P.E.I. harness racing driver suspended indefinitely over results of 4 drug tests
CBC
An award-winning P.E.I. harness racing driver is facing an indefinite suspension from competition.
This comes after horses trained by Marc Campbell tested positive for drug violations four times in the past year, according to the Atlantic Harness Racing Commission.
His supporters say the suspension is unfair, though.
"He went from a hero to zero here in a matter of a week, and he's never had a chance to explain his side of the story, or literally have due process in this," said Jim Whelan, president of the Ontario Harness Horse Association.
Whelan said he wants to see changes to the drug testing rules and penalties.
"You could destroy his whole career and his family and it'll be a tainted career going forward if this isn't properly sorted out real quick."
Campbell has a long history of training and racing horses, and is a past winner of P.E.I.'s famed Gold Cup and Saucer. He declined a CBC News request for an interview.
Three of the drug violations were registered in the last month, and Whelan said three of the four found too high a level of Lasix, a medication meant to stop bleeding. He also said three of those violations involved the same horse.
The drug is administered by a veterinarian appointed by the racing commission, a few hours before a race.
Dr. Ben Stoughton, a large-animal internal medicine clinician at the Atlantic Veterinary College in Charlottetown, said the testing process is highly regulated, for good reason.
"It does enhance their performance," he said. "So that's why there's this tight balance of giving the drug to protect the horse, but also not wanting to have too high a level, because it can enhance their performance."
Whelan said Campbell shouldn't be held responsible since he didn't administer the drug.
"When there's a mistake made — whether it's science, the horse not metabolizing stuff properly, whether it's a mistake made when the medication is administered to the horse — the trainer's held responsible, in this case when it wasn't part of his responsibility," he said.
"There was nothing he could've prevented."