0 Members and 2 Guests are viewing this topic.
The horses competing at Delaware Fair 09/23/21 had too much juice in them. The amount exceeded the Regulatory Threshold. Both are appealing the ruling. Wouldn't they have sent a sample of the blood to their own lab by now? I guess they are hoping a retest shows a lower amount and acceptable amount in the blood. We will see? Big bucks at stake though, $43,000.00 and $23,000.00. Wonder if they have a chance of reversal? I did not think Julie was like that. Maybe the lab made a mistake.
The real issue here is the drug regulatory committee that runs the allowable medications and withdrawal times. It's all made up by the phoney ARCI commission. They won't tell you the science behind the limits and withdrawal times because they just make everything up as they go along. Here is the rule right from their website.DexamethasoneHarness Racing Only.5 picograms per milliliter of plasma or serumSEE NOTEBELOW72 hoursIntramuscular and intravenous administration of dexamethasone sodium phosphate or oral administration of dexamethasone at 0.05milligrams per kilogram regardless of routeRMTC studyApplicable analyte is dexamethasone in plasma or serum.They catch people on allowable (Class 4) medications and never catch anyone using epogen, Soda, or anything that finds the real drugs like the ones all the trainers at Yonkers were finally caught using thanks to the FBI. The ARCI is a joke. Can't wait for them to be out of business and the Fed's take over. Can't happen soon enough. Good Riddins
great info guysi agree that there needs to be distinction between some of these penaltiesare ARCI suggesting these kinds of penalties are the same as what surrick and oakes were doing, please not even closejust a question, the scenario you provide sounds similar to what baffart is claiming, not trying to support baffart who seems to be on the edge but ??
Exactly Brown Jug. Therapeutic medications should not result in severe penalties-or penalties costing thousands of dollars and suspensions.Your question on Baffert--here is my answerBaffert had 17 pg/ml of betamathasone.The horse has 30,000ml of blood so that would equal 510,000 picrograms total. This is 0.0005mg of Betamethasone horse had in his system at time of event..The doasage for Betamethasone is 9mg in a horse.See the difference?? 9mg vs 0.0005mg ---its humungous and suggests the therapeutc value had long since worn off.Giving 0.0005mg of Betamethasone- that amount would not affect a tiny mouse let alone a horse.To take the Kentucky Derby off Baffert--or Suspend Baffert racing ANY of his horses in New York-IMHO is nonsensical and to let the public believe that the horse was "DOPED" in my opinion is criminal,sickening,and contrary to everything that honest trainers strive for. Now take Surick and the other criminals medication violations.They were strictly using performance enhancers like EPO and the like. Drugs that should not be in a horse at any time at ANY level.THAT is what needs to be addressed and those using them held accountable.Therapeutic drugs should never result in loss of purse or prizemeony--but instead fines--increasing with repeat offenses.Overzealous Laboratories and their directors- are guilty of bringing the game into disrepute just as much as the cheats.The effect of severe penalties for therapeutic drugs--only makes the Chemical trainers-search for and use drugs that are not detectable and there are many.The honest trainers are left with using 0-while the cheaters use a plethora of illegal medications.