Dutrow was handed a 10-year suspension by the New York State Racing and Wagering Board (now the
New York State Gaming Commission) in October 2011,[1] which was served from January 2013 until January 2023.
Background
Dutrow's brother
Anthony is also a trainer. Their father,
Richard E. Dutrow Sr., was one of Maryland racing's
"Big Four" who dominated racing in that state during the 1960s and 1970s and who helped modernize
flat racing training. At age sixteen, Rick Jr. began working as his father's assistant. In 1995, he set up his own public stable in New York after his father left the
NYRA circuit to return to Maryland.
In 2008, he trained Big Brown to Kentucky Derby and Preakness Stakes victories, although the colt failed to capture the Triple Crown with a last place finish in the 140th Belmont Stakes. At the time, Dutrow had been suspended or fined 72 times by US horse racing authorities and had admitted regularly administering the steroid
Winstrol to his horses including Big Brown.[3] Nevertheless, Big Brown's accomplishments helped to make Dutrow one of the finalists for that year's
Eclipse Award for
Outstanding Trainer.
Suspension
On October 12, 2011, the New York State Racing and Wagering Board suspended Dutrow from racing for 10 years and fined him $50,000, citing a long history of racing violations.[1] This followed a decision by the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission's Licensing Review Committee not to renew his license in that state.[4] Dutrow continued to train horses while he appealed the ruling in court.
Dutrow began serving his suspension in January 2013 after he exhausted his legal options in New York State.[5][6] The following month he filed a federal lawsuit against the
New York State Gaming Commission (the governing body that replaced the racing and wagering board that month), the Association of Racing Commissioners International (ARCI) and several other entities, seeking monetary damages and an overturning of his suspension. The suit alleged that Dutrow was "substantially and irreparably harmed" by the suspension and claims that he was deprived of
due process under the law.[7] The lawsuit was dismissed in July 2014,[8] and an appeal was dismissed nearly a year later.[9]
In 2020 the
Queens District Attorney's office re-opened its investigation into Dutrow's suspension based on new allegations that incriminating evidence may have been planted in his barn.[10] At the time, Dutrow received support for the reinstatement of his license from former
Yankees manager
Joe Torre and others.[10]
Dutrow withdrew his application for a training license in Kentucky in July 2020 after the licensing committee of the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission indicated it would not rule on it.[11] This was despite testimony supporting Dutrow given by individuals including trainer
Dale Romans, equine veterinarian Dr. Larry Bramlage, and a former New York State Gaming Commission steward.[12]
Return to training
Upon the conclusion of his 10-year suspension in January 2023, Dutrow successfully applied for a training license in New York.[13] On May 6, 2023, Dutrow won his first race since the end of his suspension when Prince of Pharoahs, a horse he
claimed one month earlier, won an allowance race at
Belmont Park.[14] At the time of that win, Dutrow had 15 horses in his barn.[14]
^In the matter of Richard E. Dutrow v. New York State Racing and Wagering Board (N.Y. 2013-01-08) ("Motion for leave to appeal denied with one hundred dollars costs and necessary reproduction disbursements."),
Text.