So who were these for ?

Diamond Geezer

Gone But Not Forgotten
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From Horse and Hound

A shipment containing thousands of pounds worth of unlicensed veterinary goods — including steroids, bute and anti-inflammatories — was stopped and seized at Stansted Airport at the beginning of the summer (3 May), it has emerged.

The shipment is understood to have contained performance-boosting drugs. They were listed as “horse tack” and brought in on a private plane, which was seized by Border Force officers.

“These medications have the potential to be used to enhance performance in horses, as well as more routine use in general equine practice to combat disease,” said H&H vet Karen Coumbe.

Defra was informed and the drugs were destroyed. It is not known for where the shipment was bound.

Leading vets have expressed concern that the importation of illegal and unlicensed drugs from overseas poses a “real threat” to equine health and welfare.

Keith Chandler, president of the British Equine Veterinary Association (BEVA), told H&H: “Unlicensed drugs have not passed the UK’s stringent safety and efficacy tests and therefore there is a risk that they could cause serious harm to horses.

“In the UK, the Veterinary Medicines Directorate [VMD] does a good job of protecting the availability of medicines for all animals.

“We are conscious that this sort of illegal importation puts at risk our whole system of medicines control and has potentially damaging knock-on effects regarding the availability of licensed medicines for sport horses and pleasure horses,” he added.

Earlier this year, the Godolphin doping scandal threw light on the use of unlicensed performance-boosting drugs in the racing industry.

In April, it emerged that the disgraced former trainer, Mahmood al Zarooni, had brought synthetic anabolic steroids, including stanozolol — which are banned in this country — into the UK in his suitcase when returning from Dubai.
 
Yes whoops indeed! Question is will the Racing Post run a front page on it tomorrow...................................?!
 
I'm sure this was in the printed magazine that came out on Thursday so you'd have thought the RP would have done it by now if they were going to?
 
Today's RP - Page 4

Steroids seized at Stanstead

The BHA said yesterday a shipment of unlicensed veterinary products, reported to contain steroids and seized at Stansted Airport, had no connection with racing.

It has emerged that the products, listed as ‘horse tack’, arrived in a private plane at the airport in Essex on May 3, the eve of the Guineas meeting at Newmarket.

The Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) was drafted in after the seizure by Border Force officers to confirm the identity of the medicines, which were removed and destroyed.

Both the source and destination of the shipment have not been revealed but the unlicensed goods – also said to contain bute and anti-inflammatories – were reported to be worth thousands of pounds.

The BHA was contacted by the Veterinary Medicines Directorate (VMD), an executive agency of Defra responsible for issues concerning the use and manufacture of veterinary medicines in Britain, following the seizure.

BHA spokesman Robin Mounsey said : “The VMD let us know the case was nothing to do with racing. The products were not intended for racehorses.”

A Border Force spokesperson said : “Border Force officers are on constant alert to keep unlicensed, fake and illegal items from entering the country – including veterinary products.”

.
 
More chance of them running an editorial on how Eddie Ahern was a cheat who deserved his ban.

The time the rumour went around about 5 jockeys being arrested Eddie sat at the end of his stairs with his bags packed waiting for the knock on the door.
 
It's far more likely they were for the bloodstock side of things. America has compounding pharmacies which we don't here - its not uncommon for things to be discretely brought in I should imagine.
 
It would also be highly beneficial to have a nearby yard that isn't a licensed premises in case you wanted to dope your horses risk free whilst "out of training".
 
Miesque is right - Darley has hundreds of mares, foals, stallions, ex racehorses, the 'sick and lame' based in and around Newwarket, aside from other members of the ruling house of Dubai having horses based here, in and out of racing.
 
So what are the options?

1. The drugs were being used to dope horses in training with Godolphin and/or other yards
2. The drugs were being used to dope horses from Darley and/or other studs before they went to the sales, to make them long stronger, or to help them in breeze up sales.
3. The drugs have nothing to do with Darley or Godolphin, but were being sent to a Darley farm as part of a cunning plan by another rogue operator.

Have I missed something?
 
Last edited:
So what are the options?

1. The drugs were being used to dope horses in training with Godolphin and/or other yards
2. The drugs were being used to dope horses from Darley and/or other studs before they went to the sales, to make them long stronger, or to help them in breeze up sales.
3. The drugs have nothing to do with Darley or Godolphin, but were being sent to a Darley farm as part of a cunning plan by another rogue operator.
4. The drugs were shipped to the farm for Mahmood Al Zarooni who has been hiding out in a barn there since his ban.

Have I missed something?


Edited for accuracy ;)

Martin
 
So what are the options?

1. The drugs were being used to dope horses in training with Godolphin and/or other yards
2. The drugs were being used to dope horses from Darley and/or other studs before they went to the sales, to make them long stronger, or to help them in breeze up sales.
3. The drugs have nothing to do with Darley or Godolphin, but were being sent to a Darley farm as part of a cunning plan by another rogue operator.

Have I missed something?

I'd merrily guess the steroids were Prednisone which is fairly commonly used to help problem mares maintain pregnancies and costs about 20% of what it does here if compounded in the US.
 
Ok, thanks. So just smuggling, not cheating.

Yes, pretty much - when you're shipping hundreds of yearlings all over the world with massive tack trunks anything and everything can end up in them. It's very rare they check anything - I collected a horse at Heathrow yesterday. They did a cursory look at his passport, didn't even take off wraps to match his white markings and didn't check either of the big metal trunks he came with. Both went straight on the truck with no questions. That's fairly standard.
 
More breaking on the the RP Website :

Unauthorised medicines seized at Sheikh's stud

By Graham Green 4:56PM 10 SEP 2013

SHEIKH MOHAMMED is facing fresh embarrassment following the seizure of 124 medical products, none of which have been approved for use on horses in Britain, at part of his Dalham Hall Stud operation in Newmarket.
Although there is no suspicion the haul was destined for the thoroughbred side of the sheikh's operation, the discovery of so many unauthorised medicines on the premises comes in the wake of the doping scandal earlier this year caused by disgraced Godolphin trainer Mahmood Al Zarooni, since banned from the sport for eight years.
The products, which have not been named, were found at Moorley Farm East, which provides the base within the sprawling estate for the endurance horses owned by members of the Maktoum family.
Last month's intelligence-led search of the property was conducted by officials from the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) on behalf of the Veterinary Medicines Directorate, the agency responsible for issues concerning the use and manufacture of veterinary medicines in Britain.
It is not known whether investigators were acting on information gained following the seizure by Border Force officers of unlicensed veterinary products, listed as 'horse tack', from a private plane after landing at Stansted airport in May. In that instance, the BHA said it was satisfied the shipment was not linked to racing.
The latest seizure notice, issued under regulation 41 of Veterinary Medicines Regulations and posted on the VMD website, said: "Moorley Farm East, Newmarket. 124 veterinary medicinal products were seized because they were not authorised in the UK and had not been imported into the UK in accordance with the regulations. These medicines, in varying quantities, were to be used on horses and included injectables, anaesthetics, anti-inflammatories and antibiotics."
Asked about the latest controversy to embroil Sheikh Mohammed's equine empire, Dalham Hall Stud director Liam O'Rourke, said on Tuesday: "There's no connection with the thoroughbred operation."
BHA spokesman Robin Mounsey said the issue was a matter for Defra. He added: "The property in question is not licensed by the BHA and we understand it isn't part of Darley's racing operation."
 
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