| U.S. Federal Trade Commission |
FTC News Release, Jun 19, 2003
No Silver Lining for Marketers of Bogus Supplement;
Federal Agencies Crack Down on Health Fraud
FTC Charges Marketers of Seasilver with Making False and Deceptive Claims; FDA Seizes Seasilver Inventories
The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and the
Food and Drug Administration (FDA) announced coordinated
actions against two companies - both charged with promoting
the dietary supplement "Seasilver" with unsubstantiated
medical claims. The agencies' actions against Seasilver USA,
Inc. and Americaloe, Inc. are designed to halt the fraudulent
marketing of Seasilver and to seize the available inventory of
the product. Today's actions are the latest part of Operation
Cure.All, an on-going coordinated effort among the FTC, the
FDA, Health Canada, Canada's Competition Bureau, and state
Attorneys General to crack down on unscrupulous marketers who
prey on consumers with serious illnesses.
The FTC has charged the two companies, their
owners, the principal distributor, and a purported "expert"
with making false and unsubstantiated claims about the health
benefits and safety of a product they market called
"Seasilver"- a purported cure-all liquid supplement. The FTC
alleges that the defendants promoted Seasilver as safe and
effective to treat or cure 650 diseases, including AIDS and
cancers, and to cause substantial and permanent weight loss.
The FDA has seized inventories of the product.
"The FTC and the FDA are committed to
aggressive action against fraudulent claims in the dietary
supplement market," said Timothy J. Muris, Chairman of the
FTC. "Like the snake oil salesman of old, Seasilver claimed to
cure 650 different health problems, including such serious
diseases as cancer, AIDS, and diabetes. These claims may keep
consumers from seeking appropriate treatment. They certainly
empty consumers' pockets."
"This is the sort of intolerable health
fraud I had in mind when I announced six months ago that the
FDA will take vigorous actions against firms that prey on
consumers and patients by selling worthless dietary
supplements as cures for serious and chronic diseases and
conditions," said Mark B. McClellan, M.D., PhD, the FDA
Commissioner. "Using these ineffective products is worse than
wasting money - it may cause irreparable harm by delaying or
replacing approved treatments that can bring actual health
benefits."
In a complaint filed in federal district
court in Nevada on June 12, 2003, the FTC alleges that two
Carlsbad, California-based companies, Seasilver USA. Inc. and
Americaloe, Inc., their principals, Bela and Jason Berkes;
Brett Rademacher, doing business as Netmark International and
NetmarkPro; and David R. Friedman, D.C., violated the FTC Act
by making false and unsubstantiated claims for Seasilver.
Seasilver is a liquid multi-vitamin/mineral/amino acid dietary
supplement that purports to contain, among other ingredients,
aloe vera, phyto-silver (purportedly a plant-based silver),
sea vegetables, the herb Pau D'Arco, and cranberry
concentrate. A 32-oz. bottle of Seasilver costs $39.95.
According to the FTC, the defendants promote
Seasilver through national television and radio infomercials,
Web sites at www.seasilver.com and www.myseasilver.com,
spam emails, and a glossy 28-page consumer brochure. The
defendants publicly claimed that Seasilver USA earns $180
million annually from selling Seasilver. The FTC alleges that
the defendants' ads and promotional materials represented that
Seasilver: (1) treats or cures cancer; (2) enables nine out of
ten diabetes patients to stop their insulin medication; and
(3) causes rapid, substantial, and permanent weight loss
without dieting. The FTC charges that these and other claims
go beyond existing scientific evidence on any of the
ingredients contained in the product, and therefore, are false
and unsubstantiated.
In addition, the complaint alleges that the
defendants represented, without scientific support, that
Seasilver treats or cures AIDS, diabetes, lyme disease, and
various cancers; cures chronic obstructive pulmonary disease;
enables post-heart attack patients to reduce their heart
medication, eliminates high blood pressure; and is 100 percent
safe for pregnant and lactating women, senior citizens,
children, and infants. Finally, the complaint alleges that
defendants provided deceptive advertisements and promotional
materials to distributors for use in their marketing and sale
of Seasilver.
At the FTC's request, on June 13, 2003, the
federal district court issued a temporary restraining order
prohibiting the defendants from making the challenged claims
and freezing their assets. In addition, the FTC is seeking
preliminary and permanent injunctive relief, including
restitution to consumers who purchased the product.
On June 16, 2003, acting at the FDA's
request, the United States Attorney for the Southern District
of California filed a complaint seeking the seizure of
Seasilver USA's Seasilver product. On June 17, 2003, United
States Marshals seized 132,480 bottles of Seasilver, worth
nearly $5.3 million from Seasilver USA's San Diego
headquarters. The Government's complaint alleges that,
although Seasilver USA markets Seasilver as a dietary
supplement, it promotes it on the Internet and in marketing
materials sent with the product as a treatment for serious
diseases including cancer, diabetes, hypoglycemia, psoriasis,
hepatitis, and arthritis. These claims cause Seasilver to be
an unapproved new drug under the Federal Food, Drug, and
Cosmetic Act (the Act). Such claims also cause Seasilver to be
misbranded under the Act because it lacks adequate directions
for use. Seasilver's labeling also contains claims such as
"cleanses your vital organs" and "oxygenates your body's
cells." According to the complaint, these claims show that
Seasilver is intended to affect the structure or function of
the body. Because the claims are unsubstantiated, Seasilver is
misbranded under the Act.
In addition to the violations caused by its
product claims, Seasilver USA has had ongoing sanitation
problems at its manufacturing facility. As recently as
December of last year, FDA cited the company for using
equipment that cannot be properly cleaned and for permitting
its employees to work the production line in street clothes.
Employees in facilities like Seasilver USA's must wear
garments that protect against contamination of food and food
containers.
The FTC vote to authorize staff to file the
complaint in this matter was 5-0. The case was filed in the
U.S. District Court of Nevada, on June 12, 2003.
NOTE: The Commission
authorizes the filing of a complaint when it has "reason to
believe" that the law has been or is being violated, and it
appears to the Commission that a proceeding is in the public
interest. The complaint is not a finding or ruling
that the defendant actually has violated the law. The case
will be decided by the court.
The text in this article was prepared by the U.S. Federal Trade Commission.