
Burger King was just hit with a whopper — in the
form of a class-action lawsuit.
A lawsuit filed last week in U.S. District Court in Miami claims Burger King is deceiving customers "based on false and misleading advertising
concerning the size and/or the amount of ingredients contained in said menu item."
Specifically, Burger King exaggerates size, then and under-delivers when it comes to its Whoppers. The
fast-food franchise allegedly made the Whoppers look larger in its ads, starting in 2017.
A side-by-side comparison of Burger King's current vs. former Whopper ads show it "increase in size by
approximately 35% and the amount of beef increased by more than 100%," the suit says.
Four plaintiffs, three in New York and one in Florida, stated that if each "knew that said burgers were
much smaller than advertised, he would not have purchased the burgers."
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The suit also applies to sandwiches — from the meatless Impossible Whopper to the Croissan'wich breakfast
sandwich.
The lawsuit claims are breach of contract, negligent misrepresentation and unjust enrichment, for which Burger King consumers are owed damages and legal fees.
Financial
restitution is sought, along with a jury trial, to end the fast-food franchise's "deceptive behavior."