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LEGAL ALERT

EDITOR'S NOTE


A federal court has entered consent decrees of permanent injunction against two companies: Premium Production, a dietary supplement manufacturer, and Evig, its distributor, and their executives, for alleged labeling and manufacturing violations that rendered their products (sold under the Balance of Nature brand) new or misbranded drugs, or adulterated dietary supplements. The consent decrees were issued following 2019 inspections and the issuance of a warning letter to the Premium Production and Evig, alleging cGMP and labelling violations. Follow-up inspections allegedly revealed that the defendants had failed to make the necessary corrections.

Consent decrees entered against Utah dietary supplement manufacturer and distributor

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration announced that a dietary supplement distributor, manufacturer, and two executives have been ordered by a federal court to stop producing and selling their products until they come into compliance with federal regulations and requirements under the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act. 


The U.S. District Court for the District of Utah, Central Division has entered two consent decrees of permanent injunction against Evig LLC, of St. George Utah, and the company’s CEO, Douglas Lex Howard, as well as Premium Production LLC, of St. George, Utah, and its Manager, Ryan Petersen. 


Balance of Nature products are marketed as dietary supplements, with labeling that rendered them unapproved new drugs and misbranded drugs. The FDA has not approved Balance of Nature products for any use, despite the company’s claims that its products could be used to diagnose, cure, mitigate, treat, or prevent diseases such as cancer, heart disease, cirrhosis, diabetes, asthma, and COVID-19. In addition, Evig LLC violated current good manufacturing practice (CGMP) requirements, which rendered its products adulterated dietary supplements. Evig distributes Balance of Nature dietary supplement products through Amazon, Walmart, and its own online store at www.balanceofnature.com. 


Premium Production LLC and Mr. Petersen manufactured Balance of Nature products in violation of multiple CGMP requirements, such as failing to establish ingredient and finished products specifications for identity, purity, strength, and composition, which rendered them adulterated dietary supplements. 


“This FDA action ensures that dietary supplements distributed to American consumers are appropriately labeled, lawfully manufactured, and prevents products that potentially put people’s health at risk with unproven claims to cure, treat or prevent a serious illness,” said Michael C. Rogers, the FDA’s Acting Associate Commissioner for Regulatory Affairs. “We previously warned Evig LLC and Premium Production LLC, but they have demonstrated repeated violations of manufacturing requirements, and the public cannot have confidence that their products are what they purport to be. The FDA will continue to protect the U.S. public health by taking appropriate actions when companies violate the law.”


In 2019, the FDA issued warning letters to Evig LLC and Premium Production LLC after facility inspections identified CGMP violations at both companies’ facilities. The warning letter to Evig LLC also informed the company that a review of its Balance of Nature website revealed that its products as labeled were unapproved new and misbranded drugs because they were intended to cure, mitigate, treat, or prevent disease. Following the 2019 warning letters, FDA inspections showed that the firms failed to address the deviations and come into compliance with the FDA’s requirements. Based on the firms’ continued violations, the FDA pursued injunctions against the firms. 


“Products intended to treat or cure diseases require FDA approval,” said Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General Brian M. Boynton, head of the Justice Department’s Civil Division. “Dietary supplement makers also must abide by federal health and safety requirements. The Department will continue to work closely with FDA to stop the distribution of unapproved, adulterated, and misbranded dietary supplements.”


The consent decrees prohibit Evig LLC and Premium Production LLC from distributing or manufacturing products until they are in compliance with CGMP and labeling regulations. Under the consent decrees, both firms must hire CGMP experts, submit documents demonstrating compliance, and receive the FDA’s approval to resume operations. In addition, Evig LLC must hire a labeling expert to ensure their products are no longer considered new and/or misbranded drugs. 


The U.S. Department of Justice filed the complaints on behalf of the FDA.


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The American Herbal Products Association (AHPA) distributes dietary supplement regulation and enforcement news as Legal Alerts. The information presented in Legal Alerts represents the views and opinions of the original authors of the content and does not necessarily represent the views or opinions of AHPA. Distribution of dietary supplement regulation and enforcement news as a Legal Alert does not constitute AHPA endorsement of the content or legal advice. Please direct any questions about Legal Alerts to communications@ahpa.org.

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