Jon Styf  |  April 18, 2023

Category: Consumer News

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Kratom pills next to a pistol and mortar with kratom inside
(Photo Credit: NIKCOA/Shutterstock)

Kratom class action overview: 

  • Who: Ashlynn Marketing, selling its products as Krave Botanicals, is facing a class action lawsuit over its kratom sales.
  • Why: Plaintiffs allege that kratom is addictive, similar to opioids, but the packaging of kratom does not indicate the danger.
  • Where: The kratom class action was filed in federal court in California but the class includes at least one Arizona resident.

Ashlynn Marketing is facing a class action lawsuit related to its sale of kratom under the business entity Krave Botanicals.

Kratom is sold at convenience stores in innocuous packaging that does not indicate the serious nature of its addictiveness, the class action lawsuit claims.

Kratom is a dried leaf that is sold in different forms, including gel capsules, loose powder or extract. Kratom works on the same opioid brain receptors as morphine, has similar effects, similar withdrawal and similar risks, including physical addiction and dependency, according to the lawsuit. It is “perniciously addictive” on a different level than caffeine and nicotine, the lawsuit claims.

The kratom plant, which comes from Southeast Asia, is the most widely used drug in Thailand, the lawsuit states. That addictiveness, however, is not noted on Krave Botanicals’ packaging, labeling or marketing materials, according to the lawsuit. Ashlynn Marketing relies on a lack of knowledge about the plant and its effects to get users addicted and then have them continue to purchase the product, the lawsuit claims.

The class action was filed in federal court in California by a class that only uses initials due to the ongoing stigma related to addiction.

Class claims exceed $5 million along with injunctive relief and attorneys’ fees in kratom class action lawsuit

Plaintiffs claim that the class in the kratom class action lawsuit are owed more than $5 million in damages. Kratom is a $1.3 billion industry in the United States with 11 million to 15 million annual users, according to the kratom class action lawsuit.

Plaintiffs are asking for damages, restitution, injunctive relief and attorneys’ fees in the kratom class action lawsuit and the class includes at least thousands of members, according to the lawsuit.

A previous class action lawsuit claimed that Botanic Tonics’ Feel Free drink is addictive despite the companies’ advertising.

Have you encountered over the counter products that you believe are addictive? Let us know in the comments.


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32 thoughts onKrave Botanicals fails to warn consumers kratom could be addictive, class action alleges

  1. Doreen says:

    I am going through the same thing add me.

  2. Cindy Checkeye says:

    I am addicted to Botanic Tonic Feel Free and so is my spouse.
    I wish I never started drinking this stuff. I have a history of addiction and if FF hadn’t neglected to list Kratom or had a warning of addiction. I would have NEVER started using this stuff and ruin my 10+ years of sobriety. I researched KAVA, the advertised ingredient that makes FF an option when looking for something for both energy and pain relief. I am sure that it is ok to use if you don’t have an addiction problem and it works really well, but SHAME on BT for hiding Kratom as a key ingredient. I even contacted them a few years ago when we first started drinking it to ask if it was safe to consume more than 2 bottles per day and BT ensured me that was not a problem. I still have that correspondence from them. I went from drinking 1-2 bottles a day to 12+….that’s a lot of $$$$$.
    I admit I have an addiction issue and certainly would have shared that with BT if they had cared to ask. I wouldn’t have purchased FF.
    I am struggling, with the help of my spouse, to stop drinking FF. It has been really hard and I can compare this to the withdrawal symptoms from opiates (muscle cramps, restlessness, nausea, diarrhea, insomnia, hot flashes, chills). I DO NOT want to go thru DAT because you just trade one bad drug for another…been there, done that twice over 10 years ago. My sobriety has been ruined just because BT neglected to be transparent.
    I am not telling you not to use Kratom but to be aware of the effects of Kratom if you have a history of addiction.

  3. Cathy Stanley says:

    Add me

  4. TERI Mathews says:

    Add me

  5. Doug Mattox says:

    Add me please

  6. Joe Ezell says:

    Please add me

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