Big Agencies, Cosmetics Giants Charged With Cheating Models Of $20M In Fees

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A group of the nation’s largest ad agencies have been dragged into a class-action lawsuit that alleges that a number of New York-based modeling agencies have systematically cheated professional models out of millions in usage fees.

Ad agencies, including McCann-Erickson, Ogilvy & Mather, Leo Burnett, Publicis and Saatchi & Saatchi, were also charged in the suit for using models’ images in ads without proper authorization.

Large cosmetics marketers such as Revlon, Coty and L’Oreal were also charged with similar violations.

The formal complaint was filed in New York State Supreme Court earlier this month by model Louisa Raske, who charged that she and dozens of other models were cheated out of more than $20 million in fees by modeling agencies, such as Wilhelmina Models, Ford Models, Trump Model Management.

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Raske alleged that the modeling agencies would routinely extend image rights agreements on behalf of the models -- without the latters’ awareness or consent -- with ad agencies and marketers. In many cases, the modeling agencies no longer represented the models and would forge their signatures on documents in order to extend the agreements, Raske alleged.

The agencies and marketers were not accused of willful misconduct according to the suit. Raske alleges that the agencies and marketers were, in effect, duped by the modeling agencies into paying for the rights to use models’ images, based on contracts between models and modeling agencies that were not valid.

Still the ad agencies and clients used and continue to use images of models in ads in the U.S. and other markets without proper legal authority according to the suit. “The advertising agency defendants and client defendants received releases that the models never agreed to or executed,” the suit stated.  Plus, the models have not been paid for the use of their images based on those releases, the suit added.  

Raske has asked the court to bar the agencies and clients from any further use of images if the rights are based on unauthorized releases.  

So far, none of the defendants has responded to the specific allegations in the suit. 

 

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2 comments about "Big Agencies, Cosmetics Giants Charged With Cheating Models Of $20M In Fees".
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  1. John david -- Sottile from Sottile's Winning Action Teams (S*W*A*T), November 27, 2012 at 8:23 a.m.

    Why the SENSATIONAL TITLE IMPLICATING COSMETIC GIANTS as in "... Cosmetics Giants Charged With Cheating Models Of $20M In Fees?"

    The complaint was filed against the modeling agencies. In fact, Ms Raske suggests or alleges that the agencies (advertising one imagines... certainly not the modeling agencies) and marketers were DUPED!

    From the article:

    "The formal complaint was filed in New York State Supreme Court earlier this month by model Louisa Raske, who charged that she and dozens of other models were cheated out of more than $20 million in fees by modeling agencies, such as Wilhelmina Models, Ford Models, Trump Model Management." .... "The agencies and marketers were not accused of willful misconduct according to the suit. Raske alleges that the agencies and marketers were, in effect, duped by the modeling agencies into paying for the rights to use models’ images, based on contracts between models and modeling agencies that were not valid.

    At least from this article relating the complaint, there is NO COMPLICITY between the companies which used the images and the modeling agencies which forged documents to generate fraudulent payments.

  2. Paula Lynn from Who Else Unlimited, November 27, 2012 at 10:26 a.m.

    Because the usage continued after agencies were made aware of the situation now puts them into complicity although originally they were not. This whole thing should not be a surprise in the history of modeling and "ownership" of the agencies.

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