Bob Evans Macaroni and Cheese
Allegations: Falsely marketing products as containing no artificial preservatives
Sweeney et al. v. Post Consumer Brands, LLC
25-cv-9263, S.D.N.Y.
(Nov. 2025)
Fruity Pebbles cereal
Misleadingly marketing that products are “Family Size” boxes that contain 15 servings of cereal when they contain only approximately 12.2 servings
Pending
Allegations: Falsely marketing products as containing no artificial preservatives
Allegations: Misleadingly marketing that products are “Family Size” boxes that contain 13 servings of cereal when they contain only approximately 12 servings
Allegations: Falsely advertising products as “Natural Food” that contain “No Artificial Preservatives”
Allegations: Misleadingly marketing cereals as “Made with real honey”
Allegations: Deceptively marketing cereals as healthy
Allegations: Misleadingly marketing that honey is the primary sweetener when the primary sweetener is sugar
Why TINA.org wants the Supreme Court to address proof of harm in Lanham Act cases.
Letters alert agencies and organizations to company’s improper marketing.
TINA.org discovers some roadblocks to unlocking this purportedly free offer.
New research points to “no.”
Why disclosures are key to protecting informed consumer choice and competition.