FTC Members Spar Over ‘Protected’ Speech On ‘Dr. Oz’ In Supplement Claims Enforcement
This article was originally published in The Tan Sheet
Executive Summary
FTC announces a settlement including $9 million in consumer redress for false ads for green coffee extract supplements. In a dissent, Commissioners Maureen Ohlhausen and Joshua Wright argue that comments made in TV programs are “protected non-commercial speech” and should not influence the amount of a fine.
You may also be interested in...
Weight Loss Claims Land Firms On FTC Radar In First ‘Negative Option’ Case
FTC says Health Formulas LLC of Las Vegas, and its associated firms in Nevada and California, make unsubstantiated claims for green coffee bean extract and other supplement products. A judge issued a temporary injunction against the firms from using “free” trial offers and deceptive health claims.
FTC’s Stern POM Opinion Expands Disease Claim Findings
The Federal Trade Commission’s 5-0 decision against POM Wonderful finds the firm made false and misleading claims and requires it to conduct at least two randomized controlled clinical trials for all future disease-related claims. POM vows to appeal the order in federal court.
Abbott's ‘Bedrock Of Good Health’ Nutritionals Business Faces Mounting Infant Formula Litigation
Nutritional product business had 5.1% Q1 sales growth and is like Abbott’s other segments, “super well-aligned to the global demographics and trends in health care,” says CEO Ford. But as it defends complaints of damages from powder formulas made at facility found with unsafe levels of bacterial contaminants, Abbott’s also targeted in litigation alleging failure to warn about risk of infants born prematurely developing necrotizing enterocolitis if fed cow’s milk-based formula.