The legal library gives you easy access to the FTC’s case information and other official legal, policy, and guidance documents.
2503011 Informal Interpretation
20250956: Friede Springer; KKR Traviata Co-Invest L.P.
20250968: Starboard Value and Opportunity Fund Ltd; News Corporation
20250980: Snow Phipps Group AIV, L.P.; Velocity Financial, Inc.
20250983: General Atlantic Partners (Bermuda) IV, L.P.; Huda Kattan
20250988: KKR Traviata Co-Invest L.P.; Axel Springer SE
Statement of Chairman Andrew N. Ferguson
Statement of Commissioner Melissa Holyoak
2503004 Informal Interpretation
Vroom, Inc. FTC v.
In July 2024, the FTC took action against online used car dealer Vroom for misrepresenting that it thoroughly examined all vehicles before listing them for sale and failing to obtain consumers’ consent to shipment delays or provide prompt refunds when cars weren’t delivered in the time Vroom promised. The company agreed to a proposed settlement that would require the company to pay $1 million to refund consumers harmed by the company’s conduct.
In March 2025, the FTC sent more than $934,000 in refunds to consumers who were harmed by online used car dealer Vroom’s shipment delays.
Career Step, LLC, FTC v.
In July 2024, the FTC announced that online career-training company, Career Step, LLC has been ordered to pay $43.5 million in debt cancellation and cash to resolve charges brought by the Federal Trade Commission that alleged the company lured consumers, specifically servicemembers and their families, with deceptive ads that falsely touted inflated employment outcomes, job placement, and partnerships with prominent companies.
In March 2025, the FTC sent more than $15.5 million in refunds to consumers who were harmed by Career Step’s deceptive advertising.
2503008 Informal Interpretation
20250964: Adena T. Friedman; Nasdaq, Inc.
Evolv Technologies
Announcing settlement Evolv Technologies over allegations that the company made false claims about its AI-powered security screening system
Restoro-Reimage
Two tech support companies will pay $26 million to settle FTC charges that they bilked tens of millions of dollars from consumers, particularly older consumers, by duping them into buying computer repair services in violation of the FTC Act and the Telemarketing Sales Rule.
In March 2024, two tech-support companies agreed pay $26 million to settle FTC charges that they bilked tens of millions of dollars from consumers, particularly older consumers, by duping them into buying computer repair services in violation of the FTC Act and the Telemarketing Sales Rule. In March 2025, the Commission announced it was sending more than $25.5 million to consumers the companies defrauded.