The legal library gives you easy access to the FTC’s case information and other official legal, policy, and guidance documents.
20251106: Greenbriar Equity Fund VI, L.P.; West Star Aviation Investments, LLC
20251091: Adage Capital Partners, L.P.; Soleno Therapeutics, Inc.
20251108: Denali Investment Holdings, L.P.; Dun & Bradstreet Holdings, Inc.
20251085: The Veritas Capital Vantage Fund, L.P.; Cobra Holdco, LLC
Facebook, Inc., In the Matter of
The FTC alleged that Facebook violated its privacy promises to consumers and subsequently violated a 2012 Commission order.
Cleo AI, Inc., FTC v.
Online cash advance company Cleo AI has agreed to pay $17 million to settle the Federal Trade Commission’s allegations that the company deceived consumers about how much money they could get and how fast that money could be available. The complaint, filed in federal district court along with the proposed settlement order, also alleges that Cleo made it difficult for consumers to cancel Cleo’s subscription service.
Workado, LLC, f/k/a Content at Scale AI; Analysis of Proposed Consent Order To Aid Public Comment
20250948: Charlesbank Equity Fund X, Limited Partnership; Bradley R. Bibb
20251092: One Equity Partners IX-A, L.P.; Craftmark Bakery Holdings, LLC
20251094: AT&T Inc.; M/C Partners VIII, L.P.
20251097: Braze, Inc.; OfferFit, Inc.
Publishers Clearing House, LLC (PCH), FTC v.
As a result of a Federal Trade Commission lawsuit, Publishers Clearing House (PCH) has agreed to a proposed court order will require it to pay $18.5 million to consumers who spent money and wasted their time, and make substantial changes to how it conducts business online.
In a complaint against PCH, the FTC charges that the company uses “dark patterns” to mislead consumers about how to enter the company’s well-known sweepstakes drawings and made them believe that a purchase is necessary to win or would increase their chances of winning, and that their sweepstakes entries are incomplete even when they are not. The FTC also charges that the company has added surprise shipping and handling fees to the costs of products, misrepresented that ordering is “risk free,” used deceptive emails as part of its marketing campaign, and misrepresented its policies on selling users’ personal data to third parties prior to January 2019. Many consumers affected by these practices are older and lower-income.
In April 2025, the FTC sent more than $18 million in refunds to consumers harmed by misleading claims made by Publishers Clearing House (PCH).
Agency Information Collection Activities; Proposed Collection; Comment Request; Extension (Regulation V, Subpart N)
Content at Scale AI
In April 2025, the FTC issued a proposed order requiring Workado, LLC to stop advertising the accuracy of its artificial intelligence (AI) detection products unless it maintains competent and reliable evidence showing those products are as accurate as claimed. The settlement will be subject to public comment before becoming final.