In the lawsuit filed
in Montgomery County, Republican Attorney General Ken Paxton said Google
engaged in false and misleading practices in violation of the Texas Deceptive
Trade Practices—Consumer Protection Act.
The lawsuit says
Google hired iHeartMedia in October 2019 to have its radio personalities —
including those in markets in the Dallas and Houston areas — record
advertisements for the Pixel 4, a Google-brand smartphone.
But at the time the advertisements were
recorded, the lawsuit says, the phone wasn't released yet and none of the DJs
had used them. The suit says that even though iHeartMedia “expressed to Google
the violative nature of the advertisements" if the DJs had not used them,
Google did not provide phone samples.
Google spokesman José Castañeda said
Wednesday that they take compliance with advertising laws seriously and have
policies in place to help ensure they follow regulations.
“We will review the complaint but the AG's
allegations appear to misrepresent what occurred here," Castañeda said.
Paxton also sued Google in December 2020.
In that lawsuit, Texas led a group of states alleging Google was running an
illegal digital-advertising monopoly in cahoots with Facebook. Google, which is
based in Mountain View, California, called the claims in that lawsuit
“meritless.”
Paxton, who faces GOP challengers in his
reelection bid this year, is facing a years-old criminal case and a newer FBI
investigation.
He pleaded not guilty in a state securities
fraud case, which has been stalled since 2015. He has broadly denied wrongdoing
in the separate criminal probe launched after his then-top deputies reported
him to the FBI in 2020 for alleged bribery and abuse of office.
0 comments:
Post a Comment