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Orlando Weight Loss
Orlando Weight Loss
If you live or work or watch TV in a major television market in
Southern California such as San Diego, Los Angeles, Santa Barbara, Palm
Springs, Indio, El Centro, or Orange County, CA, (which sees Los
Angeles stations) or live elsewhere in cities such as Santa Ana, Long
Beach, Anaheim, Riverside, Irvine, San Bernardino, Fontana, Newport
Beach, Corona del Mar, Moreno Valley, Garden Grove, Corona,
Victorville, El Cajon, Chula Vista or Hesperia, you will probably see
at least a couple of commercials on television tonight that appear to
be deceptive advertisements with claims that you suspect simply can't
be true.
As a business lawyer in California and a CA advertising and marketing
attorney, it is difficult sometimes to keep an advertising client on
the straight and narrow path, especially when they see ads on the
television on a daily basis advertising products that can't possibly do
what they claim to do. This fictional conversation illustrates the
problem.
"But just last night an advertisement claimed that drinking a certain
product was proven to reduce unwanted fat," a client argued. "Can't I
say that my garage is my clinic and I've proven this pill will cure all
of your medical problems?"
"You can't do it," I said. "Deceptive advertising is illegal. No one is
going to equate your garage with a medical clinic. And if that diet
pill you saw advertised only caused overweight rats to loose weight
when they stopped feeding them anything else, they could have a
problem."
"What about the diet drugs and drinks then?" the client asked.
"If the ads are untrue, the FCC may very well prosecute," I said. "What
no one knows is how overworked the FCC may be and how many of their
prosecutors already have their hands full."
"So maybe it takes them a few years to prosecute," the client said.
"That could be after the company makes tens of millions of dollars."
"That's true" I said. "But if the FCC does catch up with a deceptive
advertiser, they will look at how much they made with their deceptive
advertising and increase the amount of their fine accordingly.
Unfortunately, unscrupulous advertisers may try to hide a portion of
their profits from the investigators and in the end, if they take that
risk and don't get caught, their enterprise may still be lucrative."
Palm Beach Weight Loss
"But I want to tell the world how my one pill will solve all their medical problems," my client said.
"Is it clinically proven?" I asked.
My client suddenly had taken a vow of silence.
"The FCC won't be your only problem," I said. "You can still face
individual law suits, investigations by state governmental agencies,
class action lawsuits, and if you have any money left, you will likely
be forced to agree to never advertise such a product again."
"What if I just write a book that tells people about my cure, without selling the cure," the client asked.
"If you advertise the book and the cure as being legitimate and those ads are deceptive," I said, "same result."
My client was scowling and even though I have no clinically proven
ability to do so, I could read his mind. He was thinking he needed a
different lawyer. One that would find a way for him to advertise his
pills to cure every medical problem known to mankind and a few others
not yet realized.
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