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Garcinia cambogia for diabetes – Is garcinia cambogia safe for diabetes and high blood pressure – Pure garcinia …

Welcome to the UPC Show with Curtis Haring, Dylan McDonnell, and Alex Cragun. On the show today we talk about some proposed changes to an initiative to fund education, Chris Stewart has a Democratic challenger, and Orrin Hatch might be on the…

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Weight Loss Products

Firm expands from sex and diet pills to gambling on financial markets

Now – months after it was first exposed – the firm has emerged in yet another online industry making headlines: binary options, where people make fixed-odd bets on financial markets.

Last week The Herald revealed that 41 SLPs were fronting these high-stakes financial gambling sites dubbed “terrifyingly deceptive” by Sir Richard Branson. We identified 22 websites fronted or supported by SLPs that had been the subject of formal warnings of international financial watchdogs.

One of those was Trade24, which was added to a warning list by the Ontario Securities Commission, in September last year. The Canadian watchdog’s list is for “individuals and companies that appear to be engaging in activities that may pose a risk to investors”. Some countries have banned binary options outright and Israel, where many of the websites have their contact centres, is moving to shut them down. Formal ownership, however, is migrating to other countries, especially the UK and particularly Scotland. So, too, are payment processing systems Trade24, on its site, says “some of its credit card payments are going through Querto Services”, listing the SLP’s former Edinburgh address and then addresses in the former Soviet republic of Georgia and Cyprus. The Herald asked Trade24 to explain its relationship with Querto and respond to Canadian warnings. It did not respond.

Querto’s emergence as a payment vehicle in the binary options industry has sparked concerns after the firm was linked to sex and diets pills. Britain’s watchdog, the Financial Conduct Authority, has issued a blanket warning about binary options. But it told The Herald it did not regulate SLPs, despite their use as unauthorised payments providers, including controversial peer-to-peer transfer systems. The UK Government is reviewing SLPs, partly in response to their use in the ‘grey’ internet economy.

Roger Mullin, the SNP candidate for Kirkcaldy and Cowdenbeath, who was on the UK Parliament’s Regulatory Reform Select Committee before the General Election was called, is demanding urgent action.

Mr Mullin said: “It is blindingly obvious some of the most dangerous and insidious products and services are being traded using unregulated payment vehicles. The FCA and other regulators either turn a blind eye or ignore what is going on because they don’t fall within the ambit of regulated products. “It is entirely in the gift of the UK Government to legislate and ensure proper regulation.

“However, we know that the current UK government is intent on reducing regulations as much as they can get away with.

“This simply gives a green light to shady operators and practices. “My hope is once the inquiry into SLPs reports, we can move to ensuring there is comprehensive and meaningful regulation of all forms of payment vehicles; otherwise, the general population is put at significant risk.”

The Herald last October revealed Querto Services was the billing agent for a website marketing Canadian-made pills, called Vimax. They were last year the subject of formal warnings from the US Federal Drug Administration, which claimed they may contain hidden ingredients that can be hazardous for some people taking certain medication. One website claimed the tablets were for “male virility enhancement.” Another said they would help women “flush pounds”

Sites linked to Querto – The Herald investigations have identified at least seven – often feature “free trials” and have a template very similar to those offering similar products, such as diet pills, from other SLPs.

Querto Services also is named as the operator of websites offering diet pills from Garcinia Cambogia, which it calls a “miraculous weight loss fruit” and which the site claims has been scientifically proved to suppress appetite and stop carbohydrates being turned in to fat.

Querto also fronts websites selling raspberry ketones. Both products have been dismissed by NHS consultant and Glasgow University nutrition expert Professor Mike Lean, who says there is no good scientific basis to support the claims made for them.

The SLP itself is registered at a virtual office in 272 Bath Street, Glasgow, where hundreds of other such firms are also based. Its websites, however, used its old address, 78 Montgomery Street, the home of one of the most prolific hosters of Scottish tax haven firms.

There is no suggestion that UK agencies or hosts at these addresses have any involvement in the business.

Querto Services was set up in 2013. Its offshore-based partner companies, Lausanne Group Sa and Sion Holdings, were also the formal owners of Avenilla Commercial, one of the SLPs allegedly used in the Moldovan billion-dollar bank looting, according to a report by US investigators Kroll for the former Soviet republic’s parliament.

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Weight Loss Products

‘Buy One, Get One Free’-Style Offer Hit With Class Action

Puritan’s Pride, Inc., deceived consumers with a “buy one, get one free”-style marketing campaign for its supplements, a new putative class action filed in California federal court alleged.

Although consumers were told that if they purchased one or more products they would receive additional items for free, the defendant built the cost of the “free products” into the price of the products being purchased, Meg Larson and Diane Cabrera said. For example, Larson claimed that she made multiple purchases of items such as garcinia cambogia and vitamin D3 using the buy one, get two free offer and paid a premium price for the one item to cover the cost of the two purportedly free ones.

“Defendants engage in the … systemic and continuous practices of disseminating false, deceptive, and misleading information about the Products via an extensive and comprehensive nationwide marketing campaign, consisting of internet postings, blast emails, targeted emails,” and other media, which is “intended to induce unsuspecting consumers, including Plaintiffs and members of the Class, into purchasing millions of dollars worth of Puritan’s Pride branded Products at a premium price,” the plaintiffs alleged.

Adding to the misleading advertising, Puritan’s Pride misrepresented that the buy something, get something free promotion was available only for a limited time, the complaint alleged, with statements such as “SEMI-ANNUAL EVENT … BUY 2 GET 3 FREE” or “THE BEST SALE OF THE YEAR IS BACK! BUY 1 GET 2 FREE.” In fact, the promotion was ongoing.

“Defendants conceal that their marketing and advertising campaign promising ‘free’ Products is permanent, and intend to induce consumers to make expedited purchases by falsely representing that they can only obtain ‘free’ products if they act quickly,” according to the plaintiffs. “There has been no time in the preceding four years when Defendants were not purportedly giving Products away for ‘free’ under the promotion.”

The plaintiffs alleged violations of California’s Consumer Legal Remedies Act, False Advertising Law and Unfair Competition Law, and requested injunctive relief and monetary damages (including disgorgement and restitution) for a class of California consumers dating back four years.

To read the complaint in Larson v. Puritan’s Pride, Inc., click here.

Why it matters: Consumers (and plaintiffs’ attorneys) have recently turned their attention to price advertising, beginning with class actions against outlet stores, accusing them of misleading pricing. Lawsuits targeting promotional deals like Puritan’s Pride’s buy one, get two free could be the next wave.