Congressional Testimony Transcript
Transcription
Congressional Testimony Transcript
/. KSS1UJES RJEILATHNG TO .El?HEDRA-CONTAllNiNG I DIETARY SUPPLEMENTS HEARINGS BEFORE THE SUBCOMMITTEE ON OVERSIGHT AND INVESTIGATIONS . A}l'D THE SUBCOMMITTEE ON COMMEROE, TRADE, AND CONSUMER PROTECTION I ' .. OF THE ·. . . . COMMITTEE ON ENERGY AND I. COMMERCE . ·. HquSE GJi' REPRESENTATIVES ONE HUNDRED EIGHTH CONGRESS I .. FIRST SESSION . . ---·. ·JULY 23 and !!4, 2003 · Printe '' for the use of the Committee on Energy and Commerce · . / A·1;d able vi the World .Wide .Web: http://www.access.gpo.gov/congress/hciuse . U .S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 89-966PDF WASHINGTON : 2003 For Iaale ~y the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office - - - - IntcrnJt: bookatore.gpo.gov Phone: toll free (866) 512-1800; DC area (202) 512·-1800 . :Fax: (202)'512-2250 Maili Stop SSOP, Washington, DC 20402-0001 I · COlWMlTTEE Oi.\T ENERGY AND COMMERCE W.J. "BILLY" TAUZIN, Louisiana, Chairman JOHN DINGE;LL, Michigan MICHAEL BILIRAKIS, Florida Rankini Member ·. JOE BARTON, Te1cas HENRY A. W/\XMAN, California FRED UPTON, Michiga!l EDWARD J. MARJ{EY, Massachusetts CLD.i'F STEARNS, Florida RALPH M. HALL, Telcas PAUL E . GILLMOR, Ohio RICK BOUCHER, Virginia JAMES C. GREENWOOD, Pennsylvania EDOLPHUS TOWNS, New York CIUUSTOPHER COX, California FRANK PALLONE, Jr., New Jersey NATHAN DEAL, Georgia SHERROD BROWN, Ohio RICHARD BURR, North Carolina BART GORDON, Tennessee Vice Chairman PETER DEUTSCH, Florida ED WHITFillLD, Kentucky BOBBY L. RUSH, lllinois CHARLill NORWOOD, Georgia ANNA G. ESHOO, California BARBARA CUBIN, Wyoming BART STUPAK, Michigan JOHN SHIMKUS,.lllino,is. . . ELIOT L. ENGEL;.New York HEATHER WILSON, New Me1dco ALBERT R. WYNN, Maryland JOHN B. SHADEGG, Arizona ·GENE GREEN, Texas CHARLES W. "CHIP" PICKERING, KAREN McCARTHY, Missouri Mississippi · TED STRICKLAND, Ohio VITO FOSSELLA, New York DIANA DEGETTE, Colorado . ROY BLUNT, Missouri . LOIS CAPPS, California STEVE BUYER, Indiana J.I4IOHAEL F. DOYLE, Pennsylvania GEORGE RADANOVICH, California CHRISTOPHER JOHN, Louisiana CHARLES F . BASS, New Hampshire TOM ALLEN, Maine JOSEPH R. PITTS, Pennsylvania JIM DAVIS, ·Florida MARY BONO, California JAN SCHAKOWSKY, Illinois GREG WALDEN, Oregon HILPA L. SOLIS, California LEE TERRY, Nebraska \ ERNill FLETCHER, Kentucky MIKE FERGUSON, New Jersey MIKE ROGERS, Michigan DARRELL E. ISSA, California C.L. "BUTCH" OTTER, Idaho DAN R. BROUILLE'ITE, Staff Director CONTENTS n. JAMES D. BARNE'ITE, Gen~ral Counsel REID P.F. STUNTZ, Minority Staff Director and Chief Counsel SUBCOMMITI'EE ON OVERSIGHT AND INVESTIGATIONS JAMES C. GREENWOOD, Pennsylvania, Chairman MICHAEL BILIRAKIS, Florida CLIFF STEARNS, Florida RICHARD BURR, North Carolina CHARLES F. BASS, New Hampshire GREG WALDEN, Oregon Vice Chairman MIKE FERGUSON, New Jersey MIKE ROGERS, Michigan W.J. "BILLY" TAUZIN, Louisiana (Ex Officio) PETER DEUTSCH, Florida Ranking Member Dl:ANA DEGETTE, Colorado .)1M DAVIS, Florida JAN SCHAKOWSKY, Illinois HENRY A. WAXMAN, California BOBBY L. RUSH, Illinois JOHN D. DINGELL, Michigan, (Ex Officio) SUBCOMMITI'EE ON COMMERCE, TRADE, AND CONSUMER PROTECTION CLIFF STEARNS, Florida, Chairman JAN SCHAKOWSKY, Illinois FRED UPTON, Michigan BARBARA CUBIN, Wyoming JOHN SHIMKUS, Illinois ,TOHN B. SHADEGG, Arizona Vice Chairman GEORGE RADANOVICH, California CHAIU.,ES F. BASS, New Hampshire JOSEPH R. PITTS, Pennsylvania MARY BONO, California LEE TERRY, Nebraska 'E RNill FLETCHER, Kentucky MIKE FERGUSON, New Jersey DARRELL E. ISSA, California C.L. "BUTCH" OTl'ER, Idaho . - . ----·- .. Ranking Member HILDA L. SOLIS, California EDWARD J. MARKEY, Massachusetts EDOLPHUS TOWNS, New York SHERROD BROWN, Ohio JIM DAVIS, Florida PETER DEUTSCH, Florida BART STUPAK, Michigan GENE GREEN, Texas KAREN McCARTHY, Missouri TED STRICKLAND, Ohio . DIANA DEGETTE, Colorado JOHN D. DINGELL, Michigan,· ........ ,....,.... .' I Page I Hearings held: i ~4y ~3, 2003!···················"················································································ '1 173 Bechle:. ~~~~~~~~.. :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~·········································· Birch, Adolplil.o A., III, Counsel for Labor Rel~ti~~~···N~ti~~~i··F~·~;;b;ll League ..... }........................................................... .. ' Boozer, Car?ll Obesity Res~arch Center, St. Luk;'s..R~~~~~~it'fi~~~it;;i··::::: Brown, DaVId, former President of Metabolife · Chin ' ··········································· ···· ery, R ob~rt, Presid~nt, Cytodyne Technologies ..................................... . Colker, Carlqn M., Chief Executive Officer and Medical Director Peak 238 13 u y 4, 2003,...................................................... . '.Pestimony of: .. ·············..... ························· · Be~:d' J. How!lr~, III, Director, Bureau of Consumer Protection, Federal r-·· c =e~, J~c c. . . d························:······ ..····..····················:..................:.......... 1 c~osse, 'Ma~cl~. fcfu:n;:~:;, ':e~tb:'c~~~:p~j;ii~··n:~~ith··~d··s~i~;:;~~ cJf!~~~~~~fo=:~~:~~~e~!~e~~rt~~~;;·~r·Ii~;;ith:·::::::::::::::::::::: Ellis, Michael, Founder and Director ofMetabolife International .............. . Fox, Roseann!, Customer ~eryice Representative, NVE Pharmaceuticals .. . Garber, D?na:ld P.,.Comrmss10ner, Major League Soccer ............................. . Helton, Mike) Pres1~ent, National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing . Hermann, Hobert, V1ce President, Metabolife International Hymsfield, S~even B., ~eputy Director of Obesity Resear~h··c-~;:;t~~ ·· st· M~~:J. R~~~~~lt~~ss~~~ lri~~~~ti~~ .. vi~~···p;~~ia~~i:··'L~b~~··li~i~ii~~~~ uman Re~ources, Major League Baseball .............................................. . M?C1e11an, Hpn. Mark B., Commissioner, Food and Drug Administration·. Mitte~, ~atthew J., Associate Dean for Academic Affairs, Marquette Umyersity ILa~ Schoo~ Director, National Sports Law Institute The N~~o~al ~p~eg~.a~ A~d etic Association ............................................'........ . 0 cc En o, ~ eDrt, es1 ~nt, NVE Pharmaceuticals ............................. :.... . 0 rza, ugenf . ·•. AssoCiate General Counsel, Major League Baseball ru;::~k~~.c~!~C:Iiiggb;.~.F"~~d~ti~~·r~;·s-;;b~t~~~·~~p;;~~·s~h.~~i~········· RSohrdrigukezR, Drniel, ~ead Nurse, Metabolife ........................................... :::::::: c ec , us sell, Chief Executive Officer Metabolife International ··········· Vasquez; Michael, Law Offices of Fred G: Cohen WoSo~ley, Ra:0nond, Vice President for Health s~i~·~~~~·· Arl~~;:;~··H~~ith Ciences Center ' Zipes, Do~gl~s P.,··:ni·~ti~~~h~d··:p;~i~~·~~~··~r· ·M:~di~~~···:ph~~~~i~g;; ~~a;'tll~l~o~':.: ..~~.~~~~~·...~.~~si~n of Cardiology, Kr;nnert In~titute materj.al submitted for the·;~~~~;i;" ..................................................... . Amfncan Corege of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, prepared statement Addition~ 0 •·••••••••••••••••···••••·•••• B(1e(¥ Mic~ael M., M:n::· ·i~i;;~;··'d~t~a··17 .. Jcl:;;··2ooa· ·· ;;;;··li~~··J~~~~ Met.ab~~:~~~~:o~~~~·;;~··~~~iii~~···~~~ti~~······················: ........................... . . q (III) 8 ............................................. .. 193 103 92 106 115 113 44 41 . 92 121 199 196 101 18 185 228 203 119 189 14 92 99 17 32 35 170 166 169 64 Mr . VASQUEZ. When I was no longer employed in the company [ inquired about this specific nurse and they said that she was let :ro beca:ttse she was very vocal about the product, whether you b:tow,,itw-as doing more harm than good. . Mr. GREENWOOD. Were you warned or persuaded .bY you_r superllisor at Metabolife not direct complainants to descnbe their symptoms but instead to just take their name and phone number and rive that to your supervisor? .· " Mr. VASQUEZ. It would depend on the severity of the call. Some lf it is minor like abdominal cramps, then you know.you would docllment that. We documented all calls. But if it was moderate to setrere, you had a proc~dure wh~re 'Ye would take as much information as we can get Without bemg Judgmental and I would fo:ryard lt to my supervisor Mr. Daniel Rodriguez. And we were basically left in the dark and we would not know what happened to that spe~ific case. Mr. Rodriguez was the one who was basically the key person that would follow up on specific case. · · · Mr. GREENWOOD. Did anyone at Metabolife including your supertrisor at the Health Information Line, Mr. Rodriguez, monitor your responses to ·customers who were co~plaining of .adverse events or o.egative side effects as a result of taking Metabohfe? Mr. VASQUEZ. Like I said earlier, there ~ere 1~ registered nu:r:ses m staff and Mr. Rodriguez and the medical director; _Dr .. Srmth, b.ad the ability to listen to all the calls that were cormng m. And lf they heard something, specifically Dan R?driguez, heard something. that one of the nurses would say, nght after the call he would critique, for example, myself and say probably you should b.ave answered that call that way. · Mr. GREENWOOD. Did you feel under any pressure to conduct vourself in those phone calls in any way other than you would ~ven what you said earlier in your testimony that you wanted to just do no harm,? . . . Mr. VASQUEZ. At times, yes. Because as a nurse It ~eemed hke the telemarketer script the kind of answer you woUld give out a~d, vou know, I was trained as a nurse, I went to scho?l, nursmg ;;chool. You know, basically you had to really be more Impersonal than you cared. . , · . While I was working there there was no nurse/pa~Ient/consumer relationship that would, you know, you would be looking out for the Jest interest of the caller rather than th~ Mr. GREENWOOD. Did you feel that yoti were functioning more as 1 marketer of the drug than as an advocate for the patient? Mr. VASQUEZ. Definitely I wouldn't say marketer, because t~ey n.ad a lot of advertisement. So not as a marketer. But. more like, yOU know, less of an advocate from a medical professional, I would >ay so. · · · Mr. GREENWOOD. Thank you, sir. My time has expired. The gentlelady from Colorado is recognized for 5 minutes. Ms. DEGETI'E. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. . My first question is for the Bechlers an? for Mr. Rig~s, because ~here are a lot of dietary supplements bemg sold now m the stores md you know, all my middle aged friends and I sit around and ;alk about what we should be taking to make ourselves feel better. !\nd listening to all the testimony.today,. it kind of makes me real- 65 ize people probably think that these products are safe because they are no~ prescription drugs or a doctor's order is not required. Do you think that that's probably true, Mrs. Bechler? · · Ms. BECHLER. I do. In fact, my son as I hear it from his wifeMs. DEGETI'E. Just move that a little closer. That helps. Yes; Ms. BECHLER. As I hear it from his wife, she got it at workout place that she worked out at. And so you-Ms. DEGETI'E. So they were giving it out at the gym? Ms. BECHLER. Yes. In fact, my other son and I worked out at. a gym .a~d th.ey have it there. So why would not you natural think that It IS gomg to be as natural and it is herbal, and it is safe. Ms. DEGETI'E. And, Mr. Riggins, what is your view on that? Mr. RIG9INS. In .our discuss~ons with kids, and when. I say kids I am not JUst talking about high school students. We are talking about college athletes as well, college students that are looking to lose weight and with the general public. We have found that when you start bringing the awareness out, when you tell them that the FpA does n?t ~ave-only has minimal control over these compa, rues, the maJonty of the people are appalled at that. They just cannot understand how come a law will allow a company just to run as one individual put it, helter skelter. · ' Ms. DEGE'ITE. But up until they know that information, they just assume tha:t the product is safe because it is being allowed to just be sold helter skelter to th.e consumers, would you not agree? Mr. RIGGINS. That is exactly right. Exactly right. Iv.ls. DEGETTE. Thank you. Dr. He:ymsfield, I was intrigued by your testimony where you were talking about ~he product labeling and you were tal,king apout when. you began domg .your research there was no product labeling as to the dangers, and m fact some of the labels said clinical tested. Is that correct? · , Mr. HEYMSFIELD. Well, some of the bottles had statements for example, "independently laboratory tested for safety." ' Ms. DEGETI'E. Have you looked at bottle of Metabolife recently? Mr. HEYMSFIELD. I have not looked at a recent bottle, no. Ms. DEGETI'E. Okay: I have got one here in my hands. Mr. HEYMSFIELD. Yes. . Ms. DEGETI'E. And there this big warning on the side of the label here. Are you familiar with that warning? · Mr. HEYMSFIELD. Yes. Yes. Ms. D:EGETI'E. Do you know when they started putting that warning on these bottles? · Mr. HEYMSFIELD. I am not aware of the date of when that appeared. . · · Ms. DEGETI'E. Does anyone else know roughly when this warning started appearing? . Mr. FRANCE. Jim France here, attorney for the B.echlers. I oelieve It was early 2001. . . Mr. GREENWOOD. Excuse me. I have to quickly. swear you in if you are going to actually speak. [Witness sworn.] · Mr. GREENWOOD. Okay. You are under oath now. ·. Ms. DEGETI'E. Mr. France, proceed. 66 67 Mr. FRANCE. Yes. n 1999 they were using another label that had 'independently laboratory tested for safety" where that silver decal cS on the front. Ms. DEGETI'E. This right here? Mr. FRANCE. Yes. And then there was a class action lawsuit ~ailed Gasperoni v. Metabolife that occurred in the year 2000. And :ts a part of that settlement it is my understanding that they could 11ot advertise that their product was independently laboratory test~d for safety anymore and they put that little decal on the front. !\nd then they started selling the product-Ms. DEGETTE. It is a butterfly. Mr. FRANCE. Yes. It is a silver decal-Ms. DEGETI'E. It is a butterfly. Mr. FRANCE. It is a butterfly. They put the butterfly over the safety claim in 2001, ][believe. Ms. DEGETI'E. And that is when they put the safety warnings on? . . Mr. FRANCE. And they added additionalsafety warning information, but they failed to include the fact that they had received thousands of AERs. Ms. DEGETI'E. Okay. Thank you. Going back to Dr. Heymsfield. Thank you for helping us, sir. You said that the studies were flawed that were done by the c:ompanies. ][ am wondering if you can tell me quickly some of the reasons why you feel those studies were flawed? Mr. HEYMSFIELD. Well, this is my opinion, but some of the published papers, for example, would report ·that effects were statistically significant. And that has very specific meaning to a scientist. But actually when you investigate the raw data in the actual statistics, they did not achieve specific significance. That was never revealed in the papers. They were misrepresented. And I could give you many examples like that of where- Ms. DEGETTE. And ][ think in addition, Dr. Woosley and others said that the studies were not scientifically controlled because IRB would. ever approve that kind of a study? Mr. HEYMSFIELD. Well, no longer. I mean, at the time the adverse events were not as clearly recognized. But I today I agree with them. Ms. DEGETTE. Okay. Thank you. Mr. GREENWOOD. The tinie of the gentlelady has expired. The gentleman from New Hampshire is recognized to inquire for 5 minutes. Mr. BASs. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. ][ have one qu.estion. Do any of the doctors here see any medicinal value to ephedra? Is there any reason-Okay. That is the only question I have. ][will yield the rest of my time to my friend Mr. Walden. Mr. WALDEN. Thank you very much. ][ would like to address my first question to the Bechlers, and I know this is a difficult one, but how did you·feel when the Broward County Coroner concluded that ephedra was "a significant factor" in your son's death? .. M:r. BECHLER. When they told us about it, we knew it had to be something. It just was not heatstroke because he was in perfect condition. I mean, there was nothing wrong with our son. Nothing. Mr. WALDEN. There have been reports that I have read in the press that ,said he was terribly overweight. How overweight was he went he went into camp? Ms. BECHLER. Ten pounds. Mr. BECHLER. Ten pounds. Mr. WALDEN. Ten pounds? Mr. BECHLER. Hi~ body fat. was less than it was a year before. Ms. BECHLER. Which the Onoles was impressed about. Mr. WALDEN. You need to turn on your mike. Ms. BECHLER.. Which the Orioles were impressed about with just the 10 pounds, but his body fat had gone down. . Mr. WALDEN. Okay. And I guess I want to ask Mr. France this ques~ion, because I was rea«ii.ng the testimony. last night of the Pr~s1dent. of Nutr~quest, Inc.,. f~rmer Xenadrine Technologies, Mr. Chinery, IS that nght? And m 1t he says we sold over 20 million bottles of Xenadrine RFA-1, which is what I think what your son took. About 1.2 billion servings. And I understand the comment of our other witness· on that. And received 450 complaints during the 5 years we s?ld the pro~uct. The great majority .of our complaints were from nuld or transitory effects. Based on all the available scientific information we did not have any reason to believe that Xenadrine RFA-1 cause!i anything but mild transitory effects. We relied upon studies not only on Xenadrine RFA-1 but also on studi~s o~ other. ephedra dietary supple.ments and on Xenadrine's plinCiple mgredients, ephedra and caffeme. Studies including the Cantox Report show. that ephedra based products are effective and safe when used properly. · Mr. France, fir st of all, are you familiar with any studies that would confirm that? Would what I h ave r easoned indicate to the contrary? · And ·. s~cond, are you aware of any court documents relating to how others have perceived the credibility of these witnesses? Mr: JfR.AJ:'TCE. yes, I am.. First of :Ul, there was a trial against Xenadnne m which Mr. Chinery testified about a month and a half ago. And during that trial several of the alleged clinical studies that took place on Xenadrine RFA-1 were discussed by expert witnesses on both. sides,. And to reiterate what Dr. Hymsfield said, there was marupulabon of research data found and disclosed durin.g that trial. The trial judge found there were significant problems With several of the studies that Xenadrine was holding to prove efficacy and/or safety. · And more importantly, the trial judge found in its verdict· a written verdict, that Mr. Chinery, Mr. Conklin, who is. here today Dr. Colker had no credibility. And the judge sat through alm~st 7 weeks-· Mr. WALDEN.. The judge said that? M:r. FRANCE. The judge said that in a written opinion. All I have it here today. . Mr. WALDEN. Mr. Chairman, would it be possible to have that written opinion entered into the record? Mr. GREENWOOD. Witho\lt objection, it will be incorporated into the record. [The information referred to follows:] Verdict Obtained by James P. Frantz and Co-Counsel (6 week Superior Court Trial) 68 69 Slip Copy · (CUe as: 2U03 WL 21263814 (Coi.Supcrior)) ,.. Only the Westlow ci~1tion is currently available. California Superior Court, County, Jlrison A, pARK, on behalf oi himself and nil othern Glmilarly Ditunted, l'lolntiiT, v. C'h'TOD'i!NE rnCHNOtOGi:ES, JNC., a New .l'erJey corporndon; nnd Does 1 througb 100, inclusive, Defendants. ·No. GIC 768364. Mny 30, 2003. TENTATIVE DECISION STYN,J. Slip Copy (Cite as: 2003 WL 21283814, •2 (Cai.Superior)) forth below· in the discussion of plaintiffs cl.aims linder·Business lind Professions Code sections 17200 and 17500 ~t seq. Phiintill's second "COUSe of action alleges false and misleading advertisements in ~iolotion of Btisiness IUld Professions Code sections 17200 et ~eq. 'I}'• third eo~e of action alleges fals~ and _nusle~dmg advertisenients in violation of Busmess. and Professions .Code sections 17500 et seq. Pl~intifl's factual allegations in tltese tWQ .causes o~ acmon are identicat: Plni,J)tiff does not allege any vaolat10ns of sections 17200 et seq. other than dte alleged fats~ and misleading advertising that would also vtolate sections 17~00 et seq. Further, cases nddreasing fa!se advertisitig clainJS imder both sta\'Jles have applted d1e snme legal standllrd t9 both. See Day v. AT & T O>rp. (1998) 63 Cai.App.41h 3_25. For these reasons, the ·causes of action under:sections 17200 et seq. and seclio~ 17500 et seq. wt11 be discussed together. INTRODUCTION ''!! Plaintiff·Jasqn A. Parle, on behalf of .hirns~lf ?"d ~U others simllilrly situated, filed a complaint ngntDSt defendant Cy1odync Technologies, Inc., a New Jersey · corporation. The complaint · was certified as a class action. Cytodyne mnrlcets and sells Xenadrine RFA~l: .0 dietary supplement commonly ~sed ~s "an atd. m weiglll loss. 11Je active ingredients m Xenadrine RPA-l include ephedra wtd caffeine. Cytodync advertises;: Xenadrine RFA-1 · tbrough magazine, television, and radio advertisements. PLAINTIFFS CAUSES qF ACTION Plaintiffs complaint alleges three causes of action. Tile fllSt clnim alleges violations of t~e ~!JS~':' Legal Remedies Act ("ci.RA"), ~h~onu~ Ctvtl Code sections 1750 et seq. Plamtifl's C~ allegations couch plaintiffs false . adverttsm.g allegations in the context of a CLRA clallll. There JS very little relevant case law addr~ing a!leged violations of .the CLRA. One .court has c.onstdered clainJS of false advertising alleged to ~tO!ate the .CLRA as well as Business wtd Pro.fessmns Code sections 17200. and . 17500 ~t seq .. and ?eld that statements found to be not false ot rrusleadmg under sections 17200 and 17500 et seq. ore also not false representation• .under the CLRA. Fre.eman . v•. Time, . Ind., 66 F.3d. ·265, 290 (9th Cir.l995). Tlms, the relevant legal standard and the burden of proof are set . 5. Nature oftlte Proof. 2. Plaintiff Must Prove Public Is "Likely To Be Deceived." T O>rp. ( 1998) .63 Cai.App.4th 325, 331-32: .A plaintiff musi prove that the public is "likely to be ·deceived" by the statements at issue in. an advertisement. "Likely to deceive" implies mo;e than a mere possibility thot the advertisement might conceivably be misunderstood by some few conswners viewing it iq au unreasonable manner. Rather, the phrase indicates that tbe ad .is such that it is probable that a significant. portion of the general consuming public or of targeted consumers, acting reasonably in. the circwnstanccs, could be misled. Lavie v. Proctor & Gamble 0>. (2003) 105 Cai.App. 4th 496, 508. BURDEN OF PROOF I. Plaiti~ff Mll5t Prove Statements ·were ·False .or Misleading ·and Made Without Reasonable Care. : . Sections 17500 et . seq. prohibit negligent . or · intentio~al dissemiitation of false or misleading advertising. Natinnal. Council Against Health Fraud, Inc. v. King Bio Pharnuicl!utlcals, Inc. (2003) _ Cai.App. 4th_; 133 Cal.Rptr.2d 207. Spe~ifi,aily, these statutes pr_os~rihe ~e n:"ldog or dissemination before tho pub he tn Califomaa of ·any sratement concerning the product that lljs. untru~ or misleading, and which is !mown, or which. by the exercise of reasonable care should be koifWD, to be untrue or misleading." Cal. Bus. & Prof.Code § 17500. Thus, io maintain ~ claim of false or mistead~g . advertising, a plaintiftmust pro\'e; (I) ~tatements an the advertising. arc untrue or rruslcadmg, IUld (2) defendmtS J<i,ew, or by the ..exe_r9ise of reas?nabic care should have lcnoWn, that the statements were untrue or. misleading. People v. Lynam, (1967) · 253. eat.App.2d 959, 965. . r ••i The platntiff musi- carry both the burden of producing evidence and tho burden of proving that each challenged advertising clniro is false .. or misleading. Nation~[ Council Against Health Fr~~d, Inc. v. King ~io Plutnnaceutlca/s, Inc., supra; cttang . Copr.@ Wcs.t2003 No Clain'llo.Orig. U.S. Gov1. Works Pnge2 South Bay Chevrolet v. General Motors Acceptance Corp. (1999) 72 Cal.App. 4th 861, 878). 3. Advertisers Are Not Required to Produce Substantiation for their Advertising C!ninJS. Advertisers arc not n:quired to produce substantiation for their advertising cloinJS in actions bro~ght by private plaintiffs under Business and Professions Code sections 17200 ct seq. and 17500 et seq. In National CQuncil Againsl H~alth Fraud, Inc. v. King Blo Pharmaceuticals, Tnc., supi:a, the plaintiff argued that private plaintiffs are in the sante position as the Attorney Gcneral .lllld that the court should th)lS sb.ift tho burden of production and require advertisers to produce evidence substantiating the truth of their advertising claims. The Court of Appeal rejected that argument. The court lteld that private plaititiffs have the burden of producing evidence to prove tbeir allegations that challenged advertising is false or misleading: 4. Statements Must Be Material To Be Actionable. In order for ·. lUI alleged false or misleading representation to be actionable, the statement at issue must be, nmong otber .things, l!Jlltcrilil. Mate.rilility is part of the "reasonable conswner" standard applied under the California WJ[air competition and false advertising statutes, in that re;JSonable conswners llfc not deceived by immatc.rilil claims. A general discussion of the "reasonaple consumer" standard, with citations to nwnerous relevant cases, is found in Lavie v. Proctor & Gamble 0>., I 05 .Cal.App. 4tlt 496, 504-512 (2003). The law in Utis area was summarized in Day ·v. A r & Sections . 17200 and. 17500 ato conswner protection statutes designed, in part, to proll:ct the public by prohibiting false, unfair, misleading or deceptive advertising. (Ccmmittee on Chi/dre11's Television, Inc. v. General Foods Corp. (1983) 35 Cal.3d 197, 211 [197Cai.Rptr. 783, 673 P.2d 660] (Committee ).) "To state a cause of action under Uacse statutes for injunctive relief, it is necessary only to show that 'members of. the public arc likely to be deceived.' [Citations.]" ( Ibid.) Actual deception or confusion caused by misleading statements is not required. (People v. Dollar Rcmt·A- Car Systems, Inc. (1989) 211 C;!I.App.3d 119, 129 [259 Cal.Rptr. 191].) An "un.fair" practice under section 17200 is one "whose harm to the victim outweighs its bonefits." (Saunders v. Superior Court (1994) 27 Cai.App. 4th 832, 839 [33 Cai.Rptr.2d 438). ( Saunders ).) In a similar veiti, the term "fraudulent" as used in the section "does not refer to ti)e common law tort of fraud but only requires • showing members of the .public • 'are likely to be. deceived." ' [Citation.]" (fbi<!.) No proof of direct harm from defondant's unfair business practice need be shown, such that "[a]Uegations of actual deception, reasonable reliance, and damage are unoecessary." (Committee, supra, at p. 211.) Section 17200 .)lOS been interpreted broadly to bar all ongoing wrongful business activity,._ including misleading advertising, in whatever context it presents itself. (People v. Dollar' Rent-A-Car Systems, Inc., supra, 211 Cai.App.3d atp.l29.) · •3 Thus, the statutes are meant to protect the public from a wide spectrum of itnpropcr conduct in advertising. They may be invoked where the advertising complained of is not actually false, but thought likely to mislead or deceive, ·or is in fact false. lly their brcadUt, .the statutes encompass not only those advertisements which have deceived or misled beca11se they arc w>true, but also those which may be acc\lfate on some level, but will nonetheless tend to mislead or deceive. We reiterate th~ point~ in Saunders, that the concept cncomp;assed in U>c p.hraso "likely to be deccjved" has oo rci.ationship to the concept of common Jaw fu:aud, which io also sometirnC.'l referred to "-$ deceptiorL A fraudulent deception m~t .be actually false, !mown to 'be false by the perpetrator and reasonably relied Copr.@ West .2003 No Claim to Orig. U.S. Govl. Works a 70 upon by n victim who incurs damages. None of lhcsc elements ore required to state a cloim for injunctive relief under section 17200 or 17500. A perfectly true statement couched in such o manner Uwt it is likely to mislead or deceive the consumer, such :is by failure to disclose other relevant iriforrrllltion, i9 actionable under the9C sections. the judge to determine, hosed solely upon his or her own intuitive renction, whether the ndverti~emcnt is deceptive." Rather,, tho Court held that the question is: "Wiult docs the person to whom the advertisement is addressed find to be the message?" According to the Second Circuit, the success of a plaintifl's implied falsity claim usually toms on the persuasiveness of a consumer .survey. · ·. G. Wb:lt Type of Evidence is Required to Establish *4 In HaslccU v. 1Yme, Inc: (t;:.D.Cal.t997) 965 F.Supp. 1398; the Court held that anecdotal evidence ·alone is insufficient to prove that the .public is likely to be misled. Relying on Johnson &: Johnson, the Court held lhot to prevail, plairitiff musi demonslnlte by extrinsic evidence, such os ·consum<T survey evidence, that the cliaUcng~d smtemcnts tend to mislead consumer::. In Haskell, plaintiff pres~ted evidence of "deception" regarding n sweepstakes in the form of declarations of :1 few swcepstalces customern and dtc declarotion of one professor of rhetoric. After reviewing .the alleged sweepstake statement ond fmding that plaintifl's interpretation WliS patently unreasonable, tho ·court held the testimony of only o few customers and the expert wos insufficient Tile court reasoned thnt plointiff needed consumer survey evidence indicating thot a ·signific~~nt portion of the population has been misted by defendants' bulletins. "Indeed, plaintiff does ·not dispute that o majority of recipients neither respond to defendants bulletins nor purchose ony of defendants' products. Plaintiff hos therefore ·failed to prove that defendanrs statements mislead the reasonable consumer. • Id. ot 1408. th~ Advertisemenls Are MislcodinJ:. · Defendants orgue lluit claims brought under Business Md Professions Code sectiooo 17200 end 17500 ond the CollSUIIlel' Legol Renu:diC!I Act, Civil Code ooction 1750, .Rquirc plaintiff to demonstrnte through conswner survey evidence tho! each challenged advertising claim did in fact mislead consumero. Cosc low is cleor that the proper standard to determine whether o claim is misleading is the "reasonable co~r test." Lav/e v. Procter & Gamble Co. (2003) 105 Coi.App. 4th 496; Bank of the West v. Superior Court (1992) .2 Col.4th 1254, 1267. Tite Lav/e court rejected o brooder "least oophisticated constim.er" · test proposed by the Attorney ~ern!. In so holding; the court did not specifically indicate what evidence was required in order to establish Umt on odvertisemcnt was misleading under tlte "reasonable conswiler test." Tbe isoue framed for review wao whether the trlol court hod "employed the wrong methodology in determining whftt messoges were ·conveYed by the commercial, relying ·upon its own intuition nther than viewing the ods from the vantage point of o reasonable consumer." In upholding the trial court's conclusion that the commercials for Aleve were not lilrely to mislead, the Court ~f Appcol seemingly approved ·the trial court's intuition. Lavie is not dispositive ns to whot 1ype of evidence is necess:uy to show that nn advertioement wns misleading because the portion of the opinion discussing the particular eVidence before tho trial court was not certified for publication. Defendont relics on federol court opinions that require 11 c·onsumer surveytl evidence. In Johnson &: Johnson - Merclc Consumer Pharinaceut/cals Co. v. SmithK/irie Beecham Corp. (2nd Cir.1992) 960 F.2d 294, the Second Circuit held tbat' where n plointifl's tlleory of recovery is premised upon n clnim of implied fulschood, n plainriff must 'demonstrnte, by extrimic evidence, tbot the challenged ndvertisemeots tend to mislead or confil!lc cons11111lirs. "It io not for 71 Page3 SliJl Copy (Cite oo: 2003 WL 21283814, •3 (Cui.Superlor)) Neither of these cases require the use of consumer surveys, nor hove defendanb cited o cosc with that proposition. Johnson & Johnson held lhot consum.."T surveys ore n "usuol" means of showing consumer deception. Haskell only held that "extrinsic evidence~ was required. The recent case, Drockey v. Moore (2003) 107 Cai.App. 4th 86, spccifieolly disapproved of the methodology in Haskell ond Johnson & Johnson. Like Haskell, the court in· 11rockey hod "anecdotal evidence" cif deception in 'the form of testimony from plaintiffs who were deceived. ·However, Brockey distiiig\lishcd Haskell lind other federal cases on the grounds that those cnscs involve "a very few persons claiming- to be misled and do not hold that · "oneedotal" evldeitce can never suffice. • The court in Brockey found no California · cose required · o conswner survey to establish nn ·ndvertisement was misleading. Copr. @West 2003 No Claim to Orig. U.S. Govt. Worlcs Slip Copy (Cite as: 2003 WL 21283814, *4 (Coi.Supcrior)) Tile court reasoned that the primary evidence in a false advertising case is tho advertising itself. Drockey analogized tho unlawful advertising claims .to federal cases. involving the Federal Trude C9!1llilission's regUlation of deceptive advertising. "Tbe United States Supreme Court has rejected a claim that survey cvid~nce '>':.IS rcquir~d ... [in) regulation of deceptive advertising." ·citing Fed~ral Trade Com. v.. Colgate-Palmolive Co. (1965) 380 U.S. 374, 391-392 [13 L.Ed.2d 904, 918, 8.5 S.CL 1035) and Resort Cor Re11tal Syslem, Inc. v. Federal 7i'ade .Com. (9th Cir.I975) 518 F.2d 962, 964. Tile court in Resort Car ltcld there was no ·need to consider objcctions.to cons~er tcstim0.ny because it "merely supported the inferences which can logically be drawn by scrutinizing the advertising alone." *te Tile Brockey court also found an analogy with trade name disputes and cases construing California's prior unfair competition law (former Civil Code section 3369). In thos~. cases, the courts acknowledged the "likelihood of confusion" between names was a factual question and "the comparison of the two names themselves may be odequate to establish the likelihood . of confusion." Citing . Ball v. American Tr!al Lawyers Assn. (1971) 14 Cai.App.3d 289, 309; Hair v. McGuire (1961) 188 Cal.App.2d 348,353. *5 Determining reasonableness is something the trier of fact-in tltis case, the judge-does in all types of cases. , As Indicated in Drockey, if "a person of orP!nary intelligence could reasonably be deceived or confused, that is all that is required." Tito judge should not have to exclude himself or bc~elf as a pe~on of ordinary intelligence and a reasonable consumer. Further, requiring consunter-survey-type evidence would seemingly contradict opinions which hold tltat proof of direct harm from a defendan(s unfair business practice is not necessary for recovery. "The court may also order restitution without individualized proof of deception, reliance, and injury." Committee on Children's Television v. General Foods Corp. (1983) 35 Cal.3d 197, 211; Day v. AT & T Corp. (1998) 63 C.I.App. 4th 325, 332. Based on the above, to oslablish Utat advertising is misleading under a reosonable conswner test should not roquiro the usc of consumer surveys. Considering that the advc:rli.!cment speaks for.itscu; the judge is in a position to determine whether it is misleading, i.e. likely to deceive, under o "reasonable consumer" .Pago4 standard. Thcrefore, .thls Court will analyze d1c advertiseme~ts opply tbe reasonable consumer. test. If the Cqurt finds a claim to be misleading, it means member. of the public arc likely to be.deceivcd, People v. Dollar Rent-A-Car Systems. Inc., 211 C.I.App .3d 119, 129 ( 1989), !hot the claim is material, in that it is likely to influence t11a purchasing decision, Borden It1c. 11. Krafllnc. (N.J:?.lll1989) 224 U.S.P.Q. 811, 819, ~nd the. defendant knew or should have !mown, t;lus. & Prof.Code § 17500. Before addressing Ute 9pecific advertisements, the Court will discuss some of the of contention which bear on the specilic claims in the.advertisements. ~nd = lliE PEAK WELLNE~S STUDY In May of 1999, defendant retained Peak Wcllncss Inc. to conducl o study on the effectiveness of Xcnadrinc RFA-1. Prior to tltis time, there bod been no elinicnl tests of the Xenodrine.RFA-1 product, and all of the studies in Ute advertisements referred to gene.ric studies, i.e., studies of either ephedrine or ephedrine in combination wiUt other compounds such ns ca!Tcine, aspirin or L-tyrosi.nc. The Peak Well ness study. was co~ducted prinwily by Douglas Kolmau under the supervision of Dr. Carlon Calker. The study began with 30 overweight subjects. Sixteen were in the control group and 14 were in the placebo group. 1b.is was a double blind study. By dte end ofU1e study, four in the control group had dropped out and one in the placebo group, leaving a total of25 subjects who completed the test: 12 in the control group and 13 in the placebo group. Dr. Qiubu Shi did n biostatistica1 analysis of the results. The use of Dr. Shi's information and .the results of the siudy were Ute subject of a great deal of tes timony during the trial. An abstract of the study, summarizing the results, was published in the Obesity Research Journal in Junuary 2000. When the research paper wns submitted, this journal refused to publish the paper, but it was published in the current Therapeutic Research Joumal in April 2000. "6 The results of the study were that the cxperimen1al group lost 3:14 kilogrorns of weight versus n 2.05 kilogram loss for the plocebo group. This was n nwrginally statistically significant Copr. e West 2003 No Claim to Orig. U.S. Govt. Works 72 difference according to Dr. Shi. These numbel'$ were reached by compnring the 12 who completed tlte study in the control group with the 13 who completed the study in the placebo group. Using this ·same group comporison, Dr. Slii concluded thnt the study group lost 1.93 percent of body fut compared to 0.05 percent loss of body fut in the placebo group. Table II in the Peale Wellness study used 1he beginning weight ofnll 30 subjects (including lhe five dropouts) to show a nine percent weight loss and a 16 percent body fat losa in the ·control group and a body fot loss of +I percent by all 14 ·or the people·"who began the placebo group. Comparing -16 and +I is the basis of the claim of 1700 percent greater fat loss. Dr. SlLi's conclusion of 1.93 percent versus 0.05 percent is the basis of the claim of 3860 percent greater fat loss. The fallacy of Ute percentages is cllernplilied by comparing -1 6"percent with +1 percent. There is no way those percentages can equal n 1700 percent difference, no matter what mathematical calculation one does. It is impossible to compare plus and minus and get a multiple: Thin fallacy is illustrated by the absurdity of theso comp:trisons. Tite - t 6 percent is based on o fat loss of approximately 4 percent, or approximltely 0 pounds. The 3860 percent is based upon a loss of approximately 4 1/4 pounds. Inasmuch as the loss of -16 percent of fat was o greater weight amount, it should not result· in o lower percentage differential. This illustrates the misleading natUre of the 1700 percent claim. Defendant also niis1tates the placebo group in Ex!Libit 39.3, Tab S, by stating that Ute subjects who took o placebo followed the sam~ exercise program ond actually gained body fat. This is not true since thegain in body fat is obtained only by using all 14 :rubjects. There is no infonmtiori on tl1e dropout from tlte placebo group. The subjects who completed !be trial presumably continued to exercise, and that group bad minimal fat loss. The text correctly pointed otit the relatively low weight losse~:" when comparing the people who had fnLishcd the study. Tobie 2, which is the basis for the claim in the advertisements, compared oll of the people who started. This in=sed the weight loss from about four percent to nine percent ond also substantially increased the fat loss percentages. Both sides imve presented testimony regarding the "intcnt-to-trcat11 onalysin. Defendant argues that the 73 Poge5 Slip Copy (Cite ~s: 2003 WL 21203014, "6 (CnLSuperlor)) intentto treat means that you usc lill of tho subjects in the baseline; i.e., all30 subjects in ·tbe Peak Welbtess test who begnn. This does· not make sense to tile Court. The intent-to-~t ·atllllys·is would seem to require tlic mearchers to attempt to follow up ori the four dropouts ond then use the data from all16 in"dte original group. This ·not done and there is no evidence that the Peak Wellness protocol WlL! intent to ireat. Since the dalll Was not available from the four wb,o dropped out, there is no justification for using all 16 when comparing to the placebo grilup. Similarly, using ail 14 who started in the placebo group is not justified. Therefore, tlic claim of 1700 percent fai'loss difference and the nine percent weight loss diffcn:nce ore misle~ding. = ''7 Dr. Shi did not compare the 16 to th~ 14, but rather compared the 12 who fuLished ·to the 13 who finished. He-had data"ori all 30, but did not attempt to compare them. It nppcors that Mr. Kalman went tlirough and picked ond chose the data which would give the mest favorable results. Mr. Kl.!mon adinitted it would have been more accurate to have compared the 12 to 13, which ·gives a significantly lower reduction in weight for the study group and ·n significantly lower differential between the two groups. The Court con only conclude that the ·money being paid to Dr. Colleer caused him to influence Mr. Kalman and to try to cr<ate a study-which justified the money being spent by defendant and which would ensure further work from defendant The question is whether defendant !mew of tllls manipulation of the data. The defendant claims it relied on the information in the abstract, which it used in the advertlseDll:nts. Only if the defendant did not ask any questions and blindly accepted the information_ in the abstract could 1he .defendant justifY using the percentages from the abstract However, the defendant was the sponsor of 1he study. There were coinmunications between Mr. Kalman and the defendant. The defendant should have, at n minimwn, aslced'\vb:tt.lhe actual weight losses were, what the actual fat percent decreases were, and should have had sufficient infonn:ttion to know the mislending nature of tho percentages shown in the abstract. Failure - to investigate when the infonnation was within the control of defendant satisfies the test of P~op/e v. Forest E. 0/sori, Inc. (1982) 137 Cai.App.3d -137. Even if the defendant did not have the infonnatio"n to !mow !be abstract was misleading, the defendant certainly became · aware · of this ·copr.@ West 2003 No Claim to Orig. US. Govt. Works Slip Copy (Cite u: 2003 WL 21283814, •7 (Cai.Supcrior)) infonnation when·the article was published and even before when tl1e criticisms of the article · were discussed with Mr. Kalman. Nevertheless, the defendant did not change the representations in the advertisements. Since the TV-ad disclaimers said the average weight loss was _6.9 poilhds, defendant had octual knowledge that the nine percent weight loss claim was a · distortion of the ~esuits of the Peak Wellness study. Therefore, the statemepts of the nine percent decrease in weight are false and nLislcading and were !mown or should have been known by defendant to be so. .. Dcfcndal!t's position with respect to the 3860 perce~t or 38.6 times is that in _addition to it being literally accurate, it was blessed by the judge in the Utah case brought by Bnsic Research. While the judge may have indicated that 1he math was accurate, the judge did not say it was appropriate !O make this claim in advertisements, pilrlicularly in the context in which defendant used tl1ese nwnbcrs. If anything WltS blessed by Judge Kimball in Utah, it was the intentto-treat analysis using the subjects including the dropouts. The defendant was well aware -ofthe actual weight loss and actual fat loss -and !mew that 3860 percent was based on oxtremely low weight and fat losses. TI1ereforc lho defendant knew the misleading nature of the advertisements using 3860 percent or · 38._6 times. •n Defendant was nware that percentages can be .misleading, especially,when based on small amounts, from the comments .on the article which ·were conveyed by Mr. Kalman to defendant and from Dr. Ziegenfuss in an e-mnil, .Exhibit 1311, discussing the EMU study which showed a loss of 3 .19. pounds in the control group versus n half-pound gain in the placebo gr,oup. These 11umbers arc comparable to the fo.ur nnd one-quarter P?und fat loss that was the basis for the 3860 per~cnt claim. Thus,. defendant was advised thnt the small numbers were _miSleading yet continued 1o use the 3860 percent claim The use of the _I700 percent is sini)larly misl~ading in that weight Joss of those who completed tltc study is 6.9 pounds in eight weeks compared to a four and one-half pound loss in the placebo group. Since the body fat of_ all 16 who began the study only went down by approximately four percent, actual body fat loss would bo comparable to the weight loss. What "is misleading is that the actual poWlds of either weigbt or fat lost arc. substantially smaller than the claima for the beforo-and-after subjects or the amounts people . Page6 are expected to lose as set forth in some or the advertisements. Therefore, both the 17 times and the 38.6 times clnilps are misleading because of the expectaiions raised in the minds of n reasonable conswner that these pcreenlages apply to highet weight losses and fat losses than were dcmonstnited iu the Peale Wellness study. .. The Peale Wellness study does not justifY any oftl>e perccntase comparison- between-group claims made in the advertisements. Any reasonable consumer reading these percentages would be misled. TilE EASTERN MICffiGAN UNIVERSITY (EMU) STUDY AND XENA DR!NE XTREME MAGAZINE. The only reference to the EMU study is on page 31 of the Xenadrina Xtreme magazine which was mailed toward the end of the class period. It says the "safety nnd efficacy" of Xenadrine RFA-1 was examined. 11Lis is false, as safety was not the purpose of tltc study. The only specific claim related to the study is "the results showed that the subjects ingesting Xenadrine RFA-1 lost significantly more weight (759%) and fat than tl10se using the piaccbo·with.out eating fewer calo~ies or changing tl1cir carb-to-protcin ratio. In addition, no negative effects were. found on resting electrocardiograms or blood lipid profiles." The 759 percent calculation is bused on a comparison of the weight lost in the Xenadrine RF A-1 group (minus 3.1 pounds) as compared to tlw placebo group (plus 0.44 pounds). The small total loss of weight in eight. wee~ con;bined with the fallacy of comparing plus and minus numbers, makes the 759 percent claim · misleading. This Claim appears in _a magazine which is 50 pages long and Uris reference to the EMU study consists of two sentences on page 31. Further, the preceding paragraph refers to the Peale Wellness study and the 38.6 times greater fat _loss claimed to have been achicv,cd in the Peak Weilncss study. The phrase 38,6 times or 3860 percent greater total fat loss appears at least five times in the Xenadrine Xtreme magazine. ThC$e claims, in !be context of before-and-after testimonials of losing 63 powtds of ·body fat, 46 pounds of fat, and weight losses of 25 pounds and 45 pounds, along with letlcrs indicating equally substantial if. not greater weight losses, e.g•. 100 pounds (twice), 9G pounds, and "90 pounds of pure fa~" make the rnagazine mislead4Jg witltout the reference to Ute EMU study, ns the· render would believe the 38.6 times relates ·to a weight loss or fat loss much greater than four pounds. Copr. 0 West 2003 No Claim to Orig. U.S. Govt. W0rlcs 74 75 Slip Copy , (Cite os: 2003 WL 21 Z93914, •n(Cai.Superior)) • 9 There wns testimony regarding a press conference ond a news releose in which claims were made about the EMU study. There was no evidence that either the press conference or the news release wns seen or heard by California consumers. Therefore notwithstanding the substantial nmount of time nnd ~!fort spent on the ·EMU study during the course of the trial; there is no need to discuss it further. THE UTAH CASE The parties hove in!Jo.duccd into evidence opinions from the bosic rcleurch case in Utah.· The Court has reviewed those opinions, but neither of these rulings · is binding on this Court. The Court notes tlmt while there wns some evidence received in the Utah case, the Utah court did not have the b~nefit of a six-week trial. PUFFING Defendant orgues that the general claims · arc "puffery." "Puffery"· is o wgue or general stntement on which no reasonable person would rely. To be actionable, there needs to ·be a "specific estnblislunent claim." Thompson Medical Co., l11c. v. Cibq-Geigy Corp. (S.D.N.Y.J986) 643.F.Supp, 1190. TI1c Court fmds that the generalized claims in the advertiscm.ents ;ucn as "revolutionlll}' ·new fat burning technology a.Stounds the bodybuilding world" (Tab I); "The most effective fat burning c.ompound available" (Tab 4); and "The state of the art m fat loss technology" (Tab 8) are o.ll puffmg. Therefore, these claims and the mal)y similar claims are not, by tlJcmselves, false or misleading. siffiiio.rly, t!Je claim of "pharmaceutical grade" ~r pha.rmnceutical qunlity" made on the 1abcls m puffing. Most of the experts coul.d not even defe~e what this claim me:~nr, and while Dr. Belch, m h1s ~urvey, was able to obtain reactions from consumers, thi~ claim does not appear to be false or misleading. Further, the testimony of Mel Rich supports thi~ claim. 11 THE BEFORE-AND-AFTER ADVERTISEMENTS Defendnnt cloims to rely upon the offida~ts of ihe individtiols in the before- and-after tidv¢isements to support the before-and.:ai\er cloirns. In the cnse of Mil<e Piacentino, this position makes no sense. : Defendant WIIS in possession of Ex!u"bit 222.2, the "Candidate Progress Chart" for Michael Piacentino. This showed that on hio stoi1ing tho program, ·· he weighed 229 pounds and had 21 percent body fat. That would give him a total of 48 pounds ofbody.fat as represented. At week 10, which is the time penod referred to in the advertisemeJ!t, Mi. Piacentino weighed 195 pounds nnd had 8 percent body fat. That would give him 15 1/2· pounds of body fat. That meant that during this period, he would have lost 32 112 pounds of body fat, not 46 pounds of body fat as represented. Since the . total weight loss was. 34 pounds, he would have lost muscle mosa, no.t gamed it, to make up the difference in the total we1ght Joss between Uie fat Joss· of 32 1/2 pounds and the. total weight loss of 34 pounds. Even using the week 12 reduction to 7 percent body fat, would give a total of about 13 1/2 pounds of body fni which would account for· about 34 112 pounds of body fat loss which means at most, Mi. Piacentino would have gained II 2 poW:d of muscle, not tho 12 pounds as indicated in the advertisement. •to There is no way to reconcile the affidavit indi9atiog 46 pounds of weight loss with either the caleulations in Ex!ubit 1289.1 tluough 1289.13 (the documents from Physical Addiction) or Exhibit 222.2. Even the ·weight loss of 34 pounds is misleading because of the additional supplements being taken by Mr. Piacentino. Since both Mr. Chinery and Mr. Conldin were aware of the inconsistent 'information, the claims in the a<!vertisement regarding.Mr: Pincmtino's fat loss and muscle mass gain BrC evidence of defendant's willingness to stretch the truth to make its product appear to be more effective than.it actually was. Both Mr. Chinery and Mr. Conldin used the identical wording t!iai they were "confused" by the chart of the weight loss which showed only c 34-pound weight loss end the· affidavit which showed n 46-pound weight loss. Yet the advertisements cl~im a fat loss of 46 pounds plus ·a 12-poimd gain of nmscle. Therefore, the defendant could not be relying on the affidavit whiclr sa·ys a weight loss of 46 pounds. lfthe public does not liliow the. difference between fa.t loss and weight .loss 110 argued by the defendnnt, it would think from the odvertisement that there had been a 46-pound weight loss. Sinee the defen":mt knew there had only been a 34-poWid lo•s, the defendant !mew this cloim was flllse. Evidence was introduced in ihe fonn of testimony from Mike Piacentino ond documents from Physical Copr: CO West 2003 No Claim to Orig. U.S. Govt. W!!rl<.~ .Slip Copy (Cite as: 2003 WL 21283814, ~to (Cai.Superior)) Addiction that the weight losses attributable to Karen Curtis, Remy Feniello and Maria Korsgaard were not .accurate. There is po evidence that defendant had this information. For each of these individuals defendant produced an affidavit. atte&ting to accuracy (Ex!)ibits 2118, 2120. and 596), There is no evidence that defendant knew. that the affidavits were innccurate. While thcrc is solllC qw;stlon obout the notaHZaqon of the affidav:;ts, as they are all noWized by the same notacy, and none of the affidavits .ha1 a date by the notarization, this by itself is not enough to invalidate the affidavits. More importantly, since the beforeand-after ads are misleading in the context of the exaggerate<!. claims of fat !oss, whe!her the.·beforeand-afttr ads arc accurate is not .signHicant The advcrtisernt;n.IG arc misleading in. Uiat .tho· typical consumer. would expect dramatic weight losS()s bllScd not only on the befo~-and-ofter ad but on the pcrcen!llge fat loss claim, which n re.asonable conswncr would think beru:s some rclotionship to the amount of weight lost llS shown in tl1c before-andafter ads. Since the actual amount of fat Joss, which fonns the basis for . the percentage claims was so small, the advertisements are misleading. In the case of Randy Martin his letter says his ttansformation was five months (Exhibit 1070) rather than the tluec months claimed in the advertisements. Defendant says Mr. Martin clarified the time later and said the weight was lost in three months. Since the weight loss by Mr. Martin is so great, there would be little reason to c>Uiggerate the time It took, and therefore, the Court docs not..fmd the claims of weight loss by Randy Martin to be misleading. Compare, Christjoe Muller "45 pounds in 16 weeks" (Tab 13, Exhibit 19) with television 'Clip S, Christine. Muller "45 pounds in 12 weeks" with Clip 6, Christine Muller "41 pounds in 12 weeks." CREDIBILITY *11 Before discussing the specific advertisements, it Is necessary to discuss the credibility of the defendant's most impommt witnessi·Robcrt Chinery, the president of defendant He worked for Pro Source and thl'll left and started Cytodyne. He developed Xcnadrinc RFA-1. The Court does not find Mr. Chinery io be credible. similarly the witnesses on .defendant's payroll or retainer, e.g., Kelly. Conklin, J:)r. Ziegenfius. and Dr. Colker, were not credible. This finding is particularly important in ·evaluating what the defendant knew about the claims it was making. The Court finds the defendant was well Page II aware that the claims made .in the early ads were not · accurate, as Mr, Chinery knew Xcnadrinc RFA-1 had not been the subject of the studies, lmew only portions of the ingredients bud been studied. and knew of the different dosages. Since Mr. Cbinery wos drafting the advertisements, it was his language that WllS designed to mislead consumers reading the odvci1isements by malcing · n .. reader think that Xenadrine RFA-1 had been tested. With respect to tl1e Peak Wellness study, the Court finds Mr, Chinery was well informed of what WllS going on, and that he understood ·the actual ornounts of weight and fat lOSS()3 .in the study, It appears thnt he probably encouragedMr. I<alnum to use the numbers that exaggerated the results. · With respect to the before-and·after studies, tl1erc is no.specifie evidence tl1at Mr. Chincry was aware that the weight losses might have been exaggerated, other than Mike Pillcentino. However, given his experience in the field, he probably knew that tl1e affidavits were not necurate. ~Ie !mew about Mike Piacentino because he !mew about the candidate weight-loss chart, and he should have known , tbat. Mr. Piacentino bad previously posed for an advertisement for Pro Source ns n well-conditioned body builder before he underwent his "tinnsfonnation". using Xenadrine RFA-1 (See Exhibit 93.48). Mr. Chinel}"s lack of condor can be seen throughout .. the tri.U. Cytodyne has consistently failed to produce documents that could ·have. explained things, pushed researchers to make s.tudiea come out favorable to them and paid money to the key people involved in providing infonnatio11 to them to ensure U1e infof11)ation was favorable to them. The discovery responses on the s.Ues in Ollifornia seem' to have ·boen designed to mislead the·plaintiff. The defendant did not have any product complaints before 2000. TI1ere were no ccnificatcs of ;malysis. There were no assays. E- mails were deleted. Peak Wellness did not have its underlying documents. Mel Rich did ·not bring documents. Mr. Schiff did not bring docwncnl!:, and some affidavits appeor to be missing from the before-and-after subjects. In addition, there are a series or' mistakes, ·011ch favorable to defendant. There ore mistakes in the pvalues in the Peak Wellness study. TI1ere is a mistake on the website. tbc{e was a mistake in citing the Copr. C West 2003 No Claim to Orig. U.S. Govt Works 76 77 Page? Slip Copy (CUe ru;: 2003 WL 21283814, ~11 (Coi.Superlor)) wrong · jo=l as support In one of the advertioem::nto. There was o mistake in the weigbtlosn claims. There .won not n patent pending. • 12 Defcndanro entire approach to marketing Xenadrinc RFA-I is epitottdu:d by Dr. Arms1rong nt page 133, line 8 of his deposition when he s:~id that whnt he was signing wos "not n lie, per se." SAFETY A subst:mtial omounf of the trial was spent with eJq)erts on both sides testirY;ng reg~~rding the s:~fet)' of 'icnadrine RF A- I or the safety of ephedrine and ephedrine caffeine productS. Tho issue of Safety is relcv:mt to ~•e cxpreso and implied claims of safety. · Tite Court first notes that while there should be substantial additional investigation into any adverse event reports and whether odvet'Se reoctioru~ may be caused ·by Xenadrine RFA-1 or the other ephedra products on the ·innrket, it is not the role of this Court to determine whether or n~t this product should· be banned. The plaintiffs do not·seelc to ban Xenodrine RFA-1 from mnrke~ nor would it bo within the power of lhis Court pursuant to the provisions of California Business and Professions Code sCction 17200 to mn!ce ouch ·an order. Any regulation is wirhin the purview of U1e regulatory agencies and the·legislature. The Court is ruling on the issue before it in this action: whether defendants have engaged in false and misleading advertising. There have been numerous complaints submitted to de fendan~ to competitors of defendant, ond to the Food & Drug 'Administration from consumers who cloin1 they have ·suffered everything from tmnsient events, such as palpilations or high blood pressure to strolces and l1eart attack•, some resulting iii dc~th. The Court allowed U1ese adverse events into evidence, but orily for the -purpose of showing that the complaints hod been IllJlde. l11ere was no evidi:nce that the complaints were truthful, i.e. that the events had in fact occurred, and no proof of any causal connection between taking Xcnndrine RFA-1 or other ephedra products and the adverse event, allhough some of plaintiff's eJCperts testified to . a connection and pointed out the nnture of ephedrine ond caffeine is ·to constrict blood vessels Dnd raise he.rt rate, which refiults in higher blood pressure, higher body . tetripcrriturc which, when ~<?.mbined with exercise, em result in stroke ond heart attacks; Even t110uglt t11erc have been hWldreds and n\aybe thousands of.comploints reg~~rding ephedra prod\u:ts, no evideru:e wns introduced of the number ·of complaints including strokes and heart attacks that occur in the general popUlation.nor of the nlllllbor of ephedra users. Thus, the l'lltio of complainl!l among eplleilra users could not be compared to !he general population. Recently, the Rand Report was published. While it Was referred to bY so!M of the experts, it Vr.as not allowed into c:videilce and the Court ·did 'not consider its conclusions. 11 appearo that defendllnt has gone out of its wo.y to ininirnize the existence of any health risks !hot might exist. An example' of this i• iri'thc XenadriM Xtrcme rruigazine. Thc'thermogenics llrticlo by Dr. Ziegenfuss originally contained language on the last page under the beading, "Take H~me Messages" that recommended usinc the'ploduct for only four to eight weeks nnd poinied out that one could expect certain si~e effects such <14 trembling, jitters; ·and elevated ·heart l'llte. These health Wlirnings were edited.ounwd do not appear in the article that was published irl the Xe11adri11e Xtreme mag:tzine, (Exhibit 281 .7, Exhibit 2033, p.13). . *13 ln light of the questions as to the safety of ephedra. products and the lack of safety studies, the Court firlds that Tabs I, 3, 4 and 8 are misleading because of the implied safety claims. The testimonials from doctot'S in Tabs I, 3, 4 and 8 imply Xenaclrine RFA-1 is safe, as does the reference in Tabs I' lind 3 . to "outperforming dangerous prescription products." This fwding is in addition to the reasons discussed below that these advertisements are misleading. The safety statements In the Xenadrine Xtteme magazine are· false in that the safety of Xenadrine RFA,l ·had not been studied. THE GENERlC STUDIES The·generic studies referred to In Tabs 1-6 and labels 1-3 do not support tl1e claims made in the advertisements or the labels. References to these studies are misleading in ihat Xenadrinc RFA-t was not tested; the Xenadrine RFA-1 fonnula wns not tested;· the dosoges in som.e sttidies are different; scimc studied ral:i, not humans; and the ingredients ore not identical, e.g., some include nspirin (not salicin), some include only L-tyrosinc, some tested only ephedrine; some tested ephedrine and caffeine, ond some ntudied synthetic rather than botanical ephedrine. None of these differences are elcplained. Therefore, it is misleading· to make it' appear· that Xenadrino RFA-1 was test<d. Copr. (1) West 2003'No Claim to Orig. U.S. Govt. Works Slip Copy (Cile u: 2003 WL 21283814, *13 (Cai.Superlor)) THE PRINT ADVERTISEMENTS The Court Will now discuss the effectiveness claims in individual advertisements. TAB 1 [FNI] FNI. Thi: Court l1os admitted the notebook cOrituining the adVertisements with Tabs 1-15 .. Exhibit2393. The very fll'St ad, Tab I, Exhibit No. 94.3, has several false and.mislcading statcmentsJI'ho nd Gays: "Shown in studies to ·increase the rate of fat loss by up to 300 percent!" Dr. Krieger; who did the study, testified this claim was false because the study did not measure ·falloss but only weighlloss. Moreover, tho clear implication is that this weight loss relates to the product being advertised, Xenadrine RFA-1, particularly since·it says, ''New. Available wilhout a prescription" In the comer above this phrase. The amounts of weight loss of the two models ~~re 68 poWlcls in IO·wecks and 57 pounds in 9"\Veei<S. The footnote in very' small print says, "Joseph lsnardi (sic) ond N:tncy Lo.tarroco achieved their extmordinnry results using Xe'nadrine· RFA-1 as their exClusive dietai}' supplement ta their tmihing program.• A reasonable consumer would assume, even though these were ClCtraordin!lry results, that he·or she might achieve results at least In the ballp~rk of the weight lost by these two models. The phrase, ''Patent Pending pharmaceutical grade formula," Is false in that therc·wns no p~tent pending. Whether this is n 'mistalc:e ·or riot, it certainly is a mistake' in favor of 'defendont and given defendant's tendency throughout to exnggerote and always use lhe claim most · favorable to it irre~pective of ·the contraindications, the Court fmds U~at phrase ·is false nild misleading. · It further odds to the misrepresentation as Iii whelhcr Xenadrine RFA-1 wa$ being 'tested. Why lirould this formula have a patent pending on it if· it were not the fonnula that wasbeing tested? · · ' ;. ,· *14 On the rigl•t-hand side of the advertisement, there are statements ·from doctors juxtnposed with statements such as "S!iown in clinical srudies to be 29% more effective.... " Without any otl1er reference, it appears that it was Xenadrine RFA-1 that was shown to be more effective. The next statement is: "Urililce other weight loss products, Xenadrine RFA-I's thennogcnic octivity. is 'not decreased the longer you use it To the contrary, Xenadrine RFA-l's potent thermogenic fat burning effectn ~c!lm lly increase,.. followed by 0 citation 't o Astrup. nus refers· to Xcnadrifle RFA-1 's thermogenic octivity, not the ingredients in Xenadrine RFA-1 ond siw::e Astrup tested only generic compounds, this slatement is misleading. The next quote is "Xenadrine RFA·I's advanced thennogenic formulo has been shown to actually spare lean muscle tiisue.... " Tite citntion ogoin io misleading beeliiise it appears that Xenadrine RFA-'1 was tested. Finliuy, the quote, ''has been shown . to actually prevent regaining of body fat normally associated with extreme weight loss," with o citation to Astrup must meoil Xeimdrine RFA-1 because there is no other reference. Tbtw,' the rust advertisement is misleading. TAB2 The second print 'advertisement, ·Tab 2, E1chlbit 94.2, "Revolutionary new fat burning technology astounds the bodybuilding world," has quotes from bodybuilders which were not challenged during the litigation. In the right·hru\d.colurnii, the ad sa,Ys: Since its introduction 'to the body building scene, Xenodrine RFA-1 has already esrnblisbed itself·as tl1e most effective of this cmergiilg generation of sophisticated · scientific · weight · loss tools! Xenadrino RFA-1's potent thermogenic combination has been ·proven In niore scientific studies tl1an virtually any olher fonnula (prescription or non-prescription). But Xenodrine RFA-l's powerful ·effects don't stop there-in a ground breaking study published in the prestigious International Journal of Obesity this potent thcnnogenic compoWld was actually shown to spare Jean muscle tissue during intense weight loss cycles•, making Xenadrine RFA-1 the ultinJate pl1ysique tnlnsfonoation tool! ·.' ·· ' Pasquali R; · et al. Cbronip beta receptot'S stinrulntion 'prevents nitrogen Joss during scmistatvation in obcse ·subjccts.' International Journal of Obesity 13 (supplenu:nt 1): (abstract). The second advertisement ·is mlsleoding in that a reasonable consumer would think Xenodrine RFA-1 Was the product tested·. · TAB3 The third print advertisement, Tab 3, Exhibit 58, is virtually identical ·to · the flrst ad except tl~nt the before-nnd-cfler substitutes Farah .. Fnbri~toro for Chris Sorrentino. Ms. Fnbricatore lost 3'9 pounds in 28 days. Tbis ·advertisement adds the phr:!Se, "Lose up to 30 pounds in 30 dhys \\>ith the most powerful fat Copr. \C West 2003 No Claim to Orig. U.S. Govl Worl<S 79 78 Slip Copy. (Cite ao: 200.3 W L 21283614, • 14 (Cai.Superlor)) burning compound ever developed." It has all of the fnlse and misle~ding claims of the flrst·advertisement, but by adding the phrase, "30 poWJds in 30 days," it is even more misleading. TAB4 "JS .In Tab 4, EJthibit 97, the trutb·ofthe portion of the advertisement with q~,0,tes from the doctors is unchallenged by the plaintiffs; Other !han safety, the only portion which could be deemed misleading is tho portion that. laDes about the scientific refereiJCOS. It SiiYG that .the fonnula "is centercd.around a highly advilnced, tcscarch proven thermogenic compound.... " It then snyil, "Xt;nadrine RFA-l's revolutionary tl1crmogenic compound has been proven effective through a vast series of scientific studies which offer irrefutable proof to the CKtmordinary fat-burning/muscle· sparing effects that arc possible. No ot!Jer thermogenic formula is backed by tllis nwnbcr ofpublishl:d scientific stUdies!" The clear implication ofthe se~.ond portion is that J>cnadrine RFA, l has been proven effective in scientific tests because no other thermogenic formula is backed by this number ·of tests. Further, since Xcnadrinc RFA-1 "is a revolutionary new ~pproach to weight loss ... based on the latest scientific research," any reasonable. consumer would believe Xenadrine RFA-1 is the subject of the research . mentioned in the list of scientific references. Therefore, TAB 4 is misleading. TABS The fifth advertisemen4 Tab 5., Exhibit 98.2 "Ciinicai studies confumXcnadrine RFA-tic amazing fat-bw:nJni'muscl.e-sparing effects" is a two-page advertisement The first page consists of beforc-nndaftcr picturen of Randall Hanson stating !hot. he lost "illl ei<tmordinary 63 pounds of ~ody fat. • The plaintiffs have ·not challenged ~ny of the claims attributed to Mr. Hanson. . · The next page, Exhibit 98.3, has four pictures on the top of bodybuilders with quotes attributed to them. The plaintiffs do not challenge this portion of tho advcrtiscmen~ The fight·hand side comists of quotes from mticles praising Xe!llldrine RFA·l that ore not .challenged by plaintiff. Plaintiff challenges the portion on the left-hand column of the second p,age which states, Clinically Proven To ''Bwn Fat ~nd Spare Muscle" Xcnadrine RFA-l's. advance . "FJC" ll'a ge l2 Slip Copy (Cite as: 2003 WL 21283314, • 16 (Cni.Superior)) Pag~ 11 thermogenic combination has been the subject of nwnerous published clinical studies which offer .undeniable proof of the extraordinary fat· burning/muscle sparing effeclll that are possible. In n recent study published in the prestigious International Journal of Obesity, this poll:nt compound was shown to increase the metabolic rqte by over an asto~nding 600%! This same journal als~o. published n siudy showing the synthetic equivalent of this compound to Increase the total rate offat-loss by over 300%1 And in yet another groundbrealdng . study, . this potent compound was shown t() help prevent regaining of badyfot that is typically associated with extrerm: weight los.s. This remarkable feat is actually made possible by way of Xenadrine RFA-t's amazing muscle sparing effects. In other words, preserving lean muscle tissue which is the body is more 'metabolically active' than lcfi with a permanently increased metabolism which in effect burns more calories and prevents new fa~ stores from forming. •16 Another study published in the Journal of Phaflllllcology ond Experimental Therapeutics found !hot by adding o specific thermogenic synergist, this combina.t ion may become over .54% mare effective than virtually nny other thennogenic fonuula on the market" (All emphasis in original.) No other thermogenic combination is backed by this number of published clinical studies! Tbe beading "Clinically Proven," followed by references to clinical studies, Is misleading in thai the reader would think !hot it.was Xcnadrine RFA·l !hot had been clinically .proven, not merely. some ingrcdicn~ Since none of the studie~ relate to Xenadrine RFA-1, all of !he claims eKcept for the 300 petcent attributed ;o "tl)e synthetic equivalent" arc misleading (and Dr. Kreiger said only weight loss.~ studied.) There is a claim that by adding n specific thermogenic ~ynergis4 the "coJ11bination may become over 45% more effective !han virtually any other thennogerlic formula on the market." The Maher study does not appear to support this claim. Further, Dr. Maher testified that his study did not support this conclusion. Even though Dr. Maher is probably bias~ against tile defrndan~ .the Court concludes that this portion relating to the Maher study ill misleading. r., OTIIER ADVERTISERS Before ditlcuss.ing · the rest of defendant's advertisements, the Court will address the dcfendanrs argument that its claims are·not misleading in light of Copr. 0 West 2003 No Claim 19 Orig. U.S. Oovt. Works competitors' claims. Defendant has introduced two magazines for the Court to review to see· the context in which readers see the Xehadrine RFA·l ads. Exhibit 2376 is Flex Magazine from March 1998 and Exhibit 2377 is Musclemag International for February 2000.lloth magazines consist of articles on bodybuilding and bodybuilding contests with seemingly nn equal amount of advertising, pririlarily for supplements designed to ildd muscle or lose fat The supplement business appearo to be highly competitive. Tbe defendant is correct in that consumers are bombarded with numerous advertisements :md many claims of benefit for these products. A careful review of the advertisements, however, shows tl~at the advertisements for Xenadrine RFA-1 make more specific chums than all but o couple of the other adycrtisements. Even those advertisements with specific claims are far moro candid than defendant's advertisements. For example, Hycfroxycut makes a claim !hot you can bum 613 percent more fat, but in the tex4 it refers to "the highly touted ECA (Ephedrine, caffeine and aspirin) stack. This very stack is found in Hydroxycut and has been shown in recent clinical study to elicit a 613 pen:ent greater rate of fat Ieos., .. " (Exhibit 2377, p.3). The advertisement makes it clear that they are referilng to the ingredients in Hydroxycut and not Hydroxycut itsdf. Tlie Hydroxycut ad goes on to discuss the other ingredients in Hydroxycut nnd their added benefits, thus making it clear that Hydroxycut was not the subject of the study. Further,. the advertisement refers to body fat loss· in pounds nnd shows ·Group I, tl1e control group, lost 1.5 pounds whereas Group 2 "ECA stack· as found in Hydroxycut" lost 9.2 pounds. Titus, the reader is able to ace the nctual weight loss being claimed. "17 By contras~ the advertisements for Xenadrine RFA·l say, "Xenadrine RFA-l's revolutionary thermogenic compound has been proven effective through a vast series of scientific studies ... ·no other th~nnogenic formuln is ·badred ·by this number of published scientific studies." Other claims arc that Xenadrinc RFA·I's adVll!lced "FJC thermogenic i:ombiriation has been the subject of numerous published clinical studies ... in a tecent study published in the prestigious International Journal of Obesity, this potent compound was shown to increase tm:tabolic rate by over nn astounding 600 percent" As a resul4 any rcosonable consumer would believe that Xenadrino RFA·l has been tested in the scientific journals cited in the advertisements, Notwilhstlnding tho word, 11 new," there is no way fo r o reasonable coilSlUDCr to know that the product did not exist in the early '90s when some of the Journal articles were published. While a skilled grammarian or n skilled lawyer might find ambiguities in the language to show that it does not specifically say that Xelllldrioe RFA: t waa "testcd, !hot fg not a reasonable conclusion for a reasonable coiiswncr. Defendan~s ada· are writton to leave the render with the impression that it was Xe!llldrine RF A-l 'that was tested. As is shown in the Hydroxycut ads, it is very simple to stnte that it is the ingredients, ot lens! some of the ingredients, that were tested in these studies. [FN2] or FN2. Tite Court is not finding the Hydroxycut cdvertisement to be nccurnte. It is only being used to show thnt the competitors are giving consumers more infonnation nbout the studies. Contained in Exhibi t 2377 is an advertisement for another Cytodyne product called CytopleJ~" This advertisement says that Cytoplex contains a revolutionary compound called "Glucostatin-RFS" which is lll!lde up of a. unique blend of substrates clinically prove11 to stimulate rapid and dramatic weight loss tesults, even without dieting." (Emphasis in original.) It also refers to an article in the International Journal of Obesity that found Glucostatin substmte number one actually increased the rate of weight loss by over 600 pen:ent Tho Court finds this advertisement significant in two respects. First, it shows that de(endant is capable of writing an advertisement that makes it clear that only the ingredients have been tested in scientific journals nnd not tho product itself. Second, this appears to be one of the products that Randall Hanson provided to Milce Piacentino and possibly some of the other before-and· after subjects. Since this product is designed to · increase weight loss, it would be extremely significant to a before-and-after subject who claims to have lost weight due to Xenadrine RFA-1. There is no way of knowing whether the weight Joss was due 'to Xenadrine RFA-1, to Cytoplex, to the other supplem..-nts, or to the incredible workouts done by Mr. Piacentino. The failure to disclose the consumption of other supplemen!s is another reason the Milce Pincentino before-and-after · odvertisementt; are misleoding. Therefore, the Court does not need to resolve the factual disputes regarding the pbotographo ot the instructions iivcn to Mr. Piaccntino . Copr. C West 2003 No Claim to Or! g. U.S. Govt. Works 81 80 Sbp Copy (Cite 11: 2003 WL ll28J814, *18 (Cai.Superior)) •18 Since the supplements cam: from Cytodync lo Mr. Hanson, defcndont cannot claim it did not know tlut tbeso supplemeotJ were being provided to the before..and-ailer subj ects. Defenda nt argues that Mr. Hl115on wa.s do ing before- and-oiler studies on ronny ditrcreol produc ts Mel, therefore, defendant would not know lh.>! subject WM gelling which supplements that defendant provided to Mr, ijanson. Tho defendant should have known that Mr.. Hanson was pr<~viding Mr. Piacenlino with additional supplements, including supplements that were used as meal substitute.!l and tl)ercfore were used in losing weight. Had defendant done any investigation, such as simply aslcing Mr. Hanson (who wns being paid by defendant as a consultant) who was receiving which supplements, it would havo discovered this fact See People v. Forest E. Olsen (1982) 137 Cai.App.3d 137. TAB 6 and TAB 7 Exllibit 40, Tab 6, and Exhibit 237 1, Tab 7, "Take Control," feature Nancy Lntarocca losing 57 pounds in nine weci<S. Tab 6 says, "It is no wonder Xcnadrine RFA-1 is America's hottest new diet product This revolutionary fonnula is centered aroW!d an advanced thennogcnic compound shown in clinical studies to increase the metabolism and the total rate of fat loss by over 600 percent." . Tab 7, after an identical first sentence says, "In a groundbrealcing double blind clinical trial, Xcnadrine RFA-t's revolutionary thennogenic formula was shown to increase the rate offat loss by a phenomenal 1700%!'' (Emphasis in original.) Defendant used virtually tho identical language in Tab 7 to refer to a study on Xenadrine RFA-t.·as it used in Tab 6 to describe generic studies. This illustrates how the reference in Tab 6 is mlslcnding, ns anyone reading Tab 6 would tllialc it was Xenadrine ·RFA-1 that was tested. Tab 7 bas a disclaimer, "While Nancy's results were extraordinary and go beyond wbat .the average person may achieve, Xenadrine RFA·I guarantees Vi.sible weight results in just 30 days or your .money back." However, there is no indication that Nancy's results are silt or seven times greater than the results achieved in the Peak Wellness study. The 1700 percent claim is misleading and it is not saved by the disclaimer. ll'age14 Slip Copy (Cite c•: 2003 WL 21283014, •t 9 (CaJ.Superlor)) Pugo 13 With respect to Tab. 6,- Exhibit 39, the middle page appears to be the fu~! print ad to state in bold letters, ns a headline, "Clinically proven to increase fat loss by an unprecedented 17.00 percent" This advertisement contains both the 1700 percent greater fat-loss cloim and the claim tliat the subjects reduced their total body weight by a remarkable nine percent Both of these claims arc ·misleading for the reasons discussed in the discussion of the Penlc Wcllness sltldy. The 1700-percent andninc-percent claims arc also misleading in the context of the advertisement showing Mike Piaccnrino with a 46-pound loss, which is substantially greater than the weight loss .in d1c Peak Wellness study. Further, as previously discussed, Mr. Piacenrino's weight loss was not 46 pounds, nor did he drop 46 poW!ds of fat while "packing on o phenomenal 12 pounds.ofle.an muscle mass." Further, any bcforc-and-afler advertisement with Mr. Piacentino is misleading because it does not disclose d1c uso of qther s~pplements and, in particular, meal-substitute supplements. . TAB9 •19 Tab 9, Exhibit 41, ".You can see the difference" says Lisa Debonis lost 48 pounda in 12 weeks and although "Lisa's results arc not typical," the statement that Xenadriae RFA-1 is "clinically proven . to increase fat loss by an 'astounding seventeen rimes more than diet and exercise alone" (38.6 times in later ads) would indicotc that the c.lini~al proof should have been moro substantial than the four pound fat loss in eight weeks that was basis of the 38 .6 tirncs claim or the 6.9 pound actual weight loss. Therefore, the advertisement is misleading. TAB 10 Tab 10, Exhibit 52.5, featUres Maria Korsgaard.and claims she lost an extraordinary 25 pounds in just three weeks. Even though her results are "not typic a~" the claim that Xenadrine RFA-1 is '!cliilically shown to increase fat loss by an astounding 38.6. times more than diet and ex.ercise alone" is misleading in this contel<t since 25 pow1ds in three weel01 is so dramatically higher than the 6.9 pounds in eight weeks that was shown in ihe Peak Wellncss study. TAB 11 pounds in three weeks), Dave Muller (30 pounds in four weeks), :md Maria Korsga~rd (25 ponnda in three weeks) refers lo Xcnadrine RFA- 1 having been "clinically proven to increase fat loss by a phenomenal 17 times more than diet and eliercise nlonel" claim of is followed irmnodintely by, "Whether you neOd. ·to Jose 15 poUnds or 100." nins, anyono reading thiS nd would think that the 17-times loss bears some relation to weight losses of I 5 pounds to I00 pounds or to the weighi losSes of thee models. Therefore, Tab 11 is misleading. nus Tab3 9, 10; 11, 13, and 14 refer to weight/ass in the before-and-oiler pictures and thon make claims nbout fat loss. Tbio nppenis to be nn inter1tionnl attempt to exagger:>te the claims. Tho weight loss percentage differences in · the Peale Welliless test were substantially lower than the fat loss percentage differences between groups. T he defendant bas argued, and from these advertisements it appe:u. the defendant believes, the public confuses fat loss with weight loss. Yet the advertisements usc percentage fat loss claims . to make it npp,ear dllit wcighi loss also will be dramatically higher for those using Xenadrine RFA-1 compared to those using diet and cxetcise alone. This is one more ·example of how these advertisements are misleading. TAB12 The advertisement witl1 Mars!Iall Faulk, Tab· 12, Exhibit 21, contains Dclaim of 3860 percent greater total fat loss which is misleading. However, the small amount of space devoted to this cloim compored to the two pages of quotes, statistics nnd pictures of football stan makes this claim, in contlix~ immateriaL It is doubtful if n reasonable consumer would be persuaded by the fat loss claim when there is no mention of any of the nthletes losing specific amounts of weight or fat The thrust of the advertisement is that Xenadriae RFA-1 will improve perfonnancc and make you look better, not thnt you Will lose a specific lllllOUnt of weighi or fat. Therefore, the fat JOSS cJDim is not material and d1is nd is·not misleading. even more misleading. It is not saved by tim phrase, "These result!l not typical" because the typical results ore not shown. Tire oniy time the actual results were Ghown was in the television commerciills. There was ll statement on the screen tlut the average weight loss was 6.9 po~ds in 8 weeks. The Court is W!able to fmd such a disclaimer in any of the print ods: The defendant wns aware of tl1e nctual weight loss and !mew it should be letting people IO]OW the average wciglat loss, yet the defendont did not use the actual nverngo weight loss in any of the print ads where it would be more likely to be read than in the teleVision ads. TABI4 The last advertisement, Tab No. 14, Exlubit 20, "What a difference," suffers from lhe same distortion as the other advertisements with the 3 8.6 times claim in the same advertisement witl1 n claim of extraordinary weight losses, in this case, Remy Feniello's claim of losing 35 pounds in four weeks. TI1erefore this advertisement is also misleading. TELEVISION COMMERCIALS Each side has submitted transcriptions of the television advertisements that ran during the class ·period for Sp~ts or Clips 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 10, II nod 12. TI1e plaintiff bas illso irisertcd clip B. As the Court is nol certain when clip Bran, it is not included in this analysis. Spot or· Clip 2 and Spot or Clip 12 are in Spanish. As to Clips 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 10 and 11, each contains the claim of "Clinically proven to incretiSe fat loss 38 ti!ms more than diet and · eJ<ercise alone." fu discussed in U1e analysis of the Peale Welln~ss study and the priDt ads, this claim by itself is misleading. This claim is even more mlslending in tllese television ndvertisemcnts, each of whicl• contained n claim of substantial weight loss by tlte before-nnd-after models. TI1erefore, I find each of the English television commercials to be misleading. TAB 13 •zo Tab 13, Exlu'bit 67 contnlns tho phrase, "Clinically proven to increase fat loss by · a phenomeoal 38.6 times more than diet and exercise lilonc" Claim. (Emphasis in original) As previously 'discussed, the 38.6 ti!ms by itself is rills!Cllding ond in the context of before-ond-aller claims <>flosses of 54 pounds and 4S pounds, the 38.6 times claim is In virtually uruenaahle small print on the boltom of the picture in the television ndvertisements, there is n statement d>at nppeais for o very brief time that the avcrnge weight Joss wns 6.9 pounds in 8 weeks. Further, anyone watching the television screen is so distracted by the men :md women moving nround, there is very little likelihood thllt any reasonable consumer would read the disclaimer. The defendan(s TABU Tab II, Exhibit 51, featuring IC:lrcn Curtis (24 Copr. 0 West2003 No Claim to Orig. U.S. Govt. Works Copr. tC West 2003 No Claim to Orig. U.S~ Govt. Works 83 .82 !l'age 16 Slip Copy (Cite Ds: 2003 WL 21283814, • 22 (Cili.Superlor)) .Page IS Slip Copy (CUe ns: 200:i WL 21283814, *20 (Cai.Superlor)) commencement of the action and n Firs! Amended Complaint was never filed. not carried this burden. REMEDY statements that it wus attempting to have visible disclaimers in the television ads arc disingenuous. and U1c disclaimers do not cure the misleading nature of the ads. With respect to tho Spanish version (Clip 2), tho before-and-after claims arc the same, but there arc no disclaimers. Clip 2 contains a claim of 1700 percent ·greater loss of weight This Is misleading for the rcosons discussed in 'tlie analysis. of. the Peak Welln,ess study and particularly in the conte><t of the substantial weight lasses in tl1o before-and-after claims. Further, the 1700 percent, if it wns accurate, only applies to fat loss, not weight loss. "ll Clips 2 and 3 use Mike Piacentino and are also misleading · for the rensons discussed in the beforeand-after section. · The final television clip or spot, Number 12, merely contains before-and-after claims, which nre not be themselves mislending. Sincothere does nat appear to be a specific percentage claim in this cotiUilOfcial, jt is not misleading. · THE LABELS The frrst Xenadrine RF A· I label says "Xcnadrine RFA-l's advanced new thermogenic . foiJll\lla represents tho most sophisticate.d natural weight loss t~hnology available. Its powerful thermogenic combination has been proven effective in numerous scientific studies." El<hibit 2006. Various articlen arc cited to support this. Clearly the import is that Xcnadrine RFA-1 was tested. TI1c second label, El<hibit 2007, made a slight change by adding "EIC" so the second sentence read, ·"Its powerful E/C thermogenic combination ha!J been. proven effective in numerous scientific studies." The· listing of the generic studies has been del~ted, but that docs not cure the implication that Xcnadrino ·RFA· I had been tested. The same language is contained iU label nwnbcr 3, El<hibit 2004. · In nnalyzing the effect of the claims on the labels that it was Xenadrine RFA· I that had been tested rather than merely n component, the ~ey done by Dr. Belch is helpful. I fwd that the Belch survey b o. valid ourvcy and the Court is not persuaded the criticisms .o f Dr. Sirnnd. In response to a question ~~~ iabcls I, 2 and 3, the Belch ~urvcy showed that 5\S percent of the people responding felt tlmt Xeruidrinc RFA·l had been proven effective in scientific studies (Exhibit 1305). A. The Consumer Legal Remedies Act After the Peak Wellness study, the label was changed in the full of 1999, to read, ·~xcnadrine RFA-I's adyanced new thcrinogcnic formula represents the most sophisticated natural weight loss technology available, Its powerful fat loss/muscle sparing effcc!G have been documented. throuib published clinical research." El<hibit · 2005. Anyone comparmg the language in the first three labels and:thc language in EXhibits 2005, 2009 :ind 10.5, the last three labels from fall 1999 U1r0ugh the end of the class period, would not be nble to tell the difference. The language is virtually the sa= in the way it refers to what has been studied and tested and with reference back to · Xenadrine RFA-1. While the last three labels nrc correct insofar as X.enadrine RFA·l itself had been tested, the first three labels are not, and are misleading. As set forth in Civil Code section 1782, the Consumer Legal Remedies Act (CLRA) requires that "thirty days or more" prior to filing a CLRA nction "for damages" the consumer "shnll" notify the potential defendant "of the particular alleged violations of Section 1770" and demand that he or she· "correct, repair, replace or otherwise rectify" the goods or services nlleged to be in violation or Section 1770. The last three labels arc accurate in that Xenadrinc JtfA·I wus studied and fat loss and muscle sparing results wore documented·. No specific claims arc made as to the results. Therefore, only the frrst three labels are misleading. The phrase "cliniCll!ly proven" by itself is not misleading, nor io "thermogenic." WARNINGS The label hilS warnings for people with high blood pressure, and various. other conditions. Even though consumers may not !mow tl1ey h;ove the conditions, tl1e warnin& advises them to consult a doctor if they are at risk or have a family history of the listed conditions in the wurning. The Court fmds that the warning on tbe last label is not misleading and no injunctive relief will· be gcimted with respect to the label. CLAIMS REGARDING TilE CONTENT *22 Plaintiff has challenged the amount of the ingredients; their purity and specifically challenge the amount of salacin. Defendant produced Mr. Rich, the owner of Phoenix Laboratories who was a very persuasive witness, even though he did not bring documents. They also produced Mr. Schiff regarding t11e methods of verifying the amounts of the ingredicnlll. Plaintifl's experts c11mc up with different results hnsed on testing very small lll11ounts of the product. Since plaintiff has the burden of proof of proving the claims to be false, the Court fmds that plaintiff has Copr. <C West 2003 No Claim to Orig. U.S. Govt. Works The pmpose of this notice is to provide nnd facilitate settlements of conswner · nctions wherever possible and to establish the limited period during which such settlement may be accomplished. Outboard Marine Corp. v. Superior Court (1975) 52 CnlApp.3d 30, 41. pr~complaint A party cnn amend a complaint for injunctive retief to allege damages. Subsection (d) provides: "Not less than 30 days after the conuncncement of"') oction for injunctive relief, and ofter complinnce · with subdivision (a), the consumer may amend his or her compl;)int without leave of court to include n request for dlimages." Under this sectioO, the amendment must be filed ,;not less than 30 daY,. nfter commencen1crit oi'the action for injunctive relief." The notice requiremenl!l .under the CLRA are to be "literally npplied.~ Outboard Marine Corp. nt 41 . In Outboard, plnintiff argued "substantial compliance", in part, because of a· letter sent several moritllS after the complaint was filed. The court held ·that literal interpretation was the only means to comply with the purpose of facilitating pre-settlement negotiations. However, the court upheld the trial court's ·order overruling t11e · demurrer. The court found that defendant effectively waived the notice provisions in n responsive letter whereby defendant indicated they construed the letter ••;,. o prelirniriirry notice and demand under California Civil Code 1782(a)." The co uri held thai this statement constituted n waiver· of n lrnbWn righL Defendant did not waive the notice requirem~nt. The stipulation n«ached at El<hiblt 7 merely indicates that plaintiff is seeldng damages contained in Plaintiffs Statement of Damages dated October 29, 2001. TI1ere is no statement that plaintiff and defendant agree that any' damages are allowable under the CLRA cause of action or tbat ·lhe damages in the stipulotion nre sought under the CLRA. 0 23 A demurrer wru1 filed based, in part, on the failure to provide notice of tl1e CLRA. However, the fuct that Judge Hayes overruled the demurrer does not mean that the cause of action is proper. Judge Hayes made· no fmding that the riotice WIIS ·given or WllS not ~uircd. He only overruled the demurrer. The· failure to staten cause of actiorl is never waived. (Code Civ. Proc., fi 430.80(a)J. Based on tl1e above, plaintiff did not properly comply with the requirements in tl1e CLRA for damages. Thus, damages nee not awardable under the CLRA. Even if the requirements of the CLRA had been met, the only evidence regarding damages is the nmmmt the members Of the class paid for the producL There is no evidence of the value of what the class members received. In oider to award damages, tlw Court would have to compare the difference between what the ·ctass members paid for the product nnd the value of the product they received. ·(Civ.Code, § 3343). The Court bas no eVidence upon which to mai<e such a finding. Since there is no evidence that the product has no vnlue, the plaintiff would not be entitled to damnges under the CLRA. B. Monetary Remedy In fashioning n remedy' under tl1e unfaif competition law, section 17203 does riot mnndate restitutio nary or injunctive relief, rather it provides that the court "may rnal<e such orders · or judgments ... as may be necessary to prevent the use or employment ... of nny' practice which constitutes unfuir competition ... or os may be necesSary to restore to any perSon in interest In the case nt bar, the Complaint was filed on June 4, 2001. Poraglilph 62 includes nn allegation f~r damages. l!owever, the letter giving notiee was not sent until August 29,-2001. The letter giving notice did not comply with Civil Code section 1782, which ~uires the letter to· be sent 30 doys prior ·to the uny money or property ... which mny hove been acquired by means of such unfair competition ." Thus, the court has broad equitable power to create a remedy. CiJitez v. Pui-olalor Airfl/tratioll Products Co. (2000) 23 Ca1.4th 163, 179. Copr.ICI West 2003'No Clalm.to Orig. U.S. Govt: Works 85 84 Slip Copy (CUe as: 2003 WL 21283814, Slip Copy . Page 17 (Cite as: 2003 WL 11283814, •23 (Coi.Superior)) WiQt tltis in mind, t)lo Court will fust discuss monetary remedies. Plaintiff argues tltat the class should recover the entire purchase price of Xcnadrine RFA·I from Cytodyne. Defendant W"gues tltat, at most, the plaintiff should . only recover tile "net profi~ • · Tite "'\Sea onaly.:ing the ·Unfair Gompetition law (UCL) u,se the . term •restitution• · as well as "disgorgemept" to descri\lc the rcmi:dy available. A precise definition of terms is necessary. Restitution has been defined as "compelling the UCL defendant to return mone~ obtained ihrough an unfair .business practice to those persons in interest from whom the property was taken, that is, to .persons who had an ownership interest. in the property." Korea Supply Company v. Lo,ckheed Martin Corporation (2003) 29 Cal.4th 1134, 1144-1145; citing Kraus v. Trinity Management Services, Inc. (20QO) 23 Cal.4tli 116, 126-127. True restitution recaptures the direct gain obtained by defendant in order to prevent WJjust enrichment Disgorgemcnt is a remedy that is. .broader than restitution. Disgorgement may be a synonym for restitution, . but more ol\en titan not, disgorgement refers to a remedy for those who were not direct victims of an Wlfair practice. In tbjs nonrestitutiottary sense, disgorgcment requires the surrender of all profits earned as a result of an unlawful practice regardless of whether those profits represent money taken directly from persons who were victims of the Wlfair practice. Korea Supply at 1145. After Korea Supply, there is an issue as to whether disg~rgem~nt in this "nonrestitutionary" sense . is allowabic Wlder theUCL. •24 Whetltcr one is talking "true restitution" or "disgorgemcnt," the measure is . based npon defendanrs benefit and not plaintiffs losses. The language of Business and Professions Code section 17203 contemplates that. the money or ·interest was acquired by means of the. practice. Both restitution lllld disgorgemcnt involve a return of what dcfend;mt gained in the tr;msaction. A party seeldng restitution "must generally return any , benefit" tltat it has received. Rest2d, Contracts, § 376, com. a, § 384, com. o.) California Federal Bank v. Matreyek (1992) 8 Cal.App. 4th 125. Tite purpose .behind Busin!'SS nod Professions Code section 17200 is dctcmnce and not pWJishment The purpose is "to deter future violations of the unfair li'aue 18 •zs (Cai.Superlor)) trade practice statute and to foreclose retention by the violator of its ill-gotten gains." 'i<tetcher v. Security Pacific National Bank (1979) 23 Cnl.3d 442. The court in Korea Supply discussed the purposes of the statute in terms of deterrence: TI1e language of section 17203 is clear that tho equitable powers of a. court are to be used to "prcvcDI" . pJ:l!ptices that. constitute unfair competition . ~nd to "restore to any person in interest" any iJ,oney or prop<;r!Y acquired rhro)!gh unfair practices. (§ 17203.) W)Jile the "pr0vcnt" prong of section 17203 · suggests that the Legislature considered deterrence of unfair practices to be an important goal, the fact that attorney fees and ·dantagcs, including punitive dantages, are not nvajlablc Wider tho UCL is clear evidence that deterrence by means of monetary penalties is not the act's sole objective. A court cannot, under the equitable powers of section 17203, ·~ard whatever form of monetary relief it believes might deter unfair practices. The fact that the "restore" prong of section 17203 is tho only reference to monetary penalties in this section indicates that. the Legislature intended to limit the available monclliry remedies under the act. 1:here is no case cited by plaintiff where the ConsUmer was entiiled in restitution io more tlinn the beqeflt to defendant TI1e recent case ofKorca Supply emphasized that the conunon law understanding of restitution applies to Business and Professions Code section 17200. The issue in Korea Supply is different from this case because Korea Supply did not deal with the ~~~~:asuremcnt of restitution per sc. The court !lealt with the issue of. whether disgorgement was a proper remedy for an individual.action, not a class action. · · The court found that lhruting the remedy to .restitution was consistent with the policies behind the UCL to prevent practi.ces tl>at constituto Wlfair competition and to restore to. ony .person in iqtercst money . or property acquired. us a result of those . practices. The court found no case tltat approved of noruestitutionary disgorgemen! of profits llS a remedy Wider the UCL and clW"ificd lhe semantic confusion in these terms: "While prior cases discussing the UCL may .have characterized some of the rclicfavailnblc as 'disgorgemeni•, we wea: refcrnns to the restitution'ary form of dlsgorgcment and not tO tho nonrestitutionary type.• . •25 !hough limiting its holding to individual actions, Copr. C West 2003 No ClaiJ!t to Orig. U.S. Govt. Works the reasoning of the cnse suggests a broader holding tltat in any case under tho UCL, nonrestitutionary disgorgemcnt is unavailable. The Court implies tliat the only remedy available is restitution in the traditional sense. RestitutiOn fn lhe cornmon law sense implies restoring only tl1at which lhe defendant gained in the transaction. Other casco cited by plaintiff do not. challenge this proposition. At least two C4SCS relied. .upon are inapposite because they affirm civil penalties in favor of tbe state (People .. .v. Cappuccio (1988) 204 Cai.App.3d 750; People v. Morse (1993) 21 CaLApp.4th 259). In lbese cases, restitution was not even an issue. The case People ex reL Bill Lockyer v. Fremont Life Insurance Company (2003) 104 Cal.App.4th 508, 532 also dcolt with a civil penalty. However, the court also evaluated the restitution order under Business and Professions Code section 17203. In that C4SO, the court found lhat an annuity policy was misleading, based in part on its fmdings tltat the "premium chnrge" was "unusual" nnd "not conspicuously set forth" in the policy or in the sales brochures. In a restitution order, the court ordered defendant to make an offer of restitution to each nonsettling California consumer (or beneficiary Wider lhe tcnns of the policy), to restore the premiwn charge. Appellant argued that the order d.id not restore lhe status quo but altered lhc "lawful terms of lhe annuity contract" because the premium charge itself was lawful. The court ·rejected tiJ.is assertion, reasoning that while tl1e premium charge was lawful in itself, tl1e annuity policy was misleading as n whole because of the premium charge term. Thus, the court fow1d that the premium charge was unlawful under the UCL. The court foWJd tltat the restoration of the premium charge thus restored the status quo. This case is not · helpful to plaintiff because nothing indicates that defendant had to pay more than what it unlawfully gained (except the civil penalty). Finally, plaintiff relies on Rosales v. Clliban/c, Bank (N.D.Cal.200l) 133 F.Supp.2d 1177. In Rosales, lhe plaintiff claimed that he lost money from his bank account due to an WJautltorized withdrawn! by someone else. Citibank argned tltat they did not have to restore anything to plaintiff because Citibank did not take onything from plaintiff. However, Citibank did not reimburse plaintiff as required by law. The court foWJd that Citibank thus withheld money belonging to plaintiff and this could be "restored" to plaintiff. In conclwion, either under n theory of restitution or the plaintiff class i~ entitled to "all IJUlney"obtained" by means of the. unlawful practice. The money "obtained" here is received by the defendant from the retailers lesil the amoWlt paid by defendant to the n:llinufacturcr. Anything more would constitute an award of darrulges (i.e., malcing tl1c plaintiff"wbole.") "disgorgcm."D~" •26 The testilnony.9f.both dam:lge experts is tltat the defend<!nt received ·• $16,538,328 from retailers or direct sOles. Dr. Kennedy computed the cost of goods ot $4,001 ,508, leaving n net to defendant' of $12,536,820. (Exlu'bit 2279.) There was .testimony ..that the salen to GNC were understated by is,ooo,'Wi;ts which would increase the doilars received by approximately $400,000. TI1ere was also testimony that defendant paid rebates of approximately one dollar per bottl~ to salespeople at GNC and there were other expenses. None of tltis is documented and the Court is not allowing any of these items. Sec Evidence Code section 412. Tite largest deduction claimed by defendant is tlte three to five million dollar> of advertising that defendant estimates it spent in California. lt would be inequitable to aliow the defendant to reduce tl1e amount of restitution by the amount spent on the misleading advertisements. Therefore, the Court is exercising its broad equitable power and is not going to allow the rest itutionary amoWJt to be reduced by lhe advertising expenses. Finally, since the Court has found virtually all of the advertisements to be misleading, in addition to the first three labels, !here should be no reduction for proportionality," assuming there was authority to support a proportionate reduction. The purchasers of Xcnadrine RF A-1 were misled throughout the class period and tltere is no .justification to reduce the amount of restitution from the total amoWlt received by defendant of$12,536,820. 11 Federal Savings Therefore, defendant is ordered to pay TWELVE MTLUON FIVE HUNDRED THIRTY-SIX TI10USAND EIGHT HUNDRED TWENTY and 00/ 100 DOLLARS ($12,536,820.00) into n fund to be distributed as ordered by this Court. C. Injunctive Relief Defendant argues that since it is no longer selling Copr. <0 W~t 2003No.Clairn to Orig. U.S, O~vt. Works 87 86 Puge 19 Slip Copy (Cite ns: 2003 WL 21283814, •26 (Cai.Superior)) Xenodrine RFA-1 in California, !hero cannot be any injunctive relief. This argument is not supported by the atatute, Busi.Qe:~s und l,'rofcs.sions Code section 17203, which say:;: "llllJI person who engages, has ongaged, or proposes to engage in unfair competition" may 1xl enjoined. (Emphasis Added.) See Stop Youth Addiction, Inc. v. Lucky Stores, Inc. (1998) 17 Cal.4th 553, 570. Therefore, Cytodyne, its officers, principals, agents, servants, employees, succcssoro, ~lgns, nnd all !hose in active concert or pnrticipalioll. with ~em are enjoined and restreined . from disseminating or causing to be disseminated, lbrough IIDJI advcrtiscmeo~ label, commercial . or other promotional activity, any advertising claim which includes representations identical or similar to those claims foWld to be false oi misleading, either directly or by necessary implication, whether material or not. ATIORNEY'S FEES Plaintiffs coWJsel may apply for attomey's.fecs. PRODCEDURE If a Statement of Decision is requested, the Court will prepare such Statement. This Tentative Decision shall become the StatetrnOnt of Decision unless within 10 day:; eithci" party specifies contJ:overted issues or makes proposals not covered by tllis Tentative ·oc:cision. The Court also requests each side to submit proposals on how lhe restitution fund . is to be disll:ibuted. 2003 WL 21283814 (Cal.Superior) END OF DOCUMENT Copr. @ West 2003 No Claim to Orig. U.S. Govt. Works Mr. WALDEN. Thank you. Mr. FRANCE. So, if you :want to follow up, m. terms of assessing what Mr. Chinery says, in view of the fact tliat I was at the trial and I prosecuted that case, and also observed Mr. Chinery, Mr. Conklin, Dr. Colker whO·· performed these alleged studies on Xenadrine RFA-1, at least one of them, the Peak Wellness, I question highly what Mr. Chinery had to say. Mr. WALDEN. All right. . Dr. Woosley, is Xenadrine considered a stimulate? Mr. WOOSLEY. Yes. Mr. WALDEN. And what is it and what is its purpose as a dietary supplement for weight loss? Mr. WoosLEY. Well, it contains ephedra and ephedrine; which is the major stimulant. · Mr. WALDEN. Okay. Arid as we understand it, there may be other ingredients contained in these ephedra caffeine dietary supplements .including the one I just referenced, so that is why I am asking your opinion on this. It is Tyrosine? Mr. WOOSLEY. Tyrosine. Mr. WALDEN. Considered a stimulant? Mr. WoosLEY. No. It's ail amino acid which in high doses might have pharmacologic effect, but not in the doses likely to be used in these products. Mr. WALDEN. Is L-carnatine considered a stimulate? Mr. WoosLEY. Carnatine, no. Mr. WALDEN. Okay. What is its purpose? Mr. WoosLEY. It is argued. People would not agree about its purpose. It is taken by many people to stimulate muscle growth, but there is no scientific evidence that I am aware of, except in carnatine deficiency. There are inherited disorders where people do not have enough carnatine, but it is very rare. · Mr. WALDEN. What properties does salicine have, that is white oak bark or something? · Mr. WOOSLEY. It is-probably, and I wotild have to say that whether the product that is put in there is exactly what the pharmacopeia would say is often not the same. But Salicine is thought to thought to be a salicylic acid base. It is like aspirin. Mr. WALDEN. Can it cause bleeding? Mr. WOOSLEY. Yes in high doses. In the doses that are there, we do not know. Most of these products have never been studied scientifically. Mr. WALDEN. Because some of these say you should not take aspirin with them. . Mr. WoosLEY. That is theoretically correct. But, again Mr. WALDEN. Is salicine similar to aspirin in that respect, the way it may interact? Mr. WooSLEY. It is chemically similar to aspirin, but frankly we have no idea what those drugs could do in those products because they have never been tested. Mr. WALDEN. No idea? Mr. WoosLEY. No idea. Mr. WALDEN. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Mr. GREENWOOD. The Chair thanks the gentleman.