Last week we reported on a lawsuit alleging
Isagenix corporate were in on a secret Amazon/eBay retail racket
.
A few days after news of the lawsuit broke, Isagenix co-founder Jim Coover appeared on a leadership call to
deny the allegations
.
Today we examine evidence that suggests otherwise.
Before we get started, the parties you’ll see in the screenshots below are as follows:
Bryan Lund – Co-Plaintiff and in the screenshots anything on the right
Scott Christensen – Co-Plaintiff with Lund
Jay Bennett – Isagenix’s third top earner when Lund was recruited, then rose to top earner within the company
Isagenix corporate – namely Isagenix’s Compliance Department
Jennifer Rodriguez – part of Bennett’s immediate downline and introduces herself as “Jay’s assistant”
As per Lund’s and Christensen’s complaint, Lund joined Isagenix on the proviso Isagenix corporate was on board.
This began in October 2017:
As detailed in the complaint, the first attempt at selling Isagenix on Amazon and eBay came to an abrupt halt a few months later.
At Bennett’s insistence, and representation he’d smoothed things over with Isagenix corporate, the original plan was restarted in early 2019 (around the date of Jennifer Rodriguez reaching out above).
In introducing herself, Rodriguez suggested one of her responsibilities was making sure Bennett’s downline maintained product orders.
This was done to ensure Bennett continued to qualify for commissions:
The Amazon racket ruse saw Rodriguez, on behalf of Bennett, create a bunch of customer and distributor accounts to order product through:
Email addresses and phone numbers used to generate these accounts appear to have been created on demand:
The names of the accounts, at least in part appear to be real people. To that end contracts were drawn up governing who got paid what:
As per the terms of the confidential agreements, patsies allowed Bennett to use their created Isagenix accounts to push Amazon racket product through.
In exchange, Bennett paid them a non-refundable initial payment of $25,000. Another $25,000 was paid when the account was promoted to Executive.
The terms of the contracts were for eleven months. For the duration of the contract, Bennett was then responsible for paying Lund weekly Isagenix checks.
Initially, individual delivery addresses were used to ship Isaganix products ordered through these accounts to. Lund then organized collection of the product.
Using this method, thousands of dollars were spent ordering Isagenix products:
VISA gift cards were used to purchase the product. The suspicious nature of the transactions was sometimes enough to trigger VISA’s in house security:
At one point Lund joked about selling a Ferrari to continue funding the racket:
Picking up thousands of dollars in orders from multiple addresses proved cumbersome. Eventually Lund came to the realization that, if he was to continue, it was be on the proviso one address would be used.
Bennett smoothed the reque
🤖 Quick Answer
What allegations have been made against Isagenix regarding Amazon and eBay operations?A lawsuit alleges that Isagenix corporate engaged in a secret retail scheme involving Amazon and eBay platforms, allegedly coordinating unauthorized selling activities through these channels in violation of company policies and distributor agreements.
How did Isagenix leadership respond to the lawsuit allegations?
Isagenix co-founder Jim Coover appeared on a company leadership call to publicly deny the allegations shortly after news of the lawsuit became public, rejecting claims of corporate involvement in unauthorized retail activities.
Who are the main parties involved in the lawsuit against Isagenix?
The lawsuit involves co-plaintiffs Bryan Lund and Scott Christensen, with evidence implicating Jay Bennett (a top Isagenix earner), Isagenix's Compliance Department, and Jennifer Rodriguez, identified as Bennett's assistant.
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