The legal library gives you easy access to the FTC’s case information and other official legal, policy, and guidance documents.
Carvana Complaints
20261278: Repay Holdings Corporation; The Hearst Family Trust
20261305: Zurich Insurance Group Ltd; Beazley plc
20261329: Sun Life Financial Inc.; Bell Partners Inc.
20261338: ESCO Technologies Inc.; TB Continuity II Trust
20261339: TB Continuity II Trust; ESCO Technologies Inc.
20261343: Nexans S.A.; Ronald H. Rosenbeck
20261344: Quantum Energy Partners VIII, LP; Energy Spectrum Partners VIII LP
20261349: ECP VI-D, LP; TriArtisan ES Partners II LP
20261350: Elon Musk; CF APR Super Holdings LLC
Shutterstock, Inc.
Shutterstock Inc. will pay $35 million to settle Federal Trade Commission allegations that the online digital photo and video platform illegally made tens of millions of dollars from a range of unfair and deceptive practices, including charging consumers for products without their informed consent and making it difficult to cancel subscriptions.
Concurring Statement of Commissioner Mark R. Meador In the Matter of Premium Home Service
B.E.S.T. GDR, LLC, et al., United States and State of Illinois v.
The U.S. Department of Justice, on behalf of FTC, and the state of Illinois sued Chicago-based company Premium Home Service (PHS) and its owner for fraudulently creating thousands of fake online business listings for home repair companies to deceive consumers into thinking they were choosing reputable local companies for home repairs.
20261064: The Brink's Company; NCR Atleos Corporation
Asbury Automotive Group, Inc., et al., In the Matter of
The Federal Trade Commission is acting against a large automotive dealer group, Asbury Automotive, for systematically charging consumers for costly add-on items they did not agree to or were falsely told were required as part of their purchase. The FTC also alleges that Asbury discriminates against Black and Latino consumers, targeting them with unwanted and higher-priced add-ons.
In an administrative complaint, the FTC alleges that three Texas dealerships owned by Asbury that operate as David McDavid Ford Ft. Worth, David McDavid Honda Frisco, and David McDavid Honda Irving, along with Ali Benli, who acted as general manager of those dealerships, engaged in a variety of practices to sneak hidden fees for unwanted add-ons past consumers. These tactics included a practice called “payment packing,” where the dealerships convinced consumers to agree to monthly payments that were larger than needed to pay for the agreed-upon price of the car, and then “packed” add-on items to the sales contract to make up that difference.