Market Updates

FTC Pursues Marketers of Kevin Trudeau’s ‘Weight Loss Cure’ Book

By: Rebecca Wright

Editor/Associate Publisher

The Federal Trade Commission has charged the marketers of Kevin Trudeau’s book, “The Weight Loss Cure ‘They’ Don’t Want You to Know About,” with misrepresenting the book’s contents in their infomercial. The ad claims that the weight-loss plan outlined in the book is easy to do, can be done at home, and ultimately allows readers to eat whatever they want. However, when consumers purchase the book, the FTC charges, they find it describes a complex, grueling plan that requires severe dieting, daily injections of a prescription drug that consumers cannot easily obtain, and lifelong dietary restrictions. The FTC has already filed similar charges against Mr. Trudeau.

The widely disseminated infomercial describes the weight loss plan set forth in the book, stating that “it’s easy to do, you can do it at home” and that “when you’re done with the protocol, eat whatever you want and you don’t gain the weight back.” According to the FTC, when consumers buy and read the book, they find that it actually describes a complicated system involving daily injections, specialized cleanses and supplements, and severe food restrictions, and includes a “fourth phase” of the protocol that requires dietary restrictions and never ends.

FTC filed the complaint today  Direct Marketing Concepts, Inc., ITV Direct, Inc., and the two individuals who jointly control the two corporations, Donald Barrett and Robert Maihos. The FTC alleged that the marketers deceptively claimed that the book establishes a weight loss protocol that is “easy” to follow and that once the protocol ends, consumers can eat what they want without regaining weight.

In 2004, the Commission sued the same four defendants, alleging that they made deceptive advertising claims for two dietary supplements and billed consumers’ credit cards without authorization. The FTC has filed a motion for summary judgment in that case.

The Commission vote to authorize staff to file the complaint was 5-0. The complaint was filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts.

Keep Up With Our Content. Subscribe To Nutraceuticals World Newsletters