Nature’s Recipe Dog Foods
Allegations: Falsely marketing products as natural
Sciarabba et al. v. Post Consumer Brands, LLC
25-cv-9315, S.D.N.Y.
(Nov. 2025)
Honey-Comb cereal
Misleadingly marketing that products are “Family Size” boxes that contain 13 servings of cereal when they contain only approximately 12 servings
Pending
Allegations: Falsely marketing products as natural
Allegations: Falsely marketing products as containing no artificial preservatives
Allegations: Misleadingly marketing that products are “Family Size” boxes that contain 15 servings of cereal when they contain only approximately 12.2 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 are these airport vendors slyly charging consumers for “employee benefits”?
Supplement maker agrees to pay $750K to settle deceptive health claims lawsuit.
Settlement comes after TINA.org exposed thousands of deceptive income claims.
TINA.org sheds light on confusing and misleading brightness claims.
Brant James, Ingame