The legal library gives you easy access to the FTC’s case information and other official legal, policy, and guidance documents.
20260527: David D. Smith; Asbury Automotive Group, Inc.
20260536: Mr. Edward Pick; Morgan Stanley
20260540: Robert Skillington; Palo Alto Networks, Inc.
20260541: Martin Mao; Palo Alto Networks, Inc.
20260542: Palo Alto Networks, Inc.; Chronosphere, Inc.
20260544: Davidson Kempner Opportunities International VII (AIV-TE) LP; Zenith Energy U.S., L.P.
NextMed
In July 2025, the Federal Trade Commission announced that the operators of telemedicine company Southern Health Solutions, Inc., doing business as Next Medical and NextMed, have agreed to settle the FTC’s charges that they used deceptive claims about costs and weight loss, fake reviews, and fake testimonials to lure consumers into buying their weight-loss membership programs that had hidden terms and conditions.
The proposed order requires NextMed and its principals to pay $150,000, which is expected to be used to provide refunds to consumers.
NGL
The FTC has taken action against NGL Labs, LLC and two of its co-founders, Raj Vir and Joao Figueiredo, for a host of law violations related to their anonymous messaging app, including unfairly marketing the service to children and teens.
In July 2024, the FTC took action against NGL Labs, LLC and two of its co-founders, Raj Vir and Joao Figueiredo, for a host of law violations related to their anonymous messaging app, including unfairly marketing the service to children and teens.
In January 2026, the Commission announced the claims process through which potentially defrauded consumers could see refunds from the FTC.
20260250: Boyd Group Services Inc.; JHCC Holdings Parent LLC
Disney
Disney will pay $10 million to settle Federal Trade Commission allegations that the company allowed personal data to be collected from children who viewed kid-directed videos on YouTube without notifying parents or obtaining their consent as required by the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Rule (COPPA Rule).
A federal judge approved the order in December 2025.