Thursday, November 5, 2015

Adya Clarity Consumer alert: Black mica extract, Adya Clarity still being sold as dietary supplement across USA

The Adya Clarity product we exposed last year as being fraudulently marketed as a miracle health supplement has been renamed and is currently being sold across America by over a dozen distributors. (Those distributor names and numbers are listed below).

The product is now being offered under names such as "ionic minerals" "black mica extract" and "magnetic minerals." As NaturalNews established in previous reports:

• Adya Clarity has been imported as "battery acid" (http://www.naturalnews.com/034005_Adya_Clari...)

• It is mined from ore (rocks and metals) near Fukushima, Japan

• The second-highest metal content in Adya is aluminum, which was omitted from the original label.

• The product consists of metals (iron, aluminum, etc.) dissolved with sulfuric acid into a liquid form.

• It has been heavily marketed as a dietary supplement for internal consumption, along with completely unsubstantiated health claims.

• People who drink the product report symptoms such as black stuff coming out of their ears, and fingernails turning black.

• The fraudulent marketing of the product included claims that Adya Clarity could remove "suckerfish snakes" from a woman's bowels, or that it was removing metals from one man's brain because he had black stuff coming out of his ears (among other ridiculous claims).

The Health Canada fraud

Adya, Inc. has claimed its product is "approved" by Health Canada and is therefore "harmonized" for the United States. This is blatantly fraudulent. I actually spoke to Health Canada three times on this issue. In one call, a Health Canada representative asked me if I knew of any Adya Clarity distributors in Canada. They were conducting an investigation into the off-label (unapproved) marketing of Adya Clarity, which was only registered with Health Canada as an "iron supplement."

But Canadian distribution for Adya has been shut down, providing a convenient situation where Health Canada cannot revoke their NPN number because they are not actively selling the product in Canada. Instead, Matt Bakos, the founder of Adya, claims his product's Health Canada registration number confers product approval status in the United States -- another complete fabrication.

So as long as Adya, Inc. does not actually sell their product in Canada, they can deceptively maintain their Health Canada registration number indefinitely and use that number to misrepresent their product in the United States by claiming it is "approved in Canada." This fools many consumers who don't seem to realize that Health Canada was already attempting to investigate the fraudulent marketing of Adya but halted their investigation when Adya pulled out of Canadian distribution.

I have already covered more details of Adya's Health Canada deception at:
http://www.naturalnews.com/034022_Adya_Clari...

As of today, Adya Inc. lists no Canadian distributors on its website, but it continues to point to Health Canada registration in order to falsely imply some sort of product safety and approval status in the United States. This is, all by itself, misrepresentation and fraud. As Matt Bakos says in the video we've posted (see link below): "Believe it or not, our product is harmonized by the FDA to come into the United States."

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