Former top Iyovia promoter Alex Morton has consented to a preliminary injunction.

Morton, one of
nine defendants sued by the FTC and State of Nevada
in May, stands accused of misappropriating over $76 million through Iyovia (formerly iMarketsLive and IM Mastery Academy).

As per Morton’s June 26th proposed Iyovia preliminary injunction;

[The FTC and Nevada] assert there is good cause to believe that Alex Morton has engaged in and is likely to engage in acts or practices that violate Section 5(a) of the FTC Act, 15 U.S.C. § 45(a), the Telemarketing Sales Rule (“TSR”), 16 C.F.R. Part 310, and Chapter 598 of the Nevada Revised Statutes and that [the FTC and Nevada] are therefore likely to prevail on the merits of this action.

[The FTC and Nevada] assert there is good cause to believe that immediate and irreparable harm will result from Alex Morton’s ongoing violations of the FTC Act, the TSR, and Nevada Revised Statutes, unless Alex Morton is restrained and enjoined by order of this Court.

[The FTC and Nevada] assert there is good cause to believe that immediate and irreparable damage to the Court’s ability to grant effective final relief for consumers – including monetary restitution, rescission, or refunds – will occur from the sale, transfer, destruction, or other disposition or concealment by Alex Morton of his assets or records, unless Alex Morton is immediately restrained and enjoined by order of this Court.

[The FTC and Nevada] assert that good cause exists for requiring preservation of Alex Morton’s assets, and permitting the [The FTC and Nevada] to take expedited discovery.

This Order is in the public interest.

As per the terms of the preliminary injunction order, Morton is prohibited from

making misleading  and/or unsubstantiated earnings claims (substantiation must be provided to the FTC and/or consumers on request);

misrepresenting or assisting others to misrepresent experience, time and amount of capital required to use a good or service (attached to an MLM opportunity);

misrepresenting an MLM opportunity by suggesting “any government entity” is auditing or reviewing an attached good or service;

offering a good or service with a “negative option feature” (whereby a consumer’s inaction is deemed consent to continue billing the consumer), without fully disclosing said negative option feature;

assisting others will violating the Telemarketing Sales Rule;

selling, leasing, renting, transferring or disclosing collected consumer data in relation to Iyovia;

destroying evidence that pertains to Morton’s time at Iyovia (and previous iterations);

transferring more than $75,000 in assets without prior court approval; and

transferring any assets outside of the US

Morton will also provide the FTC with financial statements, tax documents and a full accounting of any assets held outside of the US. If the FTC or Nevada wishes to depose him, Morton will have to attend a deposition with a minimum 48 hours notice.

The court approved Morton’s Iyovia preliminary injunction on June 30th.

It’s expected Morton’s Iyovia preliminary injunction will put a damper on his promotion of
Jifu
. Morton and a large component of his Iyovia downline migrated to Jifu prior to the FTC’s lawsuit.

At Jifu Morton is believed to be replicating the same alleged fraud the FTC has accused him of at Iyovia. To that end Morton is required to disclose his Jifu business activities to the FTC.

And on that note, sixteen hours ago Morton made this time-based success guarantee on his personal Instagram account:

As above, on July 8th Morton represented to consumers that if they “work 20 hours a day for a season” they “have a pretty good shot” at “guaranteed success”.

With respect to Jifu, Iyovia or any other MLM opportunity, “guaranteed success” typically equates to financial earnings.

Morton provided no substantiation for his claim on the post. It is unclear whether Morton provided the FTC with substantiation prior to making the earnings claim.

Morton is the first Iyovia defendant to consent to a preliminary injunction. As of July 8th, Morton has until July 21st to file his answer to the FTC’s lawsuit.

Update 22nd July 2025 – 
Subject to Commission approval, Alex Morton has reached a settlement with the FTC.

As per a July 18th filing;

Plaintiffs Federal Trade Commission (“FTC” or “Commission”) and State of Nevada and Defendant Alex Morton respectfully submit this joint notice and motion requesting a stay of all deadlines in this matter, relating to Plaintiffs’ claims against Defendant Morton only, for sixty (60) days.

Plaintiffs and Defendant Morton request this stay so that counsel for the FTC can seek Commission approval of a
proposed stipulated final order for permanent injunction and monetary judgment
to resolve all Plaintiffs’ claims as to Defendant Morton.

The filing states Commission approval “could take up to 60 days”. Pending approval, Daily Exposed will have a separate article up with full settlement details.

Update 31st July 2025 – 
No update on Morton’s settlement approval but the court did grant a stay pending a decision by the FTC on July 22nd.

The granted stay only pertains to proceedings against Alex Morton.

Update 5th September 2025 – 
Alex Morton has
settled Iyovia fraud charges for $76 million
.


🤖 Quick Answer

What is the Alex Morton preliminary injunction in the Iyovia case?
Alex Morton, a former top Iyovia promoter, consented to a preliminary injunction proposed on June 26th in a lawsuit filed by the FTC and the State of Nevada. Morton is one of nine defendants accused of misappropriating over $76 million through Iyovia, previously known as iMarketsLive and IM Mastery Academy.

What legal violations are alleged against Alex Morton in the Iyovia lawsuit?
The FTC and Nevada assert good cause to believe Morton violated Section 5(a) of the FTC Act (15 U.S.C. § 45(a)), the Telemarketing Sales Rule (16 C.F.R. Part 310), and Chapter 598 of the Nevada Revised Statutes, claiming likelihood of prevailing on the merits of


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