WASHINGTON - Companies marketing the Ab Circle Pro exercise device have agreed to pay as much as $US25 million ($F44 million) in refunds to customers to settle US regulators' charges of deceptive advertising.
The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) says it was deceptive to promise that people could lose 10 pounds in two weeks by using the abdominal exercise device for only three minutes a day.
The FTC had filed a civil lawsuit against the companies.
In the settlements announced on Thursday, Fitness Brands Inc, Fitness Brands International Inc, Direct Holdings Americas Inc and Direct Entertainment Media Group Inc agreed to pay a total of at least $US15 million ($F26m) and up to $US25 million, depending on the amount of refunds requested.
Consumers should carefully evaluate advertising claims for weight-loss products, the FTC said.
Reader's Digest Association Inc also agreed to contribute to the refunds. The association was named as a relief defendant in the FTC's suit filed on Wednesday in federal court in Miami. That means it wasn't accused of wrongdoing but the FTC sought to recover money that the agency said the association received from its subsidiaries Direct Holdings Americas and Direct Entertainment Media Group as proceeds from the deceptive advertising.
Fitness Brands, Fitness Brands International and Michael Casey and David Brodess, who the FTC says control the companies, agreed to pay a total $US1.2m ($F2m).
Direct Holdings Americas, Direct Entertainment Media Group and Reader's Digest Association together are paying $US13.8m ($F24m) and up to an additional $US10m ($F17m), depending on the volume of customer' refund requests.
The TV infomercials ran more than 10,000 times between March 2009 and May 2010, according to the FTC.
Pitchwoman Jennifer Nicole Lee said in the commercials that the Ab Circle Pro enabled her to lose 36 kilograms.
A sample of claims in the ads: "You'll firm and flatten your stomach in just weeks, not months. We guarantee it."
"In fact, three minutes on the Ab Circle Pro is equal to 100 sit-ups."
In addition, the device was sold on the internet, in stores and in print ads.