Kroger Cereal Bars Lawsuit: Fake Or Legit? Read This

Did you hear about the Kroger Cereal Bars Lawsuit? It’s not a scam.

Chelsea Garland and Leroy Jacobs are suing The Kroger Co. because they claim the company falsely advertises its blueberry cereal bars as containing real fruit when, in fact, the flavoring comes from artificial ingredients, which they allege is not properly disclosed.

Who Is Behind The Kroger Cereal Bars Lawsuit

Chelsea Garland and Leroy Jacobs are taking on The Kroger Co. because they’re claiming those blueberry cereal bars aren’t as fruity as they seem. Apparently, Kroger says they’re “made with real fruit,” but Chelsea and Leroy say it’s all a big fib. They thought they were munching on real blueberries, not artificial flavoring, based on what the label showed. Can you imagine, expecting a burst of juicy blueberry goodness and getting hit with artificial flavors instead.

How Much Is The Settlement

There is no settlement amount for now.

Chelsea and Leroy are calling out The Kroger Co. because those blueberry bars they marketed were totally mislabeled. Instead of the delicious blueberry taste and other natural flavors, people are complaining about some synthetic after taste like malic acid.

Conclusion

Chelsea Garland, et al. v. The Kroger Co., Case No. 3:24-cv-00240-LL-BLM, is not a scam. Just like Allstate Insurance Settlement,Chelsea Garland and Leroy Jacobs are suing The Kroger Co. because they claim the company falsely advertises its blueberry cereal bars as containing real fruit

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