
Tomo ‘Post-Alcohol Recovery’ Supplement
TINA.org breaks down the legal issues of marketing a “hangover supplement.”
July 2018: This case was voluntarily dismissed because the parties reached a settlement agreement, the terms of which have not been disclosed.
April 2018: A class-action lawsuit was filed against Puracy for allegedly misleadingly advertising its skin care, cosmetic, and in-home care products as being “natural” when, according to plaintiffs, they contain synthetic and artificial ingredients. (Martinez et al v. Puracy LLC, Case No. 18-cv-3369, C. D. CA.)
For more of TINA.org’s coverage of natural claims, click here.
TINA.org breaks down the legal issues of marketing a “hangover supplement.”
Car wrap scam has plenty of gas left in the tank.
TINA.org files a complaint with federal regulators over shoemaker’s deceptive made in the USA claims.
The Fashion Law
“Clinically proven” pain relief claims come under fire.