
CATrends: Deceptive Tactics Used to Market Subscriptions
Lawsuits allege companies fail to make adequate disclosures.
In August 2014, a federal judge dismissed a lawsuit against Kashi Company. The complaint, which was originally filed in 2013, alleged that the company mislabels products – such as Cinnamon Harvest Cereal, Kashi Steam Meals Italian Vegetable Medley Pasta, and GoLean Instant Hot Cereal Truly Vanilla – as containing “evaporated cane juice” when they actually contain sugar. The judge dismissed the lawsuit finding that, among other things, the FDA is the appropriate authority to resolve the issues and the FDA is actively considering whether “evaporated cane juice” is a common name for any sweetener. The judge dismissed the lawsuit without prejudice, meaning that plaintiffs may refile the complaint. (Saubers et al v. Kashi Company, Case No. 13-cv-00899, S. D. CA.).
For more information about other class-action lawsuits against Kashi and TINA.org’s coverage of the company, click here.
For more information about sugar, click here.
Lawsuits allege companies fail to make adequate disclosures.
The movie ticket subscription service is back. Unfortunately, so too are the deceptive ads.
Agency seeks documents from former instructor and salesperson.
Recyclable claims for products that aren’t actually being recycled need to stop.
Is this company using unapproved drug claims to market its probiotic supplement?