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Texas AG Sues Company Over Chest Binders Sold to Minors

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Detected February 20th, 2026
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Summary

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton has filed a lawsuit against Lola Olivia, Inc., an online retailer, for allegedly selling chest binders to young girls without disclosing significant health risks. The lawsuit seeks over $1,000,000 in monetary relief, including civil penalties, and injunctive relief.

What changed

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton has filed a lawsuit against Lola Olivia, Inc., a New York-based online retailer, for allegedly selling chest binders to girls as young as nine years old without disclosing potential medical risks such as permanent breast harm, back and chest pain, shortness of breath, and rib fractures. The suit, filed in Texas, alleges violations of consumer protection laws related to false, misleading, or deceptive advertising and seeks over $1,000,000 in monetary relief, including civil penalties, as well as a temporary restraining order and injunctive relief.

This action imposes significant legal and financial risk on Lola Olivia, Inc. The Attorney General's office is pursuing this aggressively, indicating a strong stance against companies perceived to be harming children through deceptive marketing practices. Regulated entities, particularly those selling products to minors or making health-related claims, should review their advertising and disclosure practices to ensure compliance with Texas consumer protection laws and similar regulations in other jurisdictions. Failure to comply could result in substantial penalties and legal action.

Source document (simplified)

Attorney General Ken Paxton has filed a lawsuit against a venture-capital backed online retailer based out of New York City, Lola Olivia, Inc. (“Lola Olivia”), for selling chest binders to Texas girls as young as nine-years-old to “transition” them.

Lola Olivia sells the chest binders to young girls without informing them that they could be subjected to no less than twenty-eight different medical conditions, including permanently harming their breasts, causing back and chest pain, shortness of breath, and even rib fracture. Chest binders have also been shown to compromise lung function and cause difficulty breastfeeding later in life. Lola Olivia’s malicious actions expose Texas kids to irreparable bodily harm, yet that has not stopped the company from turning a profit by harming girls and causing long-lasting damage.

“‘Transitioning’ a minor is child abuse, and any corporation doing it will face swift and unrelenting justice,” said Attorney General Ken Paxton. “It’s unconscionable that there are people in this world who are trying to make a fortune by hurting kids, but that’s exactly what’s going on here. I will be bringing the full force of the law against Lola Oliva for misleading Texans about the extreme harm that its products cause our kids.”

Chest binders are classified as Class I medical devices regulated by federal law and pose a significant threat to girls’ health, yet Lola Olivia illegally markets its chest binders as “safe and effective” for young children. Lola Olivia has violated Texas’ consumer protection laws banning false, misleading, or deceptive advertising by, among other illegal actions, refusing to disclose safety risks to children. Attorney General Paxton is seeking a temporary restraining order, injunctive relief, and over $1,000,000 in monetary relief, including civil penalties. To read the lawsuit, click here.

This week, Attorney General Paxton also filed a landmark lawsuit against Children’s Health System of Texas (“Children’s Health”), the country’s seventh-largest pediatrics hospital, and Jason Jarin, a Dallas-area pediatric doctor, for hurting kids by performing illegal “transition” procedures and engaging in Medicaid fraud in violation of Texas law.

Source

Analysis generated by AI. Source diff and links are from the original.

Classification

Agency
State Attorneys General (10 States)
Instrument
Enforcement
Legal weight
Binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Substantive

Who this affects

Applies to
Retailers Healthcare providers
Geographic scope
State (Texas)

Taxonomy

Primary area
Consumer Protection
Operational domain
Legal
Topics
Healthcare Child Welfare

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