A federal judge in California has dismissed a class action lawsuit against reality TV star Kim Kardashian, boxing champ Floyd Mayweather and the founders of EthereumMax, explaining that the submissions failed to meet the “heightened pleading standards” for fraud claims.
The judge has, however, left room for the plaintiffs to refile the proposed class action lawsuit if certain provisions are amended.
In the original Jan. 7 court filing submitted by Scott+Scott Attorneys At Law, the plaintiffs argued that Kardashian, Mayweather, and also former NBA superstar Paul Pierce didn’t disclose they were being paid to promote EthereumMax (EMAX).
The plaintiffs alleged that they promoted it with the objective to “artificially inflate the price of the token” through the use of “false or misleading statements.”
Kim Kardashian promoted EMAX in a Jun. 2021 post on Instagram, while Floyd Mayweather wore the EMAX logo on his boxing trunks in a boxing match against YouTube star Logan Paul in the same month.
According to reports, Judge Michael Fitzgerald dismissed the lawsuit on Dec. 7 on the grounds that the fraud allegations lacked merit and that investors at the end of the day also have the responsibility to conduct due diligence on their investments.
However in his dismissal, Judge Fitzgerald acknowledged the power that celebrities have been afforded by new technologies and social media platforms in establishing potentially fraudulent promotional schemes.
“This action demonstrates that just about anyone with the technical skills and/ or connections can mint a new currency and create their own digital market overnight,” Fitzgerald reportedly wrote in his dismissal.
Celebrities now have the ability to “readily persuade millions of
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