Boobies Rock!: Bogus Cancer Charity's Adam Shryock Returning to Jail After New Scam | The Latest Word | Denver | Denver Westword | The Leading Independent News Source in Denver, Colorado
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Boobies Rock!: Bogus Cancer Charity's Adam Shryock Returning to Jail After New Scam

In 2013, we told you about Boobies Rock!, an organization that sent hot women into bars wearing T-shirts emblazoned with the company's name -- and they told customers to whom they sold branded merchandise that the money they collected would go toward fighting breast cancer. But Colorado's Attorney General branded...
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In 2013, we told you about Boobies Rock!, an organization that sent hot women into bars wearing T-shirts emblazoned with the company's name -- and they told customers to whom they sold branded merchandise that the money they collected would go toward fighting breast cancer. But Colorado's Attorney General branded the whole thing a scam and filed a lawsuit and a temporary restraining order in an effort to stop it.

Last year, Boobies Rock! founder Adam Shyrock reportedly served a brief stint in jail after ignoring the restraining order -- and now he's going back after allegedly repeating the feat. Continue for photos, videos and details.

See also: Boobies Rock! Breast Cancer Fundraiser a Scam, Says Colorado Attorney General, published July 2013

At the time of our original report, websites such as BoobiesRockStore.org had already vanished, but a few remnants of the company remain, including a blog declaring that "Boobies Rock! is a creative blend of music, sports, fashion and pop culture. Established in September of 2010, Boobies Rock! has quickly grown to become one of the leading advocates for the awareness of breast cancer across the U.S. Our mission is simple; to create awareness through fun, fashionable and humorous clothing and accessories. Keep checking back for fun news, pictures, and more!!"

Also lingering is a Twitter account -- and although the links to the "Boobies Rock!" Facebook page are dead, some pitches linger, including this one:

According to a 9News report from November 2012, most of the young women who accepted offers like this one in Colorado and beyond thought they were working for an outfit with a big charity component -- and customers undoubtedly did as well, due to a strategy portrayed in the AG's lawsuit as purposefully misleading. Here's an excerpt:
Shyrock and his employees instructed promotion models to approach potential customers and represent that they were "taking donations" rather than selling merchandise. The models were further instructed to refer to BR as a "charitable company" and to only disclose that BR was a for-profit entity if asked.

Shyrock told models to tell customers that a percentage of the BR's net proceeds would go to charity. Some models report that they were told to say anywhere from 40 percent to 80-90 percent of BR revenue went to charity, others were told to be vague about the amount of money going to charity.

Some people apparently were so convinced that Boobies Rock! was a charity that they offered cash donations rather than buying items. These gifts were gladly accepted and combined with other funds, the lawsuit maintains. Likewise, managers at assorted bars invaded by Boobies Rock! crews were allegedly told that employees were "taking contributions for breast cancer-related causes."

How much was collected?

Continue for more about the latest legal troubles for Boobies Rock! founder Adam Shyrock, including photos, videos and documents. Between June 2011 and December 2012, the main Boobies Rock! account at Wells Fargo showed deposits of $1,074,323.26, with a little more than half that amount made in cash, the lawsuit says.

As for Shyrock, he used the Boobies Rock! account for what the lawsuit describes as "personal expenditures" -- such as $18,500 withdrawn in order to purchase a BMW. He's also said to have dipped into this greenback pool to pay his bar tab and subscribe to an online dating service.

In addition, Boobies Rock! was accused of invoking the names of actual breast cancer charities to make it seem more legitimate. An example can be found in the most recent item on the "Boobies Rock!" blog, dated October 2011. The item declares: "We are extremely excited to announce that we have just sent a $25,000 donation to the Young Survival Coalition!!" However, the lawsuit contends that this donation was actually made to settle a lawsuit from Young Survival Coalition, which hadn't given "Boobies Rock!" permission to use its name or trademark in solicitation materials.

This lawsuit wasn't the first to target Shyrock or affiliated companies, including The Se7ven Group and Say No 2 Cancer, both of which are named in the Colorado AG's complaint. Take this August 2011 post on the Ripoff Report website:
I am a previous employee of the company Boobies Rock! and although I've defended the company in the past, I quit my position in May when I realized that none of the donations had been made to the various non-profits that Mr. Adam Shryock had pledged to donate to, as promised. I was a promotional hiring manager in San Francisco and likely reached out to you point of contact that he works with, as I was sent to travel to hundreds of cities for NFL and college football games. After I left the company Mr. Shryock continued to use my e-mail account as if I were still working for him. I advise doing a background check on this person and his company. Adam Shryock is currently in a lawsuit with Keep A Breast for using their slogan "I Love Boobies" previous to using Boobies Rock! (which he only changed the logo after several threats from Keep A Breast at taking him to court).
Continue for more about the latest legal troubles of Boobies Rock! founder Adam Shyrock, including photos, videos and documents. Shyrock was able to keep "Boobies Rock!" functioning despite trips to court -- but the operation, The Se7ven Group and Say No 2 Cancer were put on hold via the temporary restraining order.

The TRO was still in effect in January 2014, when Shyrock was sentenced to fourteen days in jail for ignoring it. 7News reported at the time that in August 2013, mere weeks after the AG's office had lowered the boom on Boobies Rock!, Shyrock had created a new "charity" dubbed I Heart This Bar, in which models sold merchandise at college football tailgate events. The proceeds supposedly went to a "scholarship fund," but the AG's office dubbed it yet another moneymaking gambit for Shyrock.

The more things change, the more they stay the same. This month, 9News reports, Shyrock was back in court, accused of hiring models to sell merch at bars and tailgating gatherings that supposedly benefited either Cancer Care or Stupid Cancer, both legit charities, even though the restraining order against him despite the aforementioned restraining order.

Moreover, the groups hadn't authorized him to fundraise on their behalf, and a Stupid Cancer rep testified that the organization received no money from Shyrock's efforts.

For his part, Shyrock insisted that he was only a "consultant" in the enterprise. But a judge didn't buy it and sentenced him to six months in stir for contempt of court.

Which probably doesn't rock from his perspective.

Look below to see a 2013 9News package about "Boobies Rock!," followed by the station'spiece from the previous year, plus the AG's office complaint and the temporary restraining order.

Boobies Rock Complaint

Boobies Rock Temporary Restraining Order

Send your story tips to the author, Michael Roberts.

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