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Fishman Trial Delayed a Day With Defendant Hospitalized

Attorneys did not disclose further details about Fishman. The trial resumes Feb. 1.

Dr. Seth Fishman

Dr. Seth Fishman

Michael Reaves

Closing arguments were a late scratch Jan. 31 in the horse doping trial of veterinarian Dr. Seth Fishman being held in U.S. District Court in Manhattan.

New York U.S. District Court Judge Mary Kay Vyskocil met the lawyers for both sides in the robing room and then called the jury into the courtroom and sent them home. She told the jurors to return to court Feb. 1.

"There has developed legal issues that need to be dealt with," Vyskocil told the jury of eight women and four men.

But Fishman's absence in court only deepened the mystery. His wife, Hanna, was in the courtroom in the morning and at one point appeared to be visibly upset. He's free on $100,000 bond and has appeared in court for each of the trial's previous eight sessions.

The only other clue as to what was happening came when Fishman attorney Maurice Sercarz appeared in the courtroom after the jury had been dismissed and told the judge Fishman was on his way to the hospital.

"We are in open court," Vyskocil said to Sercarz in admonishment.

Sercarz and his co-counsel Marc Fernich and prosecutors declined further comment.

Lawyers showed up in the afternoon for another conference in the robing room. The day ended with Vyskocil never returning to the bench.

The closing arguments were set to begin after the prosecution rested its case and the defense rested without calling a single witness, including Fishman. The jury has heard five days of testimony from 11 government witnesses.

Fishman, 50, is on trial on for conspiring to violate medication adulteration and misbranding laws. He's accused of supplying horse trainers with illegal performance-enhancing drugs designed to evade testing by racing regulators in various states, including Florida, New York, and Kentucky.

The Daniel Patrick Moynihan United States Courthouse for a federal horse-doping trial on January 21, 2022 in New York.
Photo: Bryan R. Smith
Dr. Seth Fishman is on trial at the Daniel Patrick Moynihan United States Courthouse in New York

Sercarz says the actions his client has been accused of were carried out to protect the health and welfare of horses in keeping with his oath as a licensed veterinarian.

Prosecutors allege that Fishman was part of a sweeping conspiracy to dope racehorses that included top trainers Jorge Navarro and Jason Servis and two dozen others. The New York U.S. Attorney's Office announced the charges in March 2020.

Servis is awaiting trial and Navarro has been sentenced to five years in prison after pleading guilty.

Servis' name hasn't come up in testimony, but Navarro's name has come up numerous times. Prosecutors said Navarro paid Fishman tens of thousands of dollars for PEDs.

The jury saw a video of Navarro's doped X Y Jet winning the $2.5 million Dubai Golden Shaheen Sponsored by Gulf News (G1) in 2019. In a text seen by the jury after the race Navarro thanked Fishman for his help. X Y Jet later died of an apparent heart attack in early January 2020.

During the trial prosecutors also played an FBI wiretap in which Navarro was recorded speaking to Fishman.

Another prominent name that emerged in court in one of the wiretaps was that of Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, the ruler of Dubai and the owner of the international successful Godolphin racing stable. On the other end of the line in the 2019 call was Florida harness trainer Adrienne Hall, who testified Jan. 27 that Fishman put her on a program with his PEDs and that she administered the drugs to a horse that won a low-level claiming race. Hall agreed to testify in exchange for a non-prosecution agreement.

On the wiretap Fishman appears to discuss a $2 million "program" that Dubai Equine, a veterinary hospital built by Sheikh Mohammed in 1995, devised for Thoroughbreds.

A transcript of the wiretap obtained Monday begins with Fishman telling Hall that his program "is not instantaneous."

"Right, so OK, because they are racing on Sunday—they are going to be in on Monday. I gave the other stuff today anyway," Hall says.

Fishman then goes on to say that it takes one or two weeks to start things.

"This is a program," he says. "This is a program that Dubai Equine spent probably $2 million devising for their Thoroughbreds, you know? It is part of a program that uh, you know…there's other stuff too."

Fishman goes on to say that he was bringing Hall on slowly.

Fishman adds, "This is what they do for all their horses and overall, they are very happy. Sheikh (sic) Mohammed Maktoum (sic) said the best three years, you know, in the 30 years he has been racing and they are very happy. So, I'm sharing stuff with you. But then again that's for Thoroughbreds so we just have to tweak some things out because some of the stuff I design for Standardbreds, they don't work. So that's why I'm charging you a fraction of what I normally charge so let's just go baby steps, and we will just start from there, alright."

Godolphin representatives were not available for comment Monday evening.

A tally shows the wiretap was one of 55 recordings the jury heard in the case. Almost all of them involved Fishman.

The Thoroughbred industry's leading publications are working together to cover this key trial.