against the individual trainer or owner. The matter has been closed since June of 2017. No penalties were imposed as a result of human error.”By Gordon Waterstone