
Krud Kutter Cleaning Products
Allegations: Falsely marketing products as non-toxic and earth friendly
In April 2015, a class-action lawsuit was filed against Rust-Oleum for allegedly deceptively marketing “Restore” products for wooden decks, including Deck & Concrete Restore and Deck & Concrete Restore 10x. According to the plaintiffs, the company deceptively represents that the “Restore” products are an alternative to regularly repainting and replacing decks when, in reality, the products chip, peel, and leave decks unprotected months after being applied to them. (Baden et al v. Rust-Oleum Corp., Case No. 15-cv-02892, N. D. IL.).
Allegations: Falsely marketing products as non-toxic and earth friendly
Allegations: Falsely marketing that products provide twice the coverage as Rust-Oleum’s general purpose spray paints
Allegations: Falsely marketing products as tung oil when tung oil is not the primary ingredient
Allegations: Misleadingly marketing that products containing both paint and primer cover surfaces in one coat without applying a separate primer
Allegations: Misleadingly marketing products as durable and weather resistant when they prematurely degrade, peel, flake, and deteriorate
Allegations: Falsely marketing that the glass treatment “Lasts Over 100 Car Washes” and “Lasts 2X Longer*”
Allegations: Falsely marketing Restore products as superior and durable when they chip, peel, flake, and deteriorate prematurely
A recent spate of class-action lawsuits, including three involving Windex, allege household cleaners marketed as “non-toxic” contain harmful ingredients.
An industry self-regulatory board claims to have caught the company red handed.