
Pringles® Salt and Vinegar Chips
Allegations: Falsely marketing products as containing “No Artificial Flavors”
December 2017: A federal judge lifted the stay.
January 2016: A federal judge stayed this action awaiting the resolution of three similar actions pending in the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals.
July 2014: A false advertising class-action lawsuit was filed against Kellogg Company (and later transferred to federal court in October 2014) for its marketing of Gardenburgers. Specifically, the complaint alleges that the company markets Gardenburgers – including the Black Bean Chipotle Veggie Burger, the Portabella Veggie Burger, and the Original Veggie Burger – as “Made With Natural Ingredients” when, according to plaintiffs, the burgers contain synthetic and artificial ingredients. (Mohamed et al v. Kellogg Company and Does 1-10, Case No. 14-cv-2449, S. D. CA.).
For more information about other class-action lawsuit filed against Kellogg Company and TINA.org’s coverage of the company, click here.
Allegations: Falsely marketing products as containing “No Artificial Flavors”
Allegations: Misleadingly including strawberries in photographs on the front of cereal boxes when the products don’t contain any strawberries
Allegations: Deceptively using slack-filled packaging
Allegations: Misleadingly marketing the ingredients in bars
Allegations: Falsely marketing products as “veggie”
Allegations: Misleadingly marketing ingredients in crackers
Allegations: Cereals contain less protein than advertised
Allegations: Misleadingly marketing products as “Made With Wildflower Honey” when honey is not the predominant sweetening ingredient
Allegations: Misleadingly marketing the ingredients in breakfast bars
Allegations: Misleadingly marketing bars as “Cranberry Almond”
Allegations: Misleadingly marketing the filling as strawberry when it contains significant amounts of other fruits in addition to strawberries
Allegations: Misleadingly marketing that the product contains fudge when it is missing ingredients essential to fudge and contains ingredients that are not found in fudge
Allegations: Misleadingly marketing that the only fruit ingredient is strawberries
Allegations: Misleadingly marketing the ingredients used in the fruit filling and as the primary sweetener in products
Allegations: Failing to disclose chips contain harmful ingredients and misleadingly marketing chips as containing evaporated cane juice when they actually contain sugar
Allegations: Deceptively marketing breakfast cereals as healthy when they contain high amounts of sugar
Allegations: Misleadingly marketing the ingredients that are in the filling of Kashi bars
Are FTC settlements just a cost of doing business?