Pubdate: Fri, 23 Apr 2004 Source: News-Press (FL) Copyright: 2004 The News-Press Contact: http://www.news-press.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1133 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) DOG TRACKS NEED CLOSE INSPECTION Drugged Greyhounds Only One Issue Certainly Florida Attorney General Charlie Crist should investigate the possible use of cocaine at Florida greyhound racing tracks. But while he's at it, he ought to take a good, hard look at some other illegal track practices too. In the most recent complaint, GREY2K USA, a national greyhound protection group, found that 119 dogs at the state's 18 greyhound tracks tested positive for the drug from 2000 to 2003. At the Naples-Fort Myers Greyhound Track, where officials say there is a zero-tolerance policy for cocaine, 10 dogs have tested positive for cocaine over the past three years, tops among Florida tracks. Crist needs to find out how and why the dogs are getting the drug in their systems. But he also needs to determine if regulators are doing what they should to protect the dogs. Here are a few cases in point: Last May, state officials began investigating a complaint by an animal rights group that no veterinarian was present at the The Naples- Fort Myers Greyhound Track when two dogs were seriously injured. One dog's leg was severed during a race and another broke its leg in the next race. The dogs were later put down. State law requires that track officials must have a veterinarian at the track before, during and after the races, and the track can be fined $5,000 if it does not. A spokeswoman for the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation, which regulates pari-mutuel racing, told The News-Press on Friday that the investigation has not yet been completed -- one year later. In May 2002, Alabama officials arrested a former Florida dog track security guard who admitted to killing thousands of Florida greyhounds over 40 years after they had outlived their usefulness at the track. On his farm in Lillian, Ala., just across the Florida border, he shot them in the head for $10 per dog, about half what a vet would have charged to euthanize them. In Florida, it is illegal for pets to be killed by anyone other than a licensed veterinarian. But not in Alabama. According to the Mobile (Ala.) Register, which is covering this animal cruelty trial, which involves Florida racing dog owners and trainers: "Bryan Wall and Jim Barnes, investigators for the Florida Division of Pari-Mutuel Wagering, testified that dog kennel owners and trainers from as far away as Palm Beach County sent greyhounds that were too old or ill to Rhodes' farm in Lillian to die. "This case shows what was going on in the greyhound-racing industry in Florida," said Baldwin (County) District Attorney David Whetstone after the hearing. "It opens up the eyes to how sinister it was." And it leaves us wondering how greyhound owners and trainers are disposing of their dogs now. To be sure, they all are not being adopted out to loving homes. Which brings us back to the cocaine issue. Florida tests the winning dogs for illegal drugs. However, the urine is sent to a lab and the results aren't available for a couple of weeks. An owner or trainer is forced to forfeit a drugged dog's winnings and can be fined, but the wagerer whose pick lost to a drugged dog is out of luck. Obviously, the answer is to test the dogs before the race, check the results and immediately disqualify drugged dogs before they run. If the greyhound group's findings are accurate, they indicate a continuing threat both to the animals' health and to the public interest in honest racing, and suggest the whole system needs a critical review. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin