Happy Juice Lawsuit

The FTC sued a supplement MLM over kids health claims, because apparently Happy Juice needed a legal chaperone

The FTC says Amare Global and three principals misrepresented that supplements for children and adults could treat or cure depression, anxiety and ADHD.

What Happened

The Federal Trade Commission sued Amare Global Holdings Inc., a multilevel marketer, and three principals over claims tied to dietary supplements sold for children and adults.

The FTC says Amare marketed products including Kids Happy Juice, Kids Mood+ and the Happy Juice Product Pack with false, misleading or unsubstantiated claims that they could treat or cure conditions such as depression, anxiety and ADHD.

The agency also alleges Amare made deceptive earnings claims to "brand partner" recruits, including claims that people could earn specific monthly amounts or replace income even without MLM experience or a large social-media following.

Why This Matters

Health claims aimed at parents are not normal ad fluff. The FTC said the company knew some brand partners were taking advantage of parents looking for help for children with serious conditions, including depression and anxiety.

The complaint says Amare and its sellers used social media platforms including Instagram, TikTok, YouTube and Facebook to amplify claims that products were scientifically backed or clinically proven, including claims about depression, cortisol, serotonin, dopamine and GABA.

The Dumb Part With The Juice Pitch

The dumb part is the packaging. When a supplement pitch starts sounding like a pediatric mental-health treatment plan and a side-hustle income ladder at the same time, somebody has put too many miracles in one blender.

Parents deserve real evidence, not a feed full of brand partners turning serious conditions into a product demo with a referral code.

The Bottom Line

The FTC complaint was filed in federal court in California after a 2-0 Commission vote. The real stupid shit is selling vibes, earnings dreams and disease claims under a name cheerful enough to make the warning label feel embarrassed.

Sources

FTC: FTC sues to stop Amare Global from misrepresenting supplement health benefits

FTC case page: Amare Global Holdings, FTC v.


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