Why So Many Horses Have Died at Santa Anita
Source: New York Times
Why So Many Horses Have Died at Santa Anita
By Joe Drape and Corina Knoll
June 26, 2019
ARCADIA, Calif. On the morning of March 29, Santa Anita Park was reopening for racing for the first time in three weeks after the mystifying deaths of nearly two dozen horses.
Satellite trucks, national news reporters and animal rights activists converged for what had become a macabre death watch.
But California regulators were watching a live surveillance feed of a trainers assistant carrying a bucket into the stall of a horse named Tick Tock. Moments after the assistant left, a white foam was visible on the horses lips, often a telltale sign of performance-enhancing drugs.
Investigators later found syringes in the bucket, along with a fatigue-fighting agent known in racing parlance as a milkshake, according to hearing transcripts from the states Horse Racing Board.
The news that investigators believed Tick Tock had received such a concoction before the first race on the first day of the tracks return to racing, no less is indicative of the dysfunction that has enveloped Santa Anita the past six months, ...
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Read more: https://www.nytimes.com/2019/06/26/sports/santa-anita-horse-deaths.html
dixiegrrrrl
(60,011 posts)which has owned the track for two decades, to maximize profits.
Thanks for posting this info..I would have missed it otherwise....
emmaverybo
(8,147 posts)to obey and please, make people loads of money, but get drugged to death as thanks.
Enoki33
(1,605 posts)there on Saturday mornings and watch the early workouts. Got to know a few trainers, jockeys and stable hands. They all were careful to tell me where l was allowed to to go, and where not to. I was impressed with their security, but realized almost all doping problems originated from those with the necessary clearance. They will solve their many problems and be a an even better track to visit.