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Activated carbon fraud

blake

Life Member
Court Says Claims Fail Smell Test


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A Federal District Judge has ruled that ALS, the manufacturer of Scent Lok clothing has failed a smell test as it were with claims that the company had 'odor-eliminating technology' or 'odor eliminating clothing'.

The same ruling says that Cabela's and Gander Mountain - both of which sell Scent Lok and their own private-label clothing are also guilty of deceptive advertising.

The Court's ruling says the "Defendants have published countless advertisements" almost all of which "utilize the slogans 'odor-eliminating technology' or 'odor-eliminating clothing.'" The Court further found that the experts agreed that the Scent Lok clothing "cannot eliminate odor, even when new."

The Court held that all advertisements that used the words "odor-eliminating technology," "odor-eliminating clothing," "eliminates all types of odor," "odor elimination," "remove all odor," "complete scent elimination," "scent-free," "works on 100% of your scent 100% of the time," "all human scent," "odor is eradicated," and graphics demonstrating that human odor cannot escape the carbon-embedded fabric are all false statements as a matter of law.

In addition, the Court found claims that the Scent Lok clothing could be "reactivated" to "like new" or "pristine" condition to be false as a matter of law.

An injunction barring ALS/Scent Lok, Cabela's and Gander Mountain from "further deceptive practices" will be issued.

With that ruling, claims against the companies could move to trial.

The case began in 2007 when Minnesota hunters Mike Buetow, Gary Steven Richardson, Jr, Joe Rohrbach, Jeff Brosi and Dennis Deeb, filed suit against ALS, Cabela's, Cabela's Wholesale and Gander Mountain, claiming their odor controlling clothing failed to perform as advertised.

Their complaint alleged that the clothing did not "eliminate" odor, and could not be "reactivated or regenerated in a household (clothes) dryer after the clothing has become saturated with odors".

During the course of the lawsuit, scientists from both sides worked to prove-or disprove-the claims.

As you can imagine, the results disagreed in all but one key area: both plaintiff's and defendant's attorneys and scientists agreed that carbon-embedded clothing cannot eliminate 100% of a hunter's odor.

In this case "eliminate" was the key decision point- the court ruled that the word "eliminate" meant "a complete removal" the same way a claim to remove roaches from a home would mean "all roaches" not just some.

Some of the ads, however, went on to use phrases such as "complete scent elimination" "scent free" "works on 100% of your scent (100% of the time)" and "odor is eradicated".

In the court's eyes, those claims were false and misleading - beyond any test of reasonableness.

Other ads, however, used enough language to qualify the claims they made. The Court tossed a claim for a declaratory judgement from the hunters on those advertisements.

So, you might ask, do the findings in the case prove that clothing really can't mask human scent?

Short answer, no. What it case has done is reiterate and reinforce the application of common sense to advertising messages - and consumer purchases.

If it sounds too good to be true, it usually is.


This post is for informational purposes only.

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Glad to say I've never owned the stuff. Always struck me kind of funny that if you were wearing scent free socks why would you need scent free boots.
 
Lol...never saw that coming.:D Cracks me up, there are still guys on Archerytalk saying they don't care, they KNOW it works.
 
Not eliminating 100% doesn't mean it doesn't work at all.Anyone that doesn't use some type of scent control because of this is missing out.Even if it reduces your scent 25% it is worthwhile.
I would bet there is a lot of fathers on here that are fathers because birth control doesn't work 100% of the time.But it does work enough to make it worth the money.
I think all that becomes of this is that Scent Schield and Scent Loc will change the wording of their ads from scent eliminating to scent reducing/controlling.
 
Forget the wind......Just pay up !!!!!:D

Too funny!! :D :D

I never spent for the high dollar scent free clothing, but I do wash my clothes in scent free soap though on the premise that it reduces the residual scent I may leave behind, etc.

I'll bet outdoors company marketing departments everywhere are scrambling today to examine their ad content and claims on packaging in light of this development!
 
Not eliminating 100% doesn't mean it doesn't work at all.Anyone that doesn't use some type of scent control because of this is missing out.Even if it reduces your scent 25% it is worthwhile.
I would bet there is a lot of fathers on here that are fathers because birth control doesn't work 100% of the time.But it does work enough to make it worth the money.

I think all that becomes of this is that Scent Schield and Scent Loc will change the wording of their ads from scent eliminating to scent reducing/controlling.


I'm with Archery on this one. I think all it boils down to is changing the ad verbiage. I own Cabela's Scent Lok and like it. On cool weather hunts it also provides an extra layer of insulation. But I also agree with Elk Hunter in that having Scent Lok boots should eliminate the need for Scent Lok socks and vice versa. I hunt the early August archery season out here in AZ and am very scent conscious (as we all are on this site), but to stay cool during those 85 degree days in the forest, I wear a mesh-back hat. I start trudging up the mountain sides or down into the canyons and I can feel the sweat pouring out of my bald head and running all over. Its a double-edged sword: stay a little cooler in the heat and give off a little scent or go full-on cover and possibly suffer heat exhaustion. A phrase someone once told me in a first aid class comes to mind here: "Can't hurt and it might even help".
 
Doesn't work, period. The court also found the stuff could not be reactivated. I've said in the past probably the biggest scam in the history of the hunting industry.
 
MAN I KNEW IT THAT IS WHY I KEEP GETTING BUSTED!!!!!

There guys shaving thier pits and nut sacks trying to cut down on sent. Some guys buy this stuff.

Neither will get rid of all your scent. Does both help???
 
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The courts have finally had their say in this three year suit. Scent lok/Scent blocker is the loser.


Court Says Claims Fail Smell Test
A Federal District Judge has ruled that ALS, the manufacturer of Scent Lok clothing has failed a smell test as it were with claims that the company had 'odor-eliminating technology' or 'odor eliminating clothing'.

The same ruling says that Cabela's and Gander Mountain - both of which sell Scent Lok and their own private-label clothing are also guilty of deceptive advertising.

2020087.jpg
Scent Lok's advertising-at least in part- fails a Federal District Judge's smell test for odor elimination.
The Court's ruling says the "Defendants have published countless advertisements" almost all of which "utilize the slogans 'odor-eliminating technology' or 'odor-eliminating clothing.'" The Court further found that the experts agreed that the Scent Lok clothing "cannot eliminate odor, even when new."

The Court held that all advertisements that used the words "odor-eliminating technology," "odor-eliminating clothing," "eliminates all types of odor," "odor elimination," "remove all odor," "complete scent elimination," "scent-free," "works on 100% of your scent 100% of the time," "all human scent," "odor is eradicated," and graphics demonstrating that human odor cannot escape the carbon-embedded fabric are all false statements as a matter of law.

In addition, the Court found claims that the Scent Lok clothing could be "reactivated" to "like new" or "pristine" condition to be false as a matter of law.

An injunction barring ALS/Scent Lok, Cabela's and Gander Mountain from "further deceptive practices" will be issued.

With that ruling, claims against the companies could move to trial.

The case began in 2007 when Minnesota hunters Mike Buetow, Gary Steven Richardson, Jr, Joe Rohrbach, Jeff Brosi and Dennis Deeb, filed suit against ALS, Cabela's, Cabela's Wholesale and Gander Mountain, claiming their odor controlling clothing failed to perform as advertised.

Their complaint alleged that the clothing did not "eliminate" odor, and could not be "reactivated or regenerated in a household (clothes) dryer after the clothing has become saturated with odors".

During the course of the lawsuit, scientists from both sides worked to prove-or disprove-the claims.

As you can imagine, the results disagreed in all but one key area: both plaintiff's and defendant's attorneys and scientists agreed that carbon-embedded clothing cannot eliminate 100% of a hunter's odor.

In this case "eliminate" was the key decision point- the court ruled that the word "eliminate" meant "a complete removal" the same way a claim to remove roaches from a home would mean "all roaches" not just some.

Some of the ads, however, went on to use phrases such as "complete scent elimination" "scent free" "works on 100% of your scent (100% of the time)" and "odor is eradicated".

In the court's eyes, those claims were false and misleading - beyond any test of reasonableness.

Other ads, however, used enough language to qualify the claims they made. The Court tossed a claim for a declaratory judgement from the hunters on those advertisements.

So, you might ask, do the findings in the case prove that clothing really can't mask human scent?

Short answer, no. What it case has done is reiterate and reinforce the application of common sense to advertising messages - and consumer purchases.

If it sounds too good to be true, it usually is.
 
Yeah it took me 3 years of bowhunting to finally figure out that stuff didn't work. Once I started hunting the wind I started shooting deer. I still have Scent Lok clothing but once it wears out it isn't getting replaced.
 
There guys shaving thier pits and nut sacks trying to cut down on sent

I hear Bill Jordan is about ready to introduce a Realtree scent free personal hygine razor for those that really want to go scent free. Of course they will be available in all the Realtree camo patterns. :drink2:
 
This is great news for me.I been wanting to buy Scent-loc clothing for a long time but never had the extra money.Maybe now the price will go way down.I know it doesn't totally eliminate human scent 100% but I do know it does help a lot.Nothing works 100% of the time,not calls,not decoys and even muzzle loaders have an occasional hang fire. If anyone has a set of scent-loc clother they want to sell,just let me knowI will give you $10 for the worthless junk.
 
Maybe the day it comes off the factory line it will absorb some odors, but the carbon soon becomes saturated (between the factory and the store? while hanging at the store? first trip afield?) and there is no way to reactivate it.
 
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AHAHAHAH....Good stuff here! Not gonna lie, I bought a set of this waaaaay back when when it first came out. Never again after that!
 
Well with all the lawyer fees they assessed and taxpayers money wasted.....what do they stand to gain??? A refund of the clothes they bought? Seems kind of stupid to me.

I bought into the Scent-lok phase in the late 90's and realized it was a waste at that point.
 
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