Ignoring the drugging, cruelty and abuse to horses since Slot Machine cash was lavished on the dead horse racing industry, NYRA CEO suspended for knowingly cheating bettors.
This certainly seems to be consistent amoral conduct in a sleazy business.
NYRA puts CEO, counsel on unpaid leave amid probe
By Michael Gormley
Associated Press
ALBANY, N.Y.—The private group that runs New York thoroughbred
racing put its $475,000-a-year top executive on leave Monday along with the
senior vice president after a state report said $8.5 million in winnings wasn't
paid to bettors.
The New York Racing Association Executive Committee said CEO Charlie Hayward and Senior Vice President Patrick Kehoe are indefinitely on unpaid administrative leave. Kehoe was paid $423,000 a year after he and other top officers, including Hayward, got raises last summer. Kehoe was also general counsel to the entity that holds the state franchise to run racing at Belmont, Aqueduct and Saratoga race tracks.
NYRA board Chairman C. Steven Duncker said the group takes the state report
"extremely seriously."
"NYRA will take all appropriate steps and actions to cooperate with the
state's inquiries and insure the integrity of our operations," Duncker said in a
press release.
A state Racing and Wagering Board interim report released Monday said NYRA's
management intentionally miscalculated winnings paid over 15 months. The report
said NYRA knew it was shortchanging bettors by extracting inaccurate "take out
rates" from winnings and still did nothing about it, a claim NYRA
disputes.
NYRA officials told the Racing and Wagering Board that the issue was the
result of an inadvertent error.
The report also said NYRA tried to keep the information from the public,
including asking a racing columnist to keep the information out of the Daily
Racing Form. The report said the columnist agreed. It identifies the columnist
as Steve Crist, who is also the Racing Form's publisher. The report said a
reader told him NYRA was taking too much out of winnings, and Crist contacted
Hayward. The report says Hayward kept overcharging to accumulate cash for NYRA
and to avoid adverse publicity that could have turned politicians in Albany,
specifically Senate Majority Leader Dean Skelos, against NYRA.
Crist told New York's Daily News on Monday that he didn't know NYRA was
overcharging and if he did, "we would have put it on the front page."
Hayward didn't respond to a request for comment.
"The report is deeply troubling," said Robert Megna, Gov. Andrew Cuomo's
budget director and chairman of the state's Franchise Oversight Board, which
oversees NYRA. The franchise holder must maintain "character and general
fitness" to keep the racing license.
The probe comes as Cuomo seeks to expand gambling and allow a casino
developer to build the nation's largest convention center at Aqueduct. He has
also proposed a state commission to oversee all gambling statewide.
"The report raises serious questions about the actions of senior management
of NYRA," Megna wrote in a letter dated Sunday. "This is not an isolated
instance." Megna continued: "A failure to meet this most fundamental obligation
puts into doubt the continued efficacy of the state's franchise agreement with
NYRA."
The Cuomo-appointed racing committee would oversee the sport if NYRA's
franchise is dissolved.
"It was shocking to me," Cuomo said of the report. "If the facts are correct,
it's very troubling to say the least and it has been referred to the inspector
general."
NYRA is one of New York's most enduring political powers, holding the racing
franchise since 1955. In 2008, the state awarded another 25-year franchise to
NYRA, even though it was in bankruptcy proceedings at the time. In exchange,
NYRA dropped its claim to the land on which the tracks are located and collected
$105 million from the state to avoid bankruptcy.
Cuomo made a proposed $4 billion convention center near Aqueduct a major
element of his State of the State speech in January. It would be a key to major
development of the area in Queens. Real estate and construction interests were
Cuomo's biggest campaign contributors in the 2010 campaign for governor,
providing $2.6 million.
Elmont, a Long Island community a short drive from the Queens track, is also
expected to see development.
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