January 25, 2012 2:53 PM

FTC pulls plug on fake news sites pushing acai berry diet pills

By
CBS News Staff
Topics
News ,
Diet

ftc, federal trade commission, acai berry

This image provided Tuesday, April 19, 2011 by the Federal Trade Commission shows a screen shot of a web site using a fake news site to promote acai berry weight-loss products.

(Credit: AP)

(CBS) Ever been directed to a "news" website that contains scientific articles touting the benefits of acai berry pills?

The Federal Trade Commission says those sites are all a scam.

PICTURES: Six weight-loss supplements to avoid

Federal regulators announced settlements Wednesday with six online marketers who were accused of using fake news sites on the Internet to entice customers to buy acai berry weight-loss products. The sites promised rapid and substantial weight loss, sometimes claiming people could lose 25 pounds in four weeks without changing their diets or exercising.

But the FTC accused the marketers of designing websites that falsely appeared as if they were part of legitimate news organizations. The sites boasted investigative-sounding headlines and presented a reporter's "first-hand experience" with acai berry supplements.

The commission went to court in April, seeking temporary restraining orders against the marketers. All six have since taken down their sites pushing the pills.

Acai is a dark purple fruit from a palm found in Central and South America. The marketers advertised their supplement as a weight-loss aid, and often sold with a separate "colon cleanser" product.

Four other similar cases are pending.

"We have ongoing efforts to aggressively challenge deceptive advertisements over the Internet like the fake news sites attacked here, and our enforcement actions can potentially reach anyone in the chain between a seller and the consumer," said Steven Wernikoff, an FTC attorney in Chicago.

FTC attorney Matthew Wernz said consumers paid $70 to $100 for a supply of the pills.

The commission said the marketers who agreed to the proposed settlements were: Ricardo Jose Labra in Michigan; Zachary S. Graham in Minnesota with Ambervine Marketing, LLC and Encastle, Inc.; Tanner Garrett Vaughn in Washington state; Thou Lee in Minnesota; Charles Dunlevy in Pennsylvania; and DLXM, LLC and Michael Volozin in New York.

Under the agreements, they are barred from making deceptive claims and required to make clear that their messages are advertisements and not objective journalism. In all, the six marketers will pay about $500,000 to the commission.

While the FTC says the websites were a scam, acai berries' benefits are still up in the air. Acai berries contain antioxidants and previous research suggests that eating a diet rich in antioxidants may reduce the risk for diseases like heart disease and cancer.

But according to WebMD, "The jury's still out on whether there is something special about acai's ability to shed excess pounds."

7 Photos

Six weight-loss supplements to avoid

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Add a Comment
by PourpaixPourpaix January 25, 2012 8:19 PM EST
Well, nice to see the government's fairy godmother department is still on the job. For those of you who never read Heinlein, the fairy godmother department is staffed by a single elderly lady with vision so horrible that she can't see going to work most days. In contrast, the practical joke and derelictions department is staffed by thousands in a 24x7 operation......
Reply to this comment
by realtimecoffee January 25, 2012 6:09 PM EST
If you insist on paying way way too much for questionable products you can still click on the "Sponsored Links" right beside this article...
Reply to this comment
by hypnotoad72 January 25, 2012 8:05 PM EST
*zing!*

Still, if we insist that regulations are bad, let's vote to dismantle the police, fire, army, navy, etc...
by inbargains January 25, 2012 5:27 PM EST
FTC is now acting as pharmaceutical's police squad? Isn't that a surprise? I guess the competition was getting too fierce for them. They had to send in the FTC to knock some heads around.

Articles like this make you wonder what defines illegal? All day and night television has deceptive ads like the gold buffalo coin with it's 14mgs of gold and those all pass mustard. Billy Mayes (rip) made millions overselling products that rarely lived up to the hype. Telephone companies all show one hand and deal another but as long as there is a fine print contract somewhere, that they never show you, it's not consumer fraud.

How does the FTC target one minute group of marketers selling relative safe pills (bet they all had disclaimer policies) yet ignore the plethora of deceitful ads run everywhere else, and some of them are very harmful? I can only assume some FTC member had a friend or relative feel they overpaid for some acai berry pills. Little else makes sense as to why they dug and investigated this little group of marketers and ignore the real criminals. ED pills are a multi-BILLION dollar business with no medical benefit yet they can advertise all night long on television and on the web without being the target of an FTC take-down. Things that make you go ummmmmm.
Reply to this comment
by Scimajor January 25, 2012 4:33 PM EST
So making a false claim about the medical effects of something is illegal (Look out supplement industry!!). Shouldn't all "faith healers" be charged with fraud also?

The answer, sadly, is no as religion is protected. They can commit fraud all they like.
Reply to this comment
by hypnotoad72 January 25, 2012 8:06 PM EST
*zing!*

I can't argue with that.

Faith is an emotional catharsis, but it does not accomplish anything tangible in the end.
by goptarded January 25, 2012 4:09 PM EST
Now if they would only halt fake news outlets pushing propaganda... Faux News.
Reply to this comment
by Ruteger700 January 25, 2012 3:32 PM EST
I take ACAI BERRY. But got it Wal-Mart for $8. Not gonna help u lose weight, but I recommend it as an anti-oxidant in addition to a daily (quality) multi-vitamin.
Reply to this comment
by realtimecoffee January 25, 2012 5:42 PM EST
Also look into grapeseed extract. Available from Puritan as well 2 for $8.99.
by MegaProcrastination January 25, 2012 7:40 PM EST
Eat plenty of vegetables and some fruit and you'll get the same effect.
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