Business World

Coca-Cola defeats lawsuit over Diet Coke advertisem­ents

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A FEDERAL JUDGE has dismissed a lawsuit claiming that Coca-Cola Co.’s advertisin­g for Diet Coke misleads people into thinking that consuming the soft drink assists in weight loss, and that it actually causes weight gain.

NEW YORK — A federal judge has dismissed a lawsuit claiming that Coca-Cola Co.’s advertisin­g for Diet Coke misleads people into thinking that consuming the soft drink assists in weight loss, and that it actually causes weight gain.

The plaintiff, Shana Becerra, claimed that she and others would not have bought Diet Coke, which was launched in 1982, but for the word “diet” and ads such as one showing the soft drink being poured by a bare-chested man with a well-muscled torso.

In a decision on Tuesday, however, US District Judge William Alsup in San Francisco said 13 studies cited by Becerra were “equivocal” as to whether diet soda causes weight gain, and that she must prove it does to prevail.

He also noted that supermarke­ts do not display Diet Coke in the health food section, and said reasonable consumers would understand that any caloric savings would lead to weight loss only as part of a “sensible diet and exercise regimen” dependent on individual metabolism.

“Becerra has overstated the actual science,” Alsup wrote.

The judge separately rejected Coca-Cola’s argument that federal law preempted the lawsuit, which sought class-action status.

A lawyer for the plaintiff did not immediatel­y respond on Wednesday to a request for comment. Coca-Cola did not immediatel­y respond to a similar request.

Becerra, who lives in Santa Rosa, California, claimed that non- nutritive sweeteners such as Diet Coke’s aspartame interfere with the ability to metabolize calories, and raise the risk of cardiovasc­ular disease and diabetes.

She sued on behalf of California residents for unspecifie­d damages and an injunction against marketing Diet Coke as “diet.”

Coca-Cola relaunched the Diet Coke brand in January to stem falling sales, and added blood orange, cherry, ginger- lime and mango flavors in taller, thinner cans.

The case is Becerra v CocaCola Co., US District Court, Northern District of California, No. 17-05916. —

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