| U.S. Federal Trade Commission |
FTC News Release, Mar 10, 2004
Marketers of "Peel Away the Pounds" Patch Settle FTC Charges of False & Unsubstantiated Weight Loss Claims
FTC Settlement Requires the Defendants to Pay More Than $1 Million
Marketers of the "Peel Away the Pounds"
patch, which was widely advertised in infomercials, have
agreed to settle Federal Trade Commission charges that they
made false and unsubstantiated weight loss claims in violation
of the FTC Act. The FTC complaint alleges that the defendants
falsely claimed that the seaweed-based skin patch causes as
much as three to five pounds of weight loss per week, and made
other false and unsubstantiated claims. The proposed
settlement, which requires court approval, requires the
defendants collectively to pay more than $1 million in
consumer redress, to stop making certain false weight loss
claims, and to possess scientific substantiation before making
other claims for any product, program or service that
purportedly provides health benefits.
"No non-prescription product will cause
meaningful weight loss without diet or exercise," said Howard
Beales, Director of the FTC's Bureau of Consumer Protection.
"Claims that patches, creams, and wraps can cause substantial
weight loss are a ‘red flag' for falsity. Marketers should not
make those claims; the media should not run them; and
consumers should not buy them."
The FTC's complaint names patch manufacturer
Advanced Patch Technologies, Inc. (APT) and its principal,
Salomon Btesh; marketers PAP Systems, LLC, Buckhead Marketing
& Distribution LLC (BMD), and their principals, Ralf
Leszinski and Nancy Duitch; and expert endorser, Jesse
Starkman. The FTC complaint also names two "relief defendants"
- APT principal Bernard Silverfarb, and BMD affiliate Buckhead
Marketing Group, LLC. Relief defendants are individuals or
entities that did not participate in the alleged deceptive
practices, but financially benefitted as a result. The APT
defendants are based in Opa Locka, Florida; BMD is based in
Los Angeles, California; PAP and BMG are based in Atlanta,
Georgia; and Starkman resides in Weston, Florida.
According to the FTC complaint, the
defendants advertised Peel Away the Pounds in an infomercial
that aired from June 2002 to January 2003, on several websites
and in a print ad. The ads claimed that Peel Away was a
remarkable new way to shed excess pounds without strenuous
exercise and without being hungry. The ads contained
statements such as:
"Simply follow our system: Place a Peel Away
patch on your upper body. Then carry on with your
everyday lifestyle. Every three days peel off the patch and
watch as you take off the pounds. Replace with a new patch
and drop more pounds. It's that easy."
Throughout the infomercial,
individuals who purportedly used the Peel Away patch gave
glowing testimonials that attributed their purported success
in losing weight to wearing the patch. The infomercial also
featured defendant Jesse Starkman, a chemist, who allegedly
described the patch's purported ability to deliver its
ingredients into the bloodstream and to increase metabolism,
suppress appetite, and reduce fat cell production.
The FTC complaint alleges that the
defendants (except Starkman) falsely claimed that the patch
causes substantial weight loss, including as much as three to
five pounds per week; that the patch causes substantial weight
loss in all users; and that the patch is scientifically proven
to cause weight loss. The FTC complaint further alleges that
the defendants (except Starkman) made unsubstantiated claims
that the patch: causes weight loss; boosts metabolism;
suppresses appetite; causes users to burn substantial
calories, including as much as 4,000 calories in three days;
causes fat loss; reduces fat cell production; and delivers its
ingredients into the bloodstream more quickly and efficiently
than pills. In addition, the FTC complaint alleges that
defendant Starkman, appearing as an expert endorser, made
certain of these alleged unsubstantiated claims without
exercising his purported expertise in evaluating the
product.
The FTC has obtained two stipulated final
judgments and orders that together require the defendants to
pay $1,175,000. One of the stipulated final orders settles
charges against marketers PAP, BMD, Ralf Leszinski, Nancy
Duitch, and BMG, and requires a $1 million consumer redress
payment. It contains a $24.4 million judgment, which is
suspended except for the $1 million payment, with an
"avalanche clause" that requires the defendants to pay the
full $24.4 million if they made material misrepresentations on
their financial disclosure statements. The other stipulated
final order settles charges against the APT defendants and
expert endorser Starkman, and requires a $175,000 payment.
Both stipulated final orders prohibit all
false or misleading weight-loss claims, including claims that
the Peel Away patch, or any transdermal product, causes
substantial weight loss. The orders also prohibit the
defendants from representing that the Peel Away patch, or any
other product, causes substantial weight loss in all users.
The orders further prohibit the defendants from making the
unsubstantiated claims challenged in the FTC's complaint. The
orders require the defendants to possess competent and
reliable scientific evidence to substantiate future claims
about the benefits, performance, efficacy, safety, or side
effects of any product, service, or program that purportedly
provides health benefits, including weight loss or fitness
benefits. Finally, the orders prohibit the defendants from
misrepresenting any test, study, or research for any such
product, service, or program.
The stipulated orders also contain various
recordkeeping requirements to assist the FTC in monitoring the
defendants' compliance.
The Commission vote to
authorize staff to file the complaint and the two stipulated
final orders was 5-0. The complaint and stipulated
final orders were filed in the U.S. District Court for the
Northern District of Georgia, Atlanta Division on March 9,
2004. The stipulated final orders require the court's
approval.
The text in this article was prepared by the U.S. Federal Trade Commission.