SGF-1000 Salesman Kegley Gets 30 Months in Prison

Michael Kegley, Jr., the former sales director for the company that sold the purportedly performance-enhancing drug (PED) SGF-1000 that is at the heart of a years-long investigation of an international racehorse doping conspiracy, got sentenced to 30 months in prison on Thursday.

Kegley, 41, had pleaded guilty in July 2021 to one count of drug adulteration and misbranding. He had admitted in open court at that time that as sales director for the Kentucky-based MediVet Equine, he sold SGF-1000 and other products to trainers and veterinarians, knowing that there was “no medical prescription for those products” and that the substances were “not manufactured in an FDA-approved facility [nor] approved for sale by the FDA.”

Kegley's Jan. 6 prison sentence was six months shy of the maximum allowable term under federal sentencing guidelines. Just 24 hours previous to his sentencing, the same judge in the same court had handed down a maximum sentence for similar charges to Kristian Rhein, the defendant who is both Kegley's business associate and brother-in-law.

On Jan. 5, Rhein, a suspended veterinarian formerly based at Belmont Park who married Kegley's sister, got sent to prison for three years by Judge Mary Kay Vyskocil in United States District Court (Southern District of New York).

Prosecutors had previously acknowledged in a sentencing recommendation that Kegley should get a somewhat lighter sentence than his brother-in-law because of Rhein's standing as a veterinarian.

“Unlike Kegley, Rhein was a licensed veterinarian who predominantly treated racehorses; as such, Rhein was a more sophisticated actor than Kegley, and well-acquainted with the various legal regimes governing the sale and distribution of an adulterated and misbranded drug,” the government stated in its sentencing recommendation. “Likewise, Rhein, unlike Kegley, personally administered SGF-1000 to racehorses, concealed bottles of that drug, instructed others to do the same, and falsely billed customers for SGF-1000 under a false billing code.”

As a condition of Kegley's plea-bargained sentence, he was required to forfeit $3,310,490, which is a sum equal to the amount of the illegal substances seized by the government. But a court order accompanying the sentence stated that Kegley will only have to pay $192,615 if he does so within two years of his release from prison. If Kegley does not pay that amount by that time, he will be liable for the full sum.

One admitted doper of Thoroughbreds, the former trainer Jorge Navarro, last month got sentenced to five years in prison for administering myriad alleged PEDs, including SGF-1000.

Another barred trainer under indictment for alleged doping, Jason Servis, is scheduled to face trial in early 2022. Prosecutors have produced numerous intercepted communications involving Servis discussing using SGF-1000 on “almost every” horse under his care, including the disqualified 2019 GI Kentucky Derby winner Maximum Security (New Year's Day).

In one wiretapped call from July 16, 2019, Rhein and Kegley discussed how Servis and his associates were “buying literally as much” SGF-1000 as Rhein was able to source from MediVet.

It was further alleged that MediVet later in 2019 attempted to trick the Racing Medication and Testing Consortium (RMTC) into delisting SGF-1000 as a prohibited substance after Kegley's firm had already “reaped millions of dollars in revenue” by selling it illegally.

According to the government's evidence, MediVet and its associates emphasized “the potent effects of SGF-1000,” which were supposedly derived from “an innovative formulation consisting of Regenerative Proteins, Cytokines, Peptides, potent Growth Factors and Signaling Molecules derived from Ovine Placental Extract.”

Court documents filed by the feds had stated that SGF-1000 was explained to trainers as being similar to a vasodilator that would “increase stamina, performance, and overall health.” The materials even listed the growth factors that were purportedly found in SGF-1000, including some that were explicitly prohibited in many major racing jurisdictions.

The feds also alleged that despite what Kegley, Rhein, and other MediVet representatives claimed when they were parroting the company's marketing materials, no one pushing the product really had any accurate idea of what was in it.

“Notably, Kegley and his coconspirators did not know the precise contents of SGF-1000 until at least in or about August 2019–years after MediVet had started marketing and selling the drug,” court documents stated. “But [they] believed that no matter the component parts of the drug, it would enhance a horse's performance.”

 

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Max Prison Sentence for Vet Rhein

Kristian Rhein, a suspended veterinarian formerly based at Belmont Park who was caught on a wiretap bragging that he sold “assloads” of SGF-1000 to racehorse trainers, was sentenced to three years imprisonment Wednesday after pleading guilty to one felony charge within the federal government's sprawling prosecution of an allegedly years-long conspiracy to dope racehorses.

Judge Mary Kay Vyskocil imposed the maximum-allowable prison term under federal sentencing guidelines Jan. 5 in United States District Court (Southern District of New York).

According to the court order filed in conjunction with his sentencing, Rhein is to report to a to-be-determined prison

Mar. 7. Vyskocil recommended that he serve his term in the medium-security Otisville, New York, facility about 60 miles north of his Long Island residence.

As part of his plea agreement, Rhein also must forfeit to the U.S. the criminally gained proceeds that are directly traceable to his offense, which he agreed totaled $1,021,800. He had previously been ordered to pay at least $671,800 of that amount before or on his sentencing date.

Rhein also must pay $729,716 in restitution to an undisclosed list of victims, the names of whom were filed under seal and thus inaccessible to the general public.

When Rhein spoke in open court back in August to change his plea to “guilty” on one count of drug adulteration and misbranding, he directly implicated five others, most notably co-defendant Jason Servis, the now-barred trainer who was his regular client and allegedly administered purportedly performance-enhancing drugs (PEDs) like SGF-1000 to practically every Thoroughbred under his control.

Rhein, 49, began his veterinary career in 2002 and soon specialized in racehorse treatment. He started a practice at Belmont Park in 2015. In 2017, he partnered to form a bloodstock services company, Empire Thoroughbreds.

Five of 27 defendants named in the original indictment have now been sentenced after pleading guilty to charges in the federal government's prosecution of an alleged “corrupt scheme” to manufacture, mislabel, rebrand, distribute, and administer PEDs to racehorses all across America and in international races. Trials for the remaining defendants, including Servis, are scheduled to commence in 2022, possibly as early as this month.

Scott Robinson, a former veterinarian, was the first to be sentenced in March 2021. In addition to his 18 months in prison, he had to forfeit $3.8 million in profits.

In June, Sarah Izhaki was sentenced to time already served plus three years of supervised release for selling misbranded versions of Epogen.

In September, Scott Mangini, a former pharmacist who had pled guilty to one felony count related to creating custom drugs for racehorses, got sentenced to 18 months in prison. As part of a plea agreement, prosecutors also demanded a forfeiture order from Mangini in the amount of $8.1 million.

In December, the barred trainer Jorge Navarro wept in court after Vyskocil handed down a maximum-allowable sentence of five years imprisonment. Navarro had pled guilty to one count of conspiring with others to administer non-FDA-approved, misbranded and adulterated drugs, including PEDs that Navarro believed would be untestable and undetectable.

Navarro has also been ordered to pay $25.8 million in restitution to the owners, trainers and jockeys he defeated from 2016 to when he was arrested in March 2020. That money–if Navarro ever has the resources to pay it–is to be deposited into an escrow fund that theoretically would get disbursed to racetracks to use in the form of compensatory purses.

Michael Kegley Jr., the former sales director for MediVet Equine, the Kentucky-based company that marketed and sold SGF-1000, will be the next guilty-pleading defendant to be sentenced by Vyskocil, on Jan. 6.

According to court document field by federal prosecutors, Rhein and Kegley worked in tandem to extoll “the performance-enhancing benefits of [SGF-1000] to racehorse trainers.” Like Rhein, Kegley's maximum possible sentence has been calculated to be three years in prison.

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The Week in Review: Feds: Even Those Sold It Did Not Know Contents of SGF-1000

This past summer, Michael Kegley Jr. and Kristian Rhein both pled guilty to felony drug adulteration and misbranding charges in the alleged international Thoroughbred doping conspiracy case. That means they'll avoid trials prior to their sentencings. But it doesn't mean that the voluminous cache of evidence that prosecutors would have used against them won't ever see the light of day.

In fact, just last week, the feds disclosed intriguing documentation about SGF-1000, the adulterated and misbranded purportedly performance-enhancing drug (PED) that was an elixir of choice for now-barred trainer Jorge Navarro, who admitted to injecting it into his horses when he pled guilty in August to one felony drug count. SGF-1000 allegedly also served as “juice” for fellow ruled-off conditioner Jason Servis, but he's still fighting his felony doping charges, even after being implicated by other defendants and allegedly being caught on intercepted phone calls discussing his wide-ranging use of PEDs.

The new intel about SGF-1000 arrived Nov. 15 in the form of a sentencing report for Kegley submitted by the government in advance of his Jan. 6 appearance in United States District Court (Southern District of New York), when he will learn his potential prison fate.

Both Kegley and Rhein are facing maximum three-year terms of incarceration. Rhein's sentencing is Jan. 5, and his report from the government is due Nov. 24.

Kegley is the former sales director for MediVet Equine, the Kentucky-based company that marketed and sold SGF-1000. Rhein is a now-suspended veterinarian formerly based at Belmont Park who has admitted that he and Servis were “leaders and organizers” of a network of associates who performed criminal actions related to doping. The feds also allegedly have Rhein taped on an intercepted phone call bragging that he sold “assloads” of SGF-1000 to racetrackers.

Soon after the arrests of 27 defendants on Mar. 9, 2020, we learned about Servis's alleged conversations with Rhein from June 2019 in which the trainer expressed fears that his purportedly doped MGISW Maximum Security would trigger a positive for SGF-1000. Rhein assured him Max wouldn't, because “they don't even have a test for it in America.”

And this past September, when prosecutors released a separate trove of wiretapped evidence, it was further disclosed that MediVet later in 2019 allegedly attempted to trick the Racing Medication and Testing Consortium (RMTC) into delisting SGF-1000 as a prohibited substance.

The government's sentencing submission from Nov. 15 fills in some previously unknown blanks about how SGF-1000 was marketed, pitched, and positioned during this time frame to maximize sales and avoid scrutiny.

$200 a bottle…but it worked

By the time SGF-1000 had landed in the crosshairs of federal prosecutors in early 2019, MediVet had already “reaped millions of dollars in revenue,” the court document stated. Part of the reason the company was able to rake in enormous profits had to do with bypassing the costs of the rigorous drug approval and registration process required by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA).

“Unlike legitimate drug manufacturers, MediVet spent no funds on studies to demonstrate to the FDA the safety and efficacy of SGF-1000,” the submission stated.

Working in tandem, Kegley and Rhein “both extolled the performance-enhancing benefits of the drug to racehorse trainers.”

Up until the spring of 2019, marketing material for SGF-1000 was routinely provided to purchasers and was readily available on MediVet's website. According to the government, its sellers emphasized “the potent effects of SGF-1000,” which were supposedly derived from “an innovative formulation consisting of Regenerative Proteins, Cytokines, Peptides, potent Growth Factors and Signaling Molecules derived from Ovine Placental Extract.”

The submission further stated that SGF-1000 was explained to trainers as being similar to a vasodilator that would “increase stamina, performance, and overall health.” The materials even listed the growth factors that were purportedly found in SGF-1000, including fibroblast growth factor and hepatocyte growth factor.

“Of course, many jurisdictions prohibited the use of such growth factors on racehorses, particularly where the growth factors are component parts of drugs that are not approved by the FDA, and administered solely to improve a horse's recovery and race performance,” the submission stated.

“Despite the advertised effects of, and ingredients in SGF-1000, the drug's appeal was rooted in the fact that it was undetectable in a horse's system through standard drug screens used in the racing industry, which Rhein repeatedly touted when discussing the drug,” the document continued.

The feds also alleged that despite what Kegley, Rhein, and other MediVet representatives claimed when they were parroting the company's marketing materials, no one pushing the product really had any accurate idea of what was in it.

“Notably, Kegley and his coconspirators did not know the precise contents of SGF-1000 until at least in or about August 2019–years after MediVet had started marketing and selling the drug,” the submission stated. “But [they] believed that no matter the component parts of the drug, it would enhance a horse's performance.”

So too, apparently did trainers. That's why they shelled out $200 a bottle for SGF-1000.

After Servis phoned Rhein on June 5, 2019, to allegedly tell him that Maximum Security had received a dose of SGF-1000 right before an unannounced drug test, “Rhein grew concerned regarding the potential for regulatory scrutiny of SGF-1000, and shared this concern with others at MediVet,” the sentencing submission stated.

The filing continued: “A few weeks later, on July 9, 2019,  Rhein and others affiliated with MediVet convened a conference call in which they discussed the potential for increased scrutiny of the drug. During that call, a participant mentioned that the federal government had prosecuted a racehorse trainer, Murray Rojas, for doping horses, citing it as an example of a case where drug use on racehorses had been pursued by governmental authorities beyond state racing commissions.

“Following the drumbeat of events indicating heightened suspicion of SGF-1000, Rhein and Kegley strategized regarding the best way to divert people's attention away from SGF-1000.

Rather than cease their sales of that drug, Kegley and Rhein instead discussed how they could tweak the labeling of SGF-1000, so as to make it appear innocuous,” the sentencing submission stated.

“You're right, it might help to re-brand it,” the feds allegedly recorded Kegley saying on a wiretap. “We won't mention the word 'growth factor' in any way shape or form…. We can even put on the box, you know, 'dietary supplement for equine.' That way it's not–no one even has to question if it's FDA-approved or not. It's strictly a supplement.”

RMTC Trickery

By the summer of 2019, the push was on at MediVet to try and convince the RMTC that this “supplement” was so harmless that it should be delisted as a banned substance.

“On August 8, 2019, a MediVet representative received a report from Industrial Laboratories reflecting a negative finding (at that time) for certain growth factors,” the court document stated.

Yet that same test did detect, among other prohibited substances, “low levels of acepromazine, levamisole, detomidine, pyrilamine, lidocaine, MEGX, xylazine, and caffeine.”

MediVet's reaction to this disturbing news?

According to the sentencing submission, it was “to request that the negative and positive findings be split into two separate reports. On Sept. 10, 2019, MediVet, through counsel, conveyed the negative findings to the RMTC, while withholding the positive findings.”

Around the same time, MediVet was feeling heat from regulators in New York who were zeroing in on SGF-1000 as an allegedly abused PED.

“In September 2019, MediVet's sales of SGF-1000 hit a significant hurdle,” the sentencing submission stated. “The New York Gaming Commission issued a notice in which it reiterated its longstanding prohibition against the use of growth factors and growth hormones on racehorses, but also specifically named SGF-1000 as a prohibited drug of the type that contained growth hormone or growth factors.”

Yet still, the court document explained, “Kegley and Rhein continued to market and sell SGF-1000” while MediVet “altered the promotional material for SGF-1000 to divert attention and mislead anyone who was unfamiliar with the prior marketing materials description of SGF-1000.”

So whereas the packaging and label for SGF-1000 in July 2019 described it as consisting of “regenerative placental proteins” and being “made in Australia,” by October the drug's description “had been altered to remove any reference to Australia, and was instead described as a 'homeopathic placental extract.'”

Yet by Oct. 14, 2019, MediVet had already learned “that a subsequent test of SGF-1000 did result in findings reflecting the presence of a specific growth factor,” the document stated.

And by the time Kegley and Rhein were arrested five months later, “the website for SGF-1000 had been scrubbed clean, removing any reference to growth factors, and much of the description regarding SGF-1000” itself.

“In short, even after Kegley and others at MediVet had reason to pause and take stock of the illegality of SGF-1000, they nonetheless continued to sell the drug,” the submission stated.

“With full knowledge that SGF-1000 was banned in New York, that a racehorse trainer had been criminally charged for doping, and that law enforcement was beginning to scrutinize the use of SGF-1000 specifically…Kegley and Rhein worked together and with others to deceptively label that drug, and to continue to sell the drug to those in the racehorse industry seeking a competitive advantage,” the document stated.

“Given the proliferation of websites that offer potent PEDs to those in the racehorse industry, similar to that operated by MediVet, a significant sentence is warranted to send a strong signal to others thinking of engaging in such criminality that there will be consequences for their crimes.

“Many actors in the racehorse industry have grown indifferent to, and dismissive of, the notion of obtaining illegal drugs to dope racehorses for profit, and assume that no serious ramifications will follow if they are ever caught,” the submission summed up.

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Drug Distributor Kegley Pleads Guilty, Faces up to 36 Months in Jail

Among the individuals originally indicted in the doping scandal involving top trainers Jason Servis and Jorge Navarro, Michael Kegley Jr. entered a guilty plea Friday morning during a teleconference before federal judge Mary Kay Vysockil. Kegley pled guilty to one count of drug adulteration and misbranding.

Kegley had originally pled not guilty to the charges.

Kegley will not be sentenced until a Nov. 22 hearing, but it was revealed during Friday's proceedings that he has entered into a plea agreement with government lawyers in which he has agreed to a sentence ranging from 30 to 36 months. Vysockil noted that there is no parole involved when someone is sentenced on federal charges and that most guilty parties serve at least 85% of their sentence.

Kegley, a 41-year-old Lexington, KY resident, was the director of sales for a company based in Nicholasville, KY called MediVet Equine Associates LLC, and admitted in court that the firm produced and sold drugs that were not permissible to be used on  racehorses. The primary drug sold by Kegley was SGF-1000. In phone calls intercepted by the FBI, Servis admits to using SGF-1000 and, at one point, says, “I've been using it on everything almost.”

Vysockil, a United States District Judge of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, confronted Kegley, saying, “At this time I would like you to tell me what you did that makes you guilty of the offense charged…Specifically, what you did, when you did it, with whom you did it, where you did it.”

Kegley responded: “Beginning in 2016, I was an independent contractor for a company, MediVet Equine. We sold a variety of products, including SGF-1000. I sold these products to veterinarians, horse trainers. When I did that I knew there was no medical prescription for those products. Also at the time, I knew that the product was not manufactured in an FDA approved facility, nor was it approved for sale by the FDA.”

Vysockil continued to press Kegley, asking a series of follow-up questions. She asked Kegley if he knew that the trainers buying the products intended to use them on Thoroughbred racehorses and whether or not he knew the products were to be used in such a way that regulators could not detect the products through drug tests. Kegley answered “yes” to both questions.

Shortly after Friday's hearing, Manhattan U.S. Attorney Audrey Strauss issued a statement, which read: “Michael Kegley promoted and sold unregulated performance enhancing substances intended for use by those engaged in fraud and unconscionable animal abuse in the world of professional horseracing. This conviction underscores that our Office and our partners at the FBI are committed to the prosecution and investigation of corruption, fraud, and endangerment at every level of the horse racing industry.”

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