More information about text formats. Text format Comments Plain text. Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically. Lines and paragraphs break automatically. Leave this field blank. Paid Content. Network Insights. Filed Under: f , copyright , takedown Companies: pissed consumer , roca labs. Filed Under: cda , gag clause , gastric bypass alternative , immunity , reviews , weight loss Companies: consumer opinion corp.
Filed Under: ftc , gag clause , non-disparagement clauses Companies: roca labs. Filed Under: don juravin , false advertising , ftc , gag clause , temporary restraining order , tro Companies: roca labs.
Filed Under: dan juravin , deceptive advertising , ftc , gastric bypass , george whiting , scams , threats Companies: roca labs.
The United State's leading purveyor of packed-in-garages stomach cement weight loss product can't be expected to let the merits of its offerings speak for themselves. I mean, it theoretically could allow this to happen, but it has already taken steps to ensure any positive reviews of its "gastric bypass alternatives" can only be viewed with skepticism. Roca Labs will give purchasers a cut rate if they agree to proselytize on the company's behalf. Those who pay the higher price initially are somewhat better off, although Roca Labs still seems intent on shutting down any negative portrayal of its products.
Given this background, it comes as no surprise that its courtroom tactics are just as surly and underhanded. A new motion for "case-terminating sanctions" has been filed in one of Roca's many, many lawsuits. For the third time, Plaintiff and its attorney have engaged in unlawful witness intimidation.
The prior times, this Court just told them not to do it again. They did not respect that warning. Defendants request a harsher rebuke from this Court, lest this continue. This lawsuit, brought in Florida's middle district, features Roca suing PissedConsumer for negative reviews.
Roca is suing everyone involved , from the reviewers themselves to the company owning the company owning the PissedConsumer brand. In its voluminous discovery demands , Roca is seeking pretty much every detail about every involved entity, including innocuous business dealings and, weirdly, the account holder info behind some negative tweets.
That's where this gets uglier. Marc Randazza's filing notes that this isn't even the first time in this particular case that Roca's attempted to intimidate witnesses into withdrawing. This action began with a request from Roca for this Court to impose an unconstitutional prior restraint on Defendants, in the form of their Motion for Entry of a Temporary Injunction. Very shortly after Defendants filed their Opposition, Plaintiff contacted these witnesses with threats of litigation for breach of an unenforceable contract.
This timing was anything but coincidental, and so Defendants then brought a motion for a temporary restraining order against Plaintiff to cease this witness intimidation. Roca sued the witness, as well as Randazza himself. Now, it's attempting to do the same thing to another potential witness, only going further by claiming baselessly that the witness could be subject to criminal charges. Fast forward to May Parisi as an expert witness, and the two worked together to determine a fair expert billing rate for all parties to this action.
See Declaration of Marc J. On May 22, , Mr. Berger contacted Dr. Parisi by phone. During this conversation, Mr. Berger asked Dr. Parisi about his expert witness billing rates, and Dr.
Parisi informed him of them. Parisi Decl. After being told of Dr. Berger went so far as to threaten Dr. Parisi with criminal prosecution. Parisi felt intimidated and frightened by Mr. In defense of its actions, Roca Lab's lawyer, Paul Berger, claims Randazza somehow "fixed" the prices to make it, I don't know, prohibitively expensive?
Randazza has to pay the same amount for Parisi's testimony. Berger's email is included in the exhibits, and it's filled with allegations that Parisi could do the work cheaper, and that Randazza drove the price up. From Florida's laws on expert witness fees : Any expert or skilled witness who shall have testified in any cause shall be allowed a witness fee including the cost of any exhibits used by such witness in an amount agreed to by the parties, and the same shall be taxed as costs.
In instances where services are provided for the state, including for state-paid private court-appointed counsel, payment from state funds shall be in accordance with standards adopted by the Legislature. Here's Parisi's statement : As with the majority of expert witnesses, I charge a different billable rate for research and preparation of written reports than I do for in-person testimony.
Part of the reason I charge a higher rate for in-person testimony is that when I am doing research and drafting reports, I can do that in the comfort of my home, during down-time, when I would otherwise not be working or spending time with my family. In addition, it requires me to shut down my clinic for a large portion of a given day, as I am the only doctor working at my clinic. Further, I find in person testimony to be unpleasant and undesirable, and while I am willing to do it for the right pay, I can think of no other activity that would be as unpleasant as being deposed.
Parisi's statement also points out that it's not out of the realm of the imagination that Roca Labs would follow through with its threat to bring criminal charges against him or, at least, attempt to, despite having no basis for doing so considering it has already sued an opposing counsel for statements made in court. Furthermore, Parisi offers his sworn statement that Berger's assertions in his email to Marc Randazza are wholly untrue: It is my sworn testimony that Mr.
Berger is lying in this email to Mr. Randazza, and that his statements regarding the contents of our phone conversation are not true. Now, whether Roca's threats were prompted by a desire to keep Parisi from testifying or simply because its sludge slush fund for testimony reimbursement is running a little low because of its many litigations remains to be seen.
But what it looks like is the standard Roca legal strategy: threaten, sue, threaten, sue, ad nauseum -- which apparently even extends to witnesses otherwise uninvolved i. The allegations on either side are ugly. Roca is accused of baselessly threatening a witness with criminal charges. Randazza is accused of inflating the witness' testimony price which would be odd, considering that's the price he also has to pay.
The question before the court is: did Roca's lawyer's action rise to the level of sanctionable intimidation? A prior verbal warning by the court doesn't seem to have had any effect on Berger and Roca. If this sort of behavior continues, Roca may soon find itself being referred to as the "Prenda" of questionable weight loss products.
Filed Under: intimidation , marc randazza , paul berger , thomas parisi , witnesses Companies: roca labs. Roca Labs says it can help you lose weight by pumping your stomach full of its proprietary Fix-a-Flat-but-for-humans concoction. When Schaive posted her complaint on the Better Business Bureau's website, Roca Labs sued her for breaking a so-called gag clause she didn't realized she had signed when purchasing the product.
If you breach this agreement When Schaive refused to remove her comments, she said Roca Labs tried to intimidate her into compliance. Last week, the FTC filed a lawsuit against the company alleging unfair practices, saying not only is the gag clause illegal, but it was buried in the fine print.
The product's effectiveness was also challenged after a doctor retained by the FTC said the main ingredients listed were dietary fibers, saying: "There is not sufficient reliable scientific evidence for the weight loss claims. In her ruling on Sept. Roca and defendants violated the FTC Act by making deceptive weight-loss claims about their supplements, known as the "Gastric Bypass Alternative," the court said.
Defendants' threats to sue consumers for violating non-disparagement clauses and writing negative reviews were also in violation of the FTC Act.
0コメント