Missouri chiropractor Eric Anthony Nepute and his business Quickwork LLC are the first entity to be reviewed under the COVID-19 Consumer Protection Act, with a federal complaint looking at Facebook marketing claims that his zinc and vitamin D products can cure or prevent COVID-19. Facebook removed some of Nepute’s videos after he was named in the complaint, but the platform has not removed all of his Facebook and Instagram accounts that spread harmful medical misinformation and violate the platforms’ Terms of Service.
Nepute’s remaining Facebook and Instagram pages are riddled with COVID-19 and vaccine misinformation. And his pages include video content that violates Facebook and Instagram’s Terms of Service against spreading COVID-19 misinformation by “promoting that others not get the COVID-19 vaccine” and advertising “prohibited content” that uses “the public health crisis to create a sense of urgency or incite fear” to buy a product.
FTC Proceeding
On April 15, the Justice Department and Federal Trade Commission announced that Nepute’s business, which goes by the name “Wellness Warrior,” allegedly “advertised that their vitamin D and zinc nutritional supplements could prevent or treat COVID-19” and advertised “without scientific support that their supplements were equally or more effective therapies for COVID-19 than the currently available vaccines.”
As per a Federal Trade Commission statement, the Department of Justice says Nepute’s ads and videos on Facebook violate the COVID-19 Consumer Protection Act, which states that it is unlawful “for any person, partnership, or corporation to engage in a deceptive act or practice in or affecting commerce associated with the treatment, cure, prevention, mitigation, or diagnosis of COVID-19.”
According to the Centers for Disease Control, using zinc supplements is not recommended “for the prevention of COVID-19.” Similarly, the CDC says there is “insufficient data” to “recommend either for or against the use of vitamin D for the prevention or treatment of COVID-19.”
On his remaining Facebook profiles, Nepute posts videos of himself promoting his supplements while spreading conspiracy theories and misinformation about the coronavirus and COVID-19 vaccines.
During an April 14 Facebook live, Nepute declared that vaccines are “hurting people” and affect recipients' DNA (they don’t). During his fearmongering, Nepute pushed his zinc tablets by insisting that these “important minerals'' can stop viruses from “regenerating and regrowing” in your body.