
Class Action Alleges Frontier Airlines Charges Hefty Hidden Baggage Fees at the Gate
A proposed class action filed early last week claims Frontier Airlines traps customers into paying hidden, last-minute baggage fees before boarding their flights.
A proposed class action filed early last week claims Frontier Airlines traps customers into paying hidden, last-minute baggage fees before boarding their flights.
A proposed class action claims the makers of ChatGPT have unlawfully collected, stored and shared without consent the personal data of hundreds of millions of internet users.
In a lawsuit filed last week against Amazon, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) claims the online retail giant has knowingly tricked millions of consumers into signing up for Amazon Prime and intentionally complicated the cancellation process.
A proposed class action alleges Harvard University was negligent in failing to prevent a former morgue manager from mishandling and selling the body parts of cadavers donated to the Ivy League heavyweight’s medical school.
Walmart faces a proposed class action over its alleged failure to address widespread fraud that has for years plagued its money-transfer services at locations nationwide.
A&W Concentrate Company and Keurig Dr. Pepper Inc. have agreed to pay $15 million to settle a class action that alleged the companies deceptively advertised A&W root beer and cream sodas as “Made With Aged Vanilla.”
If you bought anything from Fashion Nova before November 21, 2019, you may be entitled to a refund via the Federal Trade Commission (FTC).
A proposed class action alleges certain Fitbit fitness trackers are falsely advertised in that they are unable to accurately measure the blood oxygen (SpO2) levels of users with darker skin.
Eli Lilly & Co. has agreed to pay $13.5 million and cap the price of insulin for four years to settle long-running class action litigation that alleged the pharma company illegally colluded to drive up the price of the life-saving diabetes medication.
A proposed class action alleges the maker of the Freejump Airbag vest has failed to warn consumers that the “unreasonably dangerous” equestrian product is defective and will “frequently” fail to inflate upon a fall from a horse.