Veterinary inspectors waited four weeks to give a racehorse trainer a list of steroids and medicine allegedly found in his stables, a court has heard.
Irish trainer Philip Fenton, 49, has gone on trial on eight charges over treatments and remedies.
They were recorded following a search of his yard at Garryduff, South Lodge, Carrick-on-Suir, County Tipperary, on 18 January 2012.
The trial is taking place at Carrick-on-Suir district court.
Among the substances allegedly seized was 1kg of the steroid Nitrotain in a paste form, a 20ml bottle of performance-enhancing drug Ilium Stanabolic, a counterfeit medicine and drugs held without prescription.
The trial heard the drugs were in a white cardboard box covered by a horse rug in an area described as the horse spa next to a medicine store.
The prosecution against Mr Fenton was brought in the name of Ireland’s minister for agriculture for infringements of rules on animal remedies.
Brendan Daly, an officer with the special investigations unit in the department, revealed he stored the cardboard box of drugs in a locker in his house after the raid.
“I was satisfied it was in a secure location. There was one key I was in possession of, which I have in my pocket,” Mr Daly said.
Mr Fenton was shown the box on the day of the search and some of the containers, the court heard.
The search ended shortly after the box was found as the lead investigator Noel Kelly, who was in the yard, had been informed his father-in-law had died.
No department-stamped exhibit sheet was filled out at the time, the court heard.
Mr Daly and Mr Kelly said they left the yard and immediately travelled to the offices of Mr Fenton’s vet, Martin O’Gorman, in Ballypatrick, Clonmel, County Tipperary.
They told the court a secretary was completing prescription forms when they arrived. They seized the documents.
The court heard the inspectors did not return to Mr Fenton with a list of the seized drugs until 14 February.
John Walsh, senior counsel for Mr Fenton, said protocols were not followed in the search.
“I’m suggesting to you that this is totally unacceptable and you know it is totally unacceptable and you know it is a breach of protocols that you did not record what was found in an exhibit book,” Mr Walsh said.
Mr Daly replied: “He [Mr Fenton] was made aware on the day [of the search]. He did not raise any objection.”
The inspector said Mr Fenton had “ample opportunity” to check what was in the box on the day.
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Ed:
Nitrotain is described as a “vet only product” that is “a potent, short acting oral anabolic steroid with very low potential for adverse side effects, and a short withdrawal time (providing liver and kidney functions are normal). Nitrotain, with extremely high anabolic activity and very low androgenic activity, is safe for fillies and mares, as well as geldings and yearlings.”
Saying the product has “rapid and predictable excretion” means it gets out of the system relatively fast for drug testing purposes, unlike other steroid preparations: testosterone, stanozolol, nandrolone, boldenone, and methandriol.
Does it work?
Well, some Australian body builders think it does. A trio of them were caught on camera breaking into an Australian stable, where they stole a tub of Nitrotain. Bodybuilders and other human athletes have been known to inject anabolic steroids designed for horses to help improve their performance.