The legal library gives you easy access to the FTC’s case information and other official legal, policy, and guidance documents.
20261493: Mutares SE & Co. KGaA; Saudi Arabian Oil Company
20261512: Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association of America; Schroders plc
20261514: STG Parent Topco, LLC; Reception Holdings, L.P.
20261518: Suncoast Credit Union; Launch Credit Union
20261531: Allianz SE; Joshua Motta
20261533: Daiichi Life Group, Inc.; Genstar Capital Partners IX, L.P.
20261545: Archimedes Tech SPAC Partners II Co.; Forge Nano, Inc.
20261548: MARA Holdings, Inc.; FTAI Infrastructure Inc.
20261573: Partners Group Access PF 957 L.P.; Avenue Aviation Opportunities Fund II (Onshore), L.P.
List of 31 Adoption Intermediaries Who Received Warning Letter on September 10, 2024
Amare Global Holdings, FTC v.
The FTC sued multilevel marketer Amare Global Holdings Inc. and three of its principals for misrepresenting to parents and other consumers that its dietary supplements marketed for children and adults could treat or cure health conditions such as depression, anxiety and ADHD, and for misleading its seller recruits about their potential earnings as “brand partners.”
The Federal Trade Commission has asked a federal court to hold in contempt dietary supplement provider Amare Global Holdings as well as its former Chief Science Officer Shawn Talbott and two other individuals over allegations they violated an FTC order in the Window Rock case that banned Talbott and those who work with him from making false, deceptive or unsubstantiated health claims.