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Feds Halt Bogus Healthcare 'Opportunity'Sales of herbal 'cure all' also banished |
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January 1, 2008
In addition, the FTC has halted their sale of an herbal tea product, marketed with claims that it could prevent, treat, or cure a number of diseases, including AIDS, diabetes, cancer, arthritis, strokes, and heart disease. The defendants will turn over all of their frozen assets to settle the FTC’s charges. According to the FTC, the family and their companies operated a traveling road show, where the father, Jeffrey Wayne (J.W.) McLain held “healthcare conferences” at large hotels and convention centers. At those conferences, McLain conned consumers into purchasing bogus healthcare business ventures for $2,495. The defendants offered to share their supposedly lucrative business model, promising consumers start-up assistance and claiming that they could earn $1 million a year. Upon further investigation, the FTC discovered that the father, one son, Alexander McLain, and the companies were engaged in a second healthcare fraud, selling an herbal tea that purportedly prevented, treated, or cured a number of serious diseases. The FTC said claims about the healing powers of the tea, marketed under the names “Prophet 3H,” “Ezekiel Cleansing Tea,” and “Ezekiel Healing Tea,” were false and unsubstantiated. Under the orders settling the charges, all of the defendants are prohibited from making false claims about any business venture or violating the Franchise Rule or the Business Opportunity Rule. In addition to J.W. McLain and Alexander McLain, the other defendants include the other son, Victor McLain, and the companies: Prophet 3H, Inc.; Prophet 3H, LLC; Georgia Home Health Care License and Certification Institute, Inc.; Healthcare State License and Certification Institute, Inc.; and M7 Holdings, LLC. With the exception of Victor McLain, the orders also prohibit the other defendants from making any false or unsubstantiated representations about the health benefits or efficacy of any food, drug, or dietary supplement. The order against the father and the companies enters a judgment of $26,645,479. The order against Alexander enters a $4,974,449 judgment, and the order against Victor enters a $125,900 judgment. All of the judgments are suspended based on sworn financial disclosures from the defendants. Report Your Experience
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