The legal library gives you easy access to the FTC’s case information and other official legal, policy, and guidance documents.
Hannah Garden-Monheit Letter to Missouri Legislature Regarding HB 448
Hannah Garden-Monheit Letter to Missouri Legislature Regarding SB 383
Hannah Garden-Monheit Letter to South Carolina Legislature Regarding HB 3273
Hannah Garden-Monheit Letter to South Carolina Legislature Regarding SB 46
Hannah Garden-Monheit Letter to Washington Legislature Regarding HB 1155
Hannah Garden-Monheit Letter to Virginia Legislature Regarding SB 1218
Hannah Garden-Monheit Letter to New Hampshire Legislature Regarding HB 386
2501002 Informal Interpretation
FTC v HOPE Services
In January 2025, the FTC sent more than $49,000 in refunds to consumers who paid a sham mortgage relief operation that told financially distressed homeowners it would help get their mortgages modified, but instead effectively stole their mortgage payments.
Stem Cell Institute of America, LLC
In August 2021, the FTC and the Georgia Attorney General’s Office sued the co-founders of the Stem Cell Institute of America for marketing stem cell therapy to seniors nationwide using bogus claims that it is effective in treating arthritis, joint pain, and a range of other orthopedic ailments. In January 2025 the FTC and AG’s Office announce two court orders in their favor settling the complaint and barring the company from the allegedly illegal conduct.
Epic Games, Inc. v. Google LLC et al.
Sitejabber
In a complaint issued in November 2024, the FTC charged that Sitejabber deceived consumers by misrepresenting that ratings and reviews it published came from customers who experienced the reviewed product or service, artificially inflating average ratings and review counts. Under a proposed order settling the agency’s complaint, Sitejabber will be prohibited from making such misrepresentations and from making other misrepresentations about consumer ratings or reviews. The Commission approved the consent as final in January 2025.