Forever Living Ditching MLM Model
Company becomes the latest to leave the industry.
December 2016: This action was dismissed When a complaint is dismissed without prejudice, an amended version of the complaint can be refiled. because the parties reached a settlement agreement that resolved the individual claims. The terms of the settlement have not been disclosed.
May 2014: A class-action lawsuit was filed alleging that numerous Lifewatch companies involved in the marketing and selling of medical alert devices and monitoring services use deceptive business practices. Among other things, the complaint alleges that the companies contact consumers to offer them a “free” medical alert device (saying that they only need to pay the monthly service fee because someone else purchased the device for them) when, according to the plaintiffs, the company charges them for the device. (Plaintiffs filed an amended complaint in October 2015.) (Reynolds et al v. Lifewatch, Inc., Lifewatch Corp., Lifewatch Technologies Corp., Lifewatch Services, Inc., Lifewatch, Inc. d/b/a Lifewatch USA, Evan Sirlin, Mitchell May, ABC Corporations 1-10 and John Does 1-10, Case No. 14-cv-003575, S. D. NY.).
For more information about other class-action lawsuits regarding the marketing of medical alert devices and TINA.org’s coverage of the issue, click here.
Company becomes the latest to leave the industry.
The FTC’s Negative Option Rule do-over – and what’s at stake.
Be wary of questionable and deceptive claims in origin stories.
Mounting lawsuits accuse Meta of breaking privacy promises.
Breaking down the fine print of this March Madness commercial.