CATrends: Microplastics in Bottled Water
Lawsuits allege that several brands contain microplastics despite being marketed as “natural spring water.”
April 2018: This case was voluntarily dismissed When a complaint is dismissed without prejudice, an amended version of the complaint can be refiled., the reasons for which have not been disclosed.
February 2018: A class-action lawsuit was filed against Equisolar for allegedly deceptively representing that consumers who install solar panels will save on their energy bills when, according to plaintiffs, consumers do not save money and their energy bills actually increase after the panels are installed. Plaintiffs also claim that the company deceptively claims that consumers who install the panels will receive a $5,000 bonus from the government when, according to the complaint, they do not receive any such bonus. In addition, plaintiffs claim that consumers who do not speak English were required to sign contracts that were written in English, in violation of California law. (Alaniz et al. v. Equisolar, Inc., Case No. 18-cv-205, E.D. Cal.)
Lawsuits allege that several brands contain microplastics despite being marketed as “natural spring water.”
Apartments.com couldn’t forget they have the most rental listings anywhere even if they tried
Regulator finds ad on X misrepresented game’s “core playing experience.”
These definitions are a joke.
FDA sniffs out unapproved claims company’s smelling salts increase alertness, focus, and more.