On March 2, 2011, the Federal Trade Commission announced “Operation Empty Promises,” a multi-agency law enforcement initiative aimed at cracking down on misleading “work from home” and other business opportunity offers. The campaign includes more than 90 actions brought by various state and federal agencies in the past year, including the Department of Justice, the U.S. Postal Inspection Service, and state law enforcement agencies. It includes three new FTC cases and developments in seven other FTC cases.
In a press conference that was webcast by the FTC, David Vladeck, director of the FTC’s Bureau of Consumer Protection, gave details about the new cases, including one against Ivy Capital Inc. and 29 co-defendants. The defendants in that case allegedly took more than $40 million from people who paid thousands of dollars, believing the company would help them develop their own Internet businesses and earn up to $10,000 per month. Consumers paid up to $20,000 for a business coaching program, but the FTC alleges that the products and services that the consumers received were useless. On February 22 the agency obtained an order that temporarily halted Ivy Capital’s unlawful practices, froze assets and appointed a receiver to take control of the corporate defendants.
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