
Arizona Kiwi Strawberry Fruit Juice Cocktail
Allegations: Misleadingly marketing products as “All Natural” and as kiwi and strawberry juice
Campbell et al. v. Arizona Beverages USA LLC and Hornell Brewing Co. Inc.
22-cv-2752, N.D. Cal.
(May 2022)
Arnold Palmer Half & Half Fruit Snacks and Green Tea Fruit Snacks
Misleadingly marketing that products are “made with real fruit” when they don’t contain any fruit
Pending
Allegations: Misleadingly marketing products as “All Natural” and as kiwi and strawberry juice
Allegations: Misleadingly marketing products as “Lite” when sugar is the second most predominant ingredient and they are not low in calories
Allegations: Falsely marketing that fruit snacks contain “No Preservatives” when they contain a preservative ingredient
Allegations: Falsely marketing that products contain no preservatives
Allegations: Falsely marketing products as containing “no preservatives” when they contain a preservative
Allegations: False natural claims
Allegations: False natural claims
Allegations: Marketing beverages as “lite” when sugar is the second most predominant ingredient
Allegations: False natural claims
Allegations: Marketing beverages as “Vitamin C Fortified” in violation of FDA regulations and misleadingly marketing products as “All Natural”
Allegations: Misleadingly marketing beverages as having no calories when they contain more calories than federal regulations allow when making such claims
Allegations: False natural claims
If you can take the time to fill the tank yourself, don’t pay Budget to do it.
It might be a catchy slogan, but it’s not a universally good idea.
Julie Steinberg, Bloomberg Law
Hotel advertises on its website access to an indoor pool that’s been closed for months.
Fusing of “FDA cleared” and “clinically proven” claims has potential to mislead consumers.