Robert FitzPatrick |
Herbalife Class Action "Settlement"
Reveals how the Court Could be Used to Protect Scams
In
the last two years, the most publicized information that exposes the deception
and harm of "multi-level marketing" (MLM) has not come from victim reports,
federal court rulings, media investigations, lawsuits, or petitions from
consumer protection groups, though there have been more than enough of these to
prove massive fraud. Instead, international attention has been drawn to the
extraordinary website of hedge fund, Pershing Capital, Facts About Herbalife.
Pershing invested one-billion dollars in a "short"
position on Herbalife stock that becomes profitable only if the Herbalife stock
drops in value. The investment largely relies on the same basic facts about
Herbalife deception and harm, with much added detail, that consumers have been
citing for years as they ask for law enforcement against "endless chain" scams,
i.e., "multi-level marketing." Herbalife's "facts" mirror those of hundreds of
others, all of them falsely promising "unlimited income."
The great irony is
that, lacking protection from law enforcement and with no relevant consumer
group with adequate resources to confront Herbalife or other large MLMs, the
interests of consumers are now being
championed by a Wall Street hedge fund! The
limits and flaws in relying upon investment companies - in the absence of proper law enforcement and regulation
- are obvious. Yet, such is the strange
state of affairs in consumer protection concerning these Main Street
frauds.
The
Class Action Lawsuit as Substitute for Law Enforcement
There
is, however, one other non-government recourse that consumers have turned to, in
lieu of effective law enforcement and consumer protection. This is the class
action lawsuit. Such suits have been successfully brought by consumers
against Herbalife, Nu Skin, and Amway, and other large MLM scams. All of these
class action suits against MLMs make similar charges of pyramid fraud, mail
fraud, and RICO (racketeering), among others. But, in the end, the class action
suit approach is not much more practical than expecting Wall Street to defend
and protect consumers. Most class action suits are settled with little real
change resulting. Often, the attorneys win big while consumers are left largely
where they were before, though the lawsuits themselves do serve as excellent
factual records amidst a sea of falsehoods.
The
weakness and potential misuse of the class action approach is on
|
When Class Action Goes
Awry
|
gross display in the recently proposed settlement
between one law firm and Herbalife. The proposed settlement shows how the
consumer class action law suit can be manipulated to protect the scam and harm
the victims. The Herbalife suit, Dana Bostick, et al.,
Plaintiffs, vs. Herbalife International of America , Inc., et al.,
Defendants, Case No.
2:13-CV-02488-BRO-RZ, duly listed the
terrible and well established charges against Herbalife, involving business
opportunity deception, endless chain scam, overcharging, etc. The suit states
plainly, "Herbalife Ltd. is the architect, implementer, and operator of a
global enterprise that is and has been an illegal and fraudulent pyramid scheme,
the "Herbalife
Pyramid."
The suit appeared to be based entirely on the facts and charges detailed by Pershing Capital against Herbalife. Indeed the suit was filed, without Pershing's knowledge, right after the public presentation of Pershing's fraud thesis against Herbalife backed by a 300-slide presentation of the facts.
But, after repeating these powerful charges, the attorneys who brought the suit soon huddled with Herbalife and agreed to accept a tiny settlement amount for victims to be paid by Herbalife and to walk away from the main accusations of deception and pyramid fraud. They agreed to pretend Herbalife made substantive changes and that an absurdly small dollar restitution figure - out of which the lawyers themselves would receive millions in pay from Herbalife - represented justice for the victims.
But
the settlement goes much further than just a meaningless, insignificant
financial settlement cost for Herbalife. It also would impose onerous
restrictions on all the members of the class, the victims,
preventing them from getting actual restitution and restricting their further
rights for justice. It puts a seal of approval on Herbalife's current
operations, after the suit had accused Herbalife of heinous wrongdoing, with
Herbalife making no real change at all and free to continue the scam. This
settlement appears to be custom-designed to help not the victims but Herbalife,
which is under federal investigation for fraud by the FTC, SEC and
FBI.
As
the apparent result of this absurd agreement, few victims have bothered even to
file claims under the suit - 0.5% of the total number of potential victims. Yet,
potentially all members of the
class, estimated at 1.5 million households, will be bound and restricted by the
terms, if it is approved by the court.
Phony
"Settlement" Challenged
But a challenge from some victims has now been raised to this absurd,
unfair and highly suspect "settlement" quietly reached between the law firm and
Herbalife that benefits Herbalife and the lawyers, while leaving the victims
worse off than before. The challenge is represented from the one attorney with
the strongest record and the most experience in the country of challenging
multi-level marketing scams in court and who has spoken out publicly about all disguised pyramid
schemes known as "multi-level marketing." Douglas Brooks, a Boston-area based
attorney has filed a fully documented challenge to the Herbalife settlement. His
challenge is made on behalf of a group of victims of Herbalife, who would be
included in the "class" and subject to all the restrictions and injustice
imposed upon them by this "settlement."
The objection filed by attorney Brooks on
behalf of Herbalife victims is bolstered by a friend of the court brief
filed by the non-profit, Truth in Advertising (TINA), which asserted
that the settlement will result in a windfall of $5.25 million to class
action lawyer's and likely leaves most class members with less than $20 each in
recovery. Douglas Brooks estimates that a more realistic restitution would be
well over a billion dollars, conservatively.
The facts and arguments presented in Brooks' filing should be required
reading for all regulators, attorney, journalists and consumers who
are interested in the epidemic of MLM frauds. A hearing will be
held in May where the bogus "settlement" and attorney Brooks' challenge to it
will be heard.
View the Official Objection to the
Settlement from Douglas Brooks' and his
Declaration.
Robert
L. FitzPatrick, Pres.
PYRAMID
SCHEME ALERT
704-334-2047
rfitzpatrick@pyramidschemealert.org
Disgusting. And yet... not surprising. In the world today, money dictates everything, not justice. As evil as Herbalife is, they have lots of bucks to grease the right people to keep their scam going.
ReplyDeleteI've never wanted to be part of any class action suit because this pretty much is ALWAYS the result. The lawyers hit the jackpot and the victims they are supposedly "representing" end up with nothing. It's like a big game. A money-making avenue for lawyers who, with toothy smiles, invite victims to sign up to get "justice", pretending to give a rat's ass about any of them, but in truth they are just props to use to get rich with. Same as how Herbalife treated them. Ironic, isn't it?
Anonymous - If the USA was a real democracy with government of the people by the people for the people, rather than a de facto kleptocracy with government of racketeers by racketeers for racketeers, then paying off the victims of fraud with the proceeds of fraud in order to continue to commit fraud would immediately be seen for what it is - one more part of an overall pattern of ongoing major racketeering activity as defined by the US federal Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act 1970.
DeletePersonally, under such a corrupt/stupid system, I wouldn't put anything beyond the wealthy Narcissistic bosses of any cultic racket - even secretly organizing their own smokescreen lawsuits against themselves.
Anonymous and David, I think you have summed up the situation perfectly. These aren't the first victims to fall out of the 'MLM' frying pan into the class-action fire and they won't be the last .
DeleteHopefully, with Mr. Ackman and Pershing Square also having deep pockets, they can neutralize the Herbalife giant and send a shot that would be heard around the MLM world. Frankly, I think the FTC blew it when they allowed Amway to escape back in 1979. Now's the time to reform MLM and shutting down Herballife would be a good start.
ReplyDeleteJoecool - In reality, so-called 'MLM' companies have been the legally-registered fronts for an ongoing criminogenic phenomenon of historic significance. This means that, since these corporate structures have secretly produced, and have been the product of, crime, and ultimately have had no lawful function, by their very nature, they cannot be reformed. That said, they can be closed-down, their unlawfully-acquired assets seized and their bosses held to account under the US federal RICO Act ,1970.
DeleteI very recently was in conversation with an independent person who has vast first-hand experience of the US federal government and of the legal/regulatory system. He has not been following the 'Herbalife' Ackman saga particularly closely, but he made the following common-sense observation:
' Herbalife must be as Ackman describes it, because if its CEO and board really have nothing to fear as they claim, then they would have immediately instructed their attorneys to sue the pants off Ackman and Pershing. Such a suit would allow Ackman's attorneys access to Herbalife's internal documentation via discovery. The fact that no one at 'Herbalife' has dared file suit against Ackman is conclusive proof that the company is a fraud.
Herbalife obviously is still following the Amway play book. Lawyers love to take their high percentage and leave the Herbalife losers in nearly the same bad fix.
ReplyDelete