
ABOUT JASON JONES
“Jason has been more helpful to me and my family than he will ever know. I will never be able to repay him all the good deeds he has done for my family and myself in particular.”
ABOUT JASON JONES
“It was only when Jason Jones contacted me, assuring me that I was not alone, and that they would purse legal action against [the company] for their predatory practices, that I felt a glimmer of hope. I thought finally someone would hold these individuals accountable. Mr. Jones ended up saving my family and I over hundred thousand dollars and I am profoundly grateful to Mr. Jones for the unwavering support.”
ABOUT JASON JONES
“He is so brain dead that he bagged [sic] me to make him famous. Jones is a danger to himself and his environment.”
TEAM BIOS >>>
(alphabetical order)
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JASON JONES
UNIVERSITY OF ALASKA, 99 | GEORGE WASHINGTON LAW, 03
Jason is a consumer protection litigator who represents individuals harmed by deceptive business practices, fraudulent schemes, and predatory companies. His practice focuses on cases involving multi-level marketing fraud, business opportunity scams, and the defense of consumer advocates exercising their First Amendment rights to warn others about fraudulent operations.
Prior to joining MF&H, Jason served as an Assistant Attorney General in the Office of the Attorney General for the District of Columbia. In that role, he developed and led consumer protection initiatives with a particular focus on protecting the District’s elderly residents from financial exploitation and fraud. He also handled False Claims Act matters, pursuing recoveries on behalf of the District in cases involving fraud against the government.
Before his time in government, Jason maintained a private practice representing victims of fraudulent schemes and the consumer advocates who expose them. He handled cases involving defamation claims brought by companies seeking to silence critics, as well as affirmative claims on behalf of individuals defrauded by deceptive business operations. This work built on more than a decade spent investigating and publicly documenting fraudulent business practices—work that was covered by outlets including The Verge, Popular Mechanics, and The Telegraph.
Jason served in the United States Air Force before attending the University of Alaska. He earned his J.D. from The George Washington University Law School.
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- Assistant Attorney General in the Office of the Attorney General for the District of Columbia
- Private Practice
- United States Air Force
Bars:
- Ohio, District of Columbia
📰 The Verge
Scamworld: ‘Get rich quick’ schemes mutate into an online monster
https://www.theverge.com/2012/5/10/2984893/scamworld-get-rich-quick-schemes-mutate-into-an-online-monster
The Verge profiled Jason Jones’s work documenting internet-marketing fraud through his investigative project, The Salty Droid, highlighting his long-running efforts to expose deceptive online business practices and amplify the voices of victims.
📰 The Telegraph
‘You can make six figures’ — we test internet marketing claims
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/personalfinance/10734647/You-can-make-six-figures-we-test-internet-marketing-claims.html
The Telegraph examined the reality behind high-pressure internet marketing income claims, drawing on research and public documentation from consumer-advocacy efforts that scrutinized deceptive business models.
📰 The Telegraph
Herbalife boasts big rewards for sellers but is it a pyramid scheme?
In its investigation of multi-level marketing income representations, The Telegraph referenced U.S.-based legal and consumer-advocacy work questioning the transparency and fairness of such business practices.
REPRESENTATIVE CASES
Case No. 26-04J
[FRAUD, CRYPTO, CONSUMER PROTECTION] Enforcement action against a Bitcoin ATM operator whose machines served primarily as a payment portal for scammers targeting elderly consumers. The action alleged undisclosed fees of up to 26%, deceptive refund practices, and failure to implement basic fraud prevention measures in violation of consumer protection laws.Case No. 26-03J
[CONSTRUCTION DEFECTS, FRAUD, CONSUMER PROTECTION] Enforcement action against a “pay when you sell” renovation company that used deceptive marketing and unconscionable contracts to exploit homeowners, many of them elderly. The action sought injunctive relief, restitution, civil penalties, and voiding of liens on more than 100 properties.Industry: Construction
Case No. 26-02J
[GOVERNMENT, FRAUD, TAX, FCA] Multi-million dollar tax avoidance suit brought under the False Claims Act the resulted in the largest tax recovery in DC historyIndustry: Government & Administration
Case No. 26-01J
[CLASS ACTION, RICO, FRAUD] National class action against publicly traded multi-level marketing for misrepresenting the value of attending live events that resulted in a ten-figure settlementIndustry: Professional Services

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JASON JONES
ABOUT JASON JONES
“Jason has been more helpful to me and my family than he will ever know. I will never be able to repay him all the good deeds he has done for my family and myself in particular.”
ABOUT JASON JONES
“It was only when Jason Jones contacted me, assuring me that I was not alone, and that they would purse legal action against [the company] for their predatory practices, that I felt a glimmer of hope. I thought finally someone would hold these individuals accountable. Mr. Jones ended up saving my family and I over hundred thousand dollars and I am profoundly grateful to Mr. Jones for the unwavering support.”
ABOUT JASON JONES
“He is so brain dead that he bagged [sic] me to make him famous. Jones is a danger to himself and his environment.”
UNIVERSITY OF ALASKA, 99 | GEORGE WASHINGTON LAW, 03
Jason is a consumer protection litigator who represents individuals harmed by deceptive business practices, fraudulent schemes, and predatory companies. His practice focuses on cases involving multi-level marketing fraud, business opportunity scams, and the defense of consumer advocates exercising their First Amendment rights to warn others about fraudulent operations.
Prior to joining MF&H, Jason served as an Assistant Attorney General in the Office of the Attorney General for the District of Columbia. In that role, he developed and led consumer protection initiatives with a particular focus on protecting the District’s elderly residents from financial exploitation and fraud. He also handled False Claims Act matters, pursuing recoveries on behalf of the District in cases involving fraud against the government.
Before his time in government, Jason maintained a private practice representing victims of fraudulent schemes and the consumer advocates who expose them. He handled cases involving defamation claims brought by companies seeking to silence critics, as well as affirmative claims on behalf of individuals defrauded by deceptive business operations. This work built on more than a decade spent investigating and publicly documenting fraudulent business practices—work that was covered by outlets including The Verge, Popular Mechanics, and The Telegraph.
Jason served in the United States Air Force before attending the University of Alaska. He earned his J.D. from The George Washington University Law School.
📰 The Verge
Scamworld: ‘Get rich quick’ schemes mutate into an online monster
https://www.theverge.com/2012/5/10/2984893/scamworld-get-rich-quick-schemes-mutate-into-an-online-monster
The Verge profiled Jason Jones’s work documenting internet-marketing fraud through his investigative project, The Salty Droid, highlighting his long-running efforts to expose deceptive online business practices and amplify the voices of victims.
📰 The Telegraph
‘You can make six figures’ — we test internet marketing claims
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/personalfinance/10734647/You-can-make-six-figures-we-test-internet-marketing-claims.html
The Telegraph examined the reality behind high-pressure internet marketing income claims, drawing on research and public documentation from consumer-advocacy efforts that scrutinized deceptive business models.
📰 The Telegraph
Herbalife boasts big rewards for sellers but is it a pyramid scheme?
In its investigation of multi-level marketing income representations, The Telegraph referenced U.S.-based legal and consumer-advocacy work questioning the transparency and fairness of such business practices.
Bars:
- Ohio, District of Columbia
- Assistant Attorney General in the Office of the Attorney General for the District of Columbia
- Private Practice
- United States Air Force
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