ARCADIA, Calif. – By 11 a.m. Sunday, three horse vans were parked outside of trainer Jerry Hollendorfer’s stable at Santa Anita, waiting to transport the 46-horse stable to Los Alamitos about 30 miles away. Late Saturday morning, in the hours after the Hollendorfer-trained American Currency suffered a fatal injury in a workout, track officials informed the Hall of Fame trainer that he had 72 hours to vacate his stable. American Currency was the stable’s fourth fatality in racing or training and the 30th for all stables at Santa Anita since late December. Hollendorfer was not waiting to leave. He was hoping to fully relocate to Los Alamitos by late Sunday. “We’ll be out of here,” Hollendorfer said. Hollendorfer will be able to race at the 10-day meeting at Los Alamitos that begins next Saturday. On Saturday evening, Los Alamitos track chairman Ed Allred issued a statement in support of Hollendorfer. “Los Alamitos will gladly provide stalls to Jerry Hollendorfer, a Hall of Fame trainer and an unexcelled horseman,” Allred said. “Unless forbidden by the California Horse Racing Board, we intend to permit entries from Hollendorfer. We do not feel he should be a scapegoat for a problem which derives from a number of factors.” Hollendorfer has a small division at Belmont Park in New York that will not be affected by Santa Anita’s decision, New York officials said in a statement. The fatalities at Santa Anita in the last six months have led to widespread pressure by congressional and Senate representatives from California as well as Gov. Gavin Newsom for greater oversight into the care of horses. The fatalities have led track and CHRB officials to implement several prerace examination protocols of horses entered to race or scheduled to have workouts. California Sen. Dianne Feinstein has called for a cessation of racing on three occasions since early April for full inspections of training and racetrack conditions. It was not immediately clear whether Hollendorfer would be allowed to train at the Del Mar summer meeting, which runs July 17 to Sept. 2. Del Mar officials declined to comment Saturday. On Sunday, Hollendorfer said Del Mar “doesn’t have a resolution” on the matter. Asked if the stable could operate in the name of his assistant, Dan Ward, at Del Mar, Hollendorfer said, “I think that’s a possibility.” “I haven’t been ruled off,” Hollendorfer said. “I don’t have a ruling against me.” Hollendorfer was ordered to remove his horses from Santa Anita and Golden Gate Fields in Northern California, tracks owned by The Stronach Group. Hollendorfer said his 40-horse stable at Golden Gate Fields would be relocated to the Alameda County Fairgrounds in Pleasanton. “I’m in unchartered territory,” he said. “Whatever decisions have to be made, I’ll make them. I’ll do my best for the people that work for me.” On Saturday, The Stronach Group issued a statement that said Hollendorfer was “no longer welcome to stable, race, or train his horses at any of our facilities.” In part, the statement said, “We regret that Mr. Hollendorfer’s record in recent months at both Santa Anita and Golden Gate Fields has become increasingly challenging and does not match the safety and accountability we demand.” Hollendorfer’s horses entered at Santa Anita on Saturday and Sunday were scratched by a panel of stewards and veterinarians that reviewed race and veterinary records of all horses entered to race in the last two weeks. The horses were scratched “out of an abundance of caution until we can evaluate the stable,” according to Rick Arthur, California’s equine medical director, who is part of the panel. The scratched horses included Sneaking Out, the 4-5 favorite on the morning line of Sunday’s $200,000 Melair Stakes for 3-year-old California-bred fillies. The panel will be in place during the Los Alamitos and Del Mar meetings in coming months. Hollendorfer is one of racing’s all-time leading trainers and has been a fixture at the top of California racing in the last few decades, notably in Northern California. In the last 15 years, his stable has risen in prominence in Southern California. Hollendorfer, 73, has won 7,617 races in a career that began in 1979. This year, his stable has won 65 races, including four stakes with turf mare Vasilika, the leading runner in the barn. Through Saturday, Hollendorfer was seventh in the trainers’ standings at the Santa Anita spring-summer meeting with eight wins. Hollendorfer was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2011. He won the Breeders’ Cup Dirt Mile at Del Mar in 2017 with Battle of Midway, who suffered a fatal injury in a workout at Santa Anita in February. Hollendorfer trained the champion fillies Blind Luck, Songbird, and Unique Bella and won the 2014 Pacific Classic with Shared Belief. Hollendorfer’s stable was denied an opportunity to train at Santa Anita on Sunday. The horses remained in the barn as preparations continued for departure. Through Sunday morning, equipment was removed from the barn to be loaded on trailers – an array of buckets, wheelbarrows, tack trunks, stall pads, webbings, and five washing machines used for bandages and saddle cloths. More equipment would be loaded later as the horses were being shipped.