Christina Spicer  |  April 16, 2014

Category: Consumer News

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Dreamfields pasta class action settlementThe makers of Dreamfields pasta reached a $7.9 million class action settlement on Monday over claims that the low-carb pasta was falsely advertised as containing fewer digestible carbohydrates and having a lower glycemic index than traditional pasta.

Lead plaintiffs Joseph Mirakay, Louis Messina, Michael Elefterakis, and John Gembinski filed the Dreamfields pasta class action lawsuit against Post Holdings and Dakota Growers in July of 2013, alleging that the companies advertized their low-carb pasta product as a “low-glycemic index and low-carbohydrate alternative to traditional pasta.”

According to the class action lawsuit, however, independent testing revealed that Dreamfields pasta contained the same amount of digestible carbohydrates as regular pasta, but cost twice as much. The study cited in the Dreamfields class action lawsuit also concluded that the glucose response of the test subjects who ate Dreamfields low-carb pasta and traditional pasta “was essentially identical.”

The companies began selling Dreamfield low-carb pasta in 2004 and the plaintiffs allege that the underlying data that the companies claimed backed up Dreamfields’ health claims were never released and the company offered only press releases as evidence that studies backed up the health claims. The plaintiffs brought claims on behalf of a nationwide class of consumer who purchased Dreamfields pasta for violations of the New Jersey Consumer Fraud Act, breach of contract and breach of express and implied warranty and on behalf of various subclasses under other state consumer protection laws.

The proposed Dreamfields pasta settlement, entered April 14, will provide $5 million in refunds to Settlement Class Members who purchased Dreamfields pasta since 2004. Class Members who purchased Dreamfields online will automatically receive reimbursement of $1.99 for each box purchased. Those who purchased the pasta products in stores will have to submit a claim to receive $1.99 for each box of Dreamfields purchased, up to a total of 15 boxes ($29.85).

The Dreamfields class action settlement is capped at $5 million and any remaining money that’s not claimed will be awarded to the American Diabetes Association. Post and Dakota will also be enjoined from making the disputed health claims on Dreamfields pasta labels for one year. The plaintiffs’ attorneys will be awarded $2.9 million in fees separate from the $5 million to be awarded to Class Members.

The plaintiff’s motion for the class action settlement has not yet been approved by a judge. During the discovery process, the parties agreed to mediate before U.S. District Court Judge Garrett E. Brown, Jr.

Mediation with Judge Brown took place in December in New York. According to the plaintiffs’ motion, “Judge Brown pronounced the relief obtained by the Plaintiffs ‘extraordinary.'” The plaintiffs also argue in their settlement motion that “[t]his session resulted in the Settlement, which Plaintiffs and Class Counsel believe provides substantial injunctive and monetary benefits, is fair, reasonable, and adequate, and is in the best interests of Plaintiffs and the Settlement Class Members.”

The plaintiffs also point out that “[a]lthough the case is in an early stage of the litigation, plaintiffs have conducted extensive discovery into defendant’s advertising and sales of Dreamfields pasta as well as the scientific support or its product claims,” and “before reaching the proposed settlement, class counsel had conducted an extensive review of the legal and factual issues and are well equipped to evaluate the strengths and weaknesses of plaintiffs’ claims.”

The plaintiffs are represented by Brian D. Penny of Goldman Scarlato Karon & Penny PC, William B. Federman of Federman & Sherwood, John Zaremba of Zaremba Brownell & Brown PLLC and Charles W. Branham III of Branham Law Group LLP.

The Dreamfields Pasta Class Action Lawsuit is Mirakay, et al. v. Dakota Growers Pasta Co. Inc., et al., Case No. 3:13-cv-04429, in the U.S. District Court for the District of New Jersey.

UPDATE: Details on how to file a claim for the Dreamfields pasta class action settlement are up! File your claim now.

UPDATE 2: A federal judge granted final approval to the Dreamfields pasta class action settlement on Oct. 20, 2014.

UPDATE 3: The Settlement Administrator is notifying Class Members that the Dreamsfield Pasta class action settlement has been granted final approval and all appeals have been resolved. Settlement checks are expected to be mailed out approximately June 1, 2015. Let us know if you receive a check!

UPDATE 4: On June 3, 2015, viewers began reporting that they have received checks in the mail from the Dreamfields Pasta class action settlement. Congratulations to everyone who submitted valid claims and got PAID!

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28 thoughts onDreamfields Low-Carb Pasta Maker Reaches $8M Class Action Settlement

  1. Deb H says:

    We just got 3 checks in the mail, one for me, my husband, and my deceased Mother-in-Law who had lived with us before she passed. We did not do anything to prompt the checks, so I have to assume it was because we had ordered the pastas online at one point when local stores didnt have them yet. I was actually checking out the legitimacy of these checks as I hadnt heard about the law suit before now.

  2. Betty says:

    I received a check for $28.35 today.

  3. marsha says:

    I did not know anything about this lawsuit , but back a few years I purchased this product online as it was not available in stores around here yet. I was looking here to see why I got a Check in the mail for this. Just curious.

  4. Top Class Actions says:

    UPDATE 3: The Settlement Administrator is notifying Class Members that the Dreamsfield Pasta class action settlement has been granted final approval and all appeals have been resolved. Settlement checks are expected to be mailed out approximately June 1, 2015. Let us know if you receive a check!

  5. Linda Benjamin says:

    Very upset. I totally believed their claims. I have 7 boxes in my cupboard. Was cooking it for dinner tonite and noticed the claims were no longer on the box, so I looked it up. They have played with peoples health and feel they should be required to pay a bigger settlement. Have been buying it for years and of course don’t have grocery receipts.

    1. bluett408 says:

      Yea me too

  6. Top Class Actions says:

    UPDATE 2: A federal judge granted final approval to the Dreamfields pasta class action settlement on Oct. 20, 2014.

  7. KennyB says:

    Years ago I ate Dreamfields, and experienced good results. I therefor continued using it without question. But, lately it seemed to spike my sugar level every bit as any other pasta. Very disappointed as diabetics truly need a low carb alternative. I think they had a product that actually worked, till they got rich and sloppy. This needs to be researched and developed by people for whom aren’t only looking at the bottom line. Diabetes is a hellish disease that slowly kills. The unscrupulous Dreamfields Company should be driven out of business. They are out of business, as far as I’m concerned…

  8. Elissa Kesterson says:

    I too am upset about this. I ate this all through my pregnancy as I had gestational diabetes. What’s confusing is every time I tested my blood glucose after eating Dreamfields, it was within the range it was supposed to be, but if I ate regular pasta, I would always be high.

  9. Frederick R. Dublin says:

    I am also angry but I did a test with my diabetes testing strips. I ate a “normal” pasta meal and after 1 hour took my blood level. Another day I ate a “dreamfields” pasta meal and about an hour later I took my blood sugar level. I don’t know why but when I ate the dreamfields my sugar spiked much less than with mullers pasta . If this claim of the company isn’t real… how did that happen to my blood? Anyway, If the claim is found to be false, I am very disappointed in Dreamfields. We have been buying it for years since my nutritionist told me it was a better choice and we have told many many peop;le about it.

    1. Frederick R. Dublin says:

      very interesting info.

    2. Janedear says:

      The spike wasn’t as bad because of the high fiber in D.F. pasta. You could just as easily buy generic or store brand high fiber wheat pasta and get the same results, (and save some money ). Experiment and Good luck.

  10. Top Class Actions says:

    UPDATE: Details on how to file a claim for the Dreamfields pasta class action settlement are up! File your claim now.

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