
Orgain Kids Protein Organic Nutritional Shake
Allegations: Misleadingly marketing that products contain a specific amount of grass-fed protein
December 2014: This action was voluntarily dismissed When a complaint is dismissed with prejudice, it cannot be refiled.. The reasons have not been disclosed.
March 2014: A class-action lawsuit was filed against Orgain for allegedly misleadingly marketing its nutritional shakes, including Orgain Creamy Chocolate Fudge, Orgain Sweet Vanilla Bean, and Orgain Healthy Kids – Strawberry. Specifically, the complaint alleges that the company represents that the shakes contain “evaporated cane juice” when they actually contain sugar. In addition, plaintiffs claim that the company represents that the products are “rich in antioxidants” without identifying specific antioxidants, in violation of federal regulations. (Chang et al v. Orgain, Inc. d/b/a Orgain, Case No. 14-cv-01515, E. D. NY.).
Allegations: Misleadingly marketing that products contain a specific amount of grass-fed protein
Allegations: Misleadingly representing that the flavoring ingredient is vanilla when the ingredients list shows that the product contains unspecified “Natural Flavors” and testing reveals that the vanilla flavor comes from…
Allegations: Misleadingly marketing products as vanilla
Allegations: Misleadingly marketing protein powder as vanilla and providing “clean nutrition”
TINA.org hammers out the fine print details of this advertised member perk.
Emily Stewart, Business Insider
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TINA.org calls on regulators to stop moving company’s bait and switch.
Complaint alleges IML was a $1.2 billion scam.