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To settle the allegation, Kellogg said it would expand upon a settlement it reached last year when the Federal Trade Commission blasted the company for claiming that Frosted Mini-Wheats helped ...
Kellogg Co. v. National Biscuit Co., 305 U.S. 111 (1938), is a United States Supreme Court case in which the Court ruled that the Kellogg Company was not violating any trademark or unfair competition laws when it manufactured its own Shredded Wheat breakfast cereal, which had originally been invented by the National Biscuit Company (later called Nabisco).
The various lawsuits were rolled into one class-action lawsuit, and in 2011, Kellogg settled for $5 million — $2.5 million would be paid to consumers, and $2.5 million worth of Kellogg’s ...
—Karp pointed out that Kellogg cereal brands such as Froot Loops and Baby Shark still contain artificial dyes like Red 40, Yellow 6, and Blue 1 despite the company pledging to phase out those ...
The Federal Trade Commission found fault with Kellogg's claims that Frosted Mini-Wheats cereal improved kids' attentiveness by nearly 20%. The consumer protection agency said that Kellogg's had misrepresented a study and violated federal law. [1] [2] In 2009, Kelloggs introduced a "Little Bites" spinoff of the Mini-Wheats brand.
Breakfast cereal brands of the Kellogg Company Pages in category "Kellogg's cereals" The following 36 pages are in this category, out of 36 total. This ...
Dozens of people have rallied outside the Michigan headquarters of WK Kellogg Co. to demand that the company remove artificial dyes from their cereals in the U.S. The maker of Froot Loops and ...
The total settlement remained the largest against a pharmaceutical company in a non-intervened False Claims Act case until a July 2017 settlement against Celgene Corporation exceeded it, as the civil settlement in that case was $280 million while the civil component of the Parke-Davis case settled for $190 million.