April 6, 2025
In just a few days, Nick Pineault—“The EMF Guy” from Canada—will launch the EMF Hazards Summit 2025 (April 10–15), a high-pressure digital marketing event disguised as public health education. But this is not science—it’s a calculated funnel, using deceptive marketing tactics and government likenesses to trap vulnerable Americans into giving up their personal information and being targeted with outrageous products like a $6,000 bed mat.
The danger here isn’t just the product.
It’s the abuse of the public trust.
👉 Pineault is using a pre-confirmation interview with Robert F. Kennedy Jr., now the Secretary of Health and Human Services, as exclusive content—but only after users surrender their email.
👉 The page explicitly uses Kennedy’s title and reputation, suggesting his endorsement of the summit, and by extension, its products.
👉 That false sense of credibility drives users deeper into a sales funnel that ultimately promotes unproven, potentially harmful devices—like a $6,000 bed mat that may increase EMF exposure rather than mitigate it.
This must be stopped—immediately.
🚨 We are calling on:
🛑 Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
This is not the time to play political outsider. As Secretary of HHS, your image is being used in federal-level deception that targets the very people your department is sworn to protect.
You must:
-
Publicly disavow any endorsement of the EMF Hazards Summit 2025.
-
Demand removal of your likeness from any opt-in funnel involving products not approved by HHS or any U.S. regulatory agency.
-
Speak out now, before another American is manipulated by this scheme.
🛑 Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)
Under your jurisdiction to combat:
-
Cross-border wire fraud
-
False endorsement of federal officials (18 U.S.C. § 709)
-
Consumer deception originating from abroad targeting Americans
This summit is operating across international borders with a clear intent to mislead, using federal titles and medical authority as tools of manipulation.
🛑 Federal Trade Commission (FTC)
This is a textbook violation of the FTC Act and the Lanham Act:
-
Implied endorsements using a federal official’s likeness
-
False advertising
-
Misleading medical claims aimed at vulnerable populations
You must take action to protect the public from this type of digital fraud that uses email capture as the gateway to exploit.
🛑 Canadian Authorities (Competition Bureau Canada, Health Canada, CAFC)
Pineault is operating from within your borders but is targeting Americans with deceptive claims and exploiting the likeness of U.S. federal officials to sell high-ticket products with questionable science.
You have a duty to investigate this cross-border deception under your fair advertising and consumer protection laws.
This isn’t just unethical—it’s illegal.
👉 18 U.S.C. § 709 prohibits misuse of federal officials’ likenesses.
👉 The FTC Act forbids deceptive marketing.
👉 The Lanham Act outlaws false endorsements.
By the time users realize there’s no official endorsement, they’ve already entered their emails—and the trap is sprung. They’re now inside an email marketing machine designed to erode their trust, prey on their fears, and convince them that spending $6,000 on a plug-in bed mat is the only way to protect themselves.
Enough is enough.
🛑 Shut this scam down.
🛑 Protect American health.
🛑 Stop Canadian marketers from exploiting U.S. citizens through false government credibility.
The EMF Hazards Summit 2025 is not a public health event—it’s a sophisticated funnel to exploit people who are suffering. And it’s being done under the banner of your name, Mr. Kennedy.
If you don’t act—you’re letting them use your job, your image, and your silence to enrich themselves at America’s expense.