"SGF-1000 was analyzed by racing regulators in 2014 and found to contain no known performance-enhancing ingredients, according to Dr. Mary Scollay, the executive director of the Racing Medication and Testing Consortium, which is funded by the racing industry. However, Scollay cautioned that the substance could have had its formula changed in the ensuing years. She also reiterated that many internet pharmacies make unsubstantiated claims routinely for substances that are not known to have any efficacy.In the case of SGF-1000, the main ingredient was I think, sheep collagen, Scollay recollected. That substance and others like it that are ingredients in similar products would not trigger a positive in drug tests because the substances do not have a known pharmacological effect and are therefore left off drug screenings."
"MediVet uses patent-pending technology, which may assist the stimulation of trillions of stem cells in vivo from a dormant state to an active state.In stallions,the product has been shown to enhance semen fertility and motility rate. In an initial trial using a 26-year-old Thoroughbred stallion, SGF-1000 increased the horses fertility from 60% to a remarkable 90%.
SGF-1000 Biological Breeding contains no drugs or chemicals." --AllAmericanCup.org, 2012 [ad in PDF]
Just marvel at the mere idea that one of the horses in question in the indictment could have been bred by a stallion using SFG-1000. lofl