THE FEI has opened an investigation into the actions of Australian equestrian athlete Heath Ryan, following allegations of horse abuse reported to the FEI and Equestrian Australia, as well as the posting of a video on social media showing abusive training techniques.

Equestrian Australia and the FEI have imposed a provisional suspension against Heath Ryan. The FEI suspension is reflected in the FEI Database. The investigation will be led by the FEI, in close cooperation with Equestrian Australia.

“The scenes depicted are profoundly disturbing and stand in stark opposition to the core values of FEI horse welfare,” FEI Secretary General Sabrina Ibáñez said.

“The FEI has opened an investigation to thoroughly examine all the facts and determine further disciplinary action under the FEI rules and regulations. We are committed to ensuring that any behaviour which puts horse welfare at risk is dealt with firmly and fairly.”

Equestrian Australia CEO Sam Jones said she welcomed the FEI’s investigation. “It is both appropriate and welcome that FEI leads the investigation of this matter,” Jones said. “Equestrian Australia remains extremely concerned about the incident and allegations, and we will support the FEI in any way we can.

“We know our community is keen for answers, but we would ask for patience as the FEI rightly follows a thorough and fair process, in line with their policies and procedures.”

The FEI invites anyone who witnessed the incident or who possesses relevant information or evidence to contact the FEI via email at welfare@fei.org. The FEI will provide no further comment while the investigation is ongoing in order to protect the integrity of the process.

Last week, Equestrian Australia had provisionally suspended the athlete after receiving a formal complaint.

Rescue mission

The 66-year-old, who competed at the 2008 Olympic Games in dressage and was eventing at four-star level in 2024, released a full explanation on the video, which shows him repeatedly whipping a “problem child” six-year-old horse.

He said ‘Nico’ belonged to a family friend who had been put in intensive care by the horse and he was dropped to him on the way to the knackery as a “rescue mission” because he was a beautiful type and beautifully bred. Ryan said the story had a happy ending for everyone except him, as Nico has gone on to a successful and competitive home and has an exciting future ahead. He added the video was posted by an unhappy ex-employee. “All I can say is that this awful video was collateral damage of me from the bottom of my heart launching a rescue mission.”