If horses cannot compete in races and walk off the track under their own power, their trainers should be suspended from entering horses into races
Washington, D.C. — Today, Animal Wellness Action called on the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authorit to adopt rules to suspend trainers whose horses die in competition.
“When young, healthy horses die in competition, that should trigger more than expressions of sadness. It should trigger mandatory suspensions,” said Wayne Pacelle, president of Animal Wellness Action.
“Trainers must take responsibility for the care of their horses and accept responsibility when the animals die in competition. It is not normal for a three-year-old or a six-year-old horse to die in a non-violent sport that involves a one-mile sprint,” he said.
Under a statute enacted by Congress, the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority (HISA) has the responsibility to impose a wide range of track safety standards, and it clearly has the authority to prevent dangerous trainers from putting more horses in competition.
When authorities saw Bob Baffert’s horse Havnameltdown die in competition in the race card preceding the running of the Preakness, Baffert’s entry for that Triple Crown race, National Treasure, should have been scratched from competition.
Now, HISA has an opportunity to take such action with trainer Rudy R. Rodriguez. He has seen four horses under his care die this year, with three deaths occurring at Aqueduct and one at Belmont Park, which this weekend hosts the third leg of the Triple Crown.
There were two deaths of Rodriguez’s horses just last week, with 3-year-old Midnight Empress vanned off and euthanized just days before 6-year-old horse Chaysenbryn suffered a right front leg injury and was then euthanized at Belmont Park.
“When trainers understand they’ll be suspended if their horses die in competition, then they will take precautions to prevent that terrible outcome. Now there are lamentations without consequences. Young and fit horses dying in competition is no longer acceptable in American racing.”
The recent spate of 12 deaths at Churchill Downs and Baffert’s celebrating a Preakness win just hours after one of his horses died dramatize the problem.
More broadly, Animal Wellness Action and the Center for a Humane Economy have called for a culture change within the industry and specific actions by the Authority to reduce on-track deaths of otherwise healthy horses:
- Robust enforcement of the race-day doping prohibitions, with meaningful national suspensions and other penalties for violators of the rules.
- Banning the use of the whip in American racing.
- Developing a plan to hold trainers and owners accountable to reduce death rates for racing horses to levels approaching zero, with appropriate national suspensions for trainers whose horses die at the tracks.