The legal library gives you easy access to the FTC’s case information and other official legal, policy, and guidance documents.
20201553: Genossenschaft Zentralschweizer Milchproduzenten ZMP; The Interogo Foundation
20201555: Third Point Reinsurance Ltd.; China Minsheng Investment Group Corp., Ltd.
20201556: China Minsheng Investment Group Corp., Ltd.; Third Point Reinsurance Ltd.
20201558: Flying Eagle Acquisition Corp.; Andrew Paradise
20201562: Conyers Park II Acquisition Corp.; Karman Topco L.P.
20201563: Universities Superannuation Scheme Limited; TP Group PECO - LLC
20201564: Odyssey Investment Partners Fund VI, LP; ProPharma Group Topco, LLC
20201566: Clearlake Capital Partners VI, L.P.; Cardinal Parent, Inc.
20201567: Carlyle Partners VII, L.P.; TriNetX, Inc.
20201574: Barings BDC, Inc.; MVC Capital, Inc.
NutraClick, LLC, et al.
In September 2016, nutritional supplement marketer NutraClick agreed to settle FTC charges that it lured consumers with “free” samples of supplements and beauty products and then violated the law by charging them a recurring monthly fee without their consent. Four years later, in September 2020, the FTC filed a complaint alleging the company and its two principals were continuing to deceptively market their products, in violation of the FTC order. The settlement order, announced simultaneously with the complaint, bans the defendants from negative option marketing and requires them to pay more than $1 million for consumer redress.
20201349: Clarivate Plc; GEI VII Capri Holdings, LLC
20201547: Commonspirit Health; Yavapai Community Hospital Association
2009006 Informal Interpretation
Ponte Investments, LLC
A Rhode Island company and its owner will be permanently prohibited from misrepresenting they are affiliated with the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) as part of a settlement resolving Federal Trade Commission charges they misled consumers in the early days of the coronavirus pandemic. Ponte Investments, LLC, and its owner John C. Ponte were charged by the FTC in April 2020 with misleading small businesses to think they had an affiliation with the SBA and could offer companies access to the coronavirus relief programs administered by the agency.
Renaissance Health Publishing, LLC
A Florida-based company that has promoted its Isoprex supplement to older adults as a miracle cure for pain and joint inflammation has agreed to a settlement with the FTC that bars the company from continuing to make its unproven claims. In September 2020, the FTC announced it was sending refunds totaling more than $76,000 to consumers who bought the deceptively marketed product.