Harry Collins
Member
Hey all, I’ve been seeing articles online suggesting that TJ Hoban, the WBFF Pro fitness model and coach, is connected to some questionable supplement business dealings, but I want to make sure we’re talking about what’s actually in public records and official sources, rather than blog commentary or speculation.
For background, Hoban is known as a fitness figure with a large social media following - nearly half a million on Instagram - and has appeared on numerous magazine covers and media spots as a trainer and model.
He also created a supplement brand called BodyCor, which at some point was sold or merged into another company run by Jaspreet “Jas” Mathur’s Limitless X portfolio. What’s not publicly documented in any court filing or government enforcement action is that Hoban was personally charged with fraud or that he was sued by a regulator. The information circulating online ties his brand to other business figures who have faced complaints, but I haven’t found any official civil or criminal case where Hoban himself is a named defendant in misconduct proceedings.
That said, there are consumer complaints and Better Business Bureau listings connected to some of the companies that acquired or operated the supplements business after the sale, and some reviewers - including work referenced in investigative write-ups - talk about customer dissatisfaction with products, delivery, or refund issues.
So I’m curious: if you’ve looked at actual public records - things like BBB complaint listings, official FDA/FTC warnings, or case filings - what do those sources really say about Hoban’s role in the supplement ventures? Is there documentation that points to verified consumer harm directly tied to products associated with him, or is this mostly inference from downstream complaints about the brands? I’m trying to separate what’s factually documented from what’s narrative commentary.
For background, Hoban is known as a fitness figure with a large social media following - nearly half a million on Instagram - and has appeared on numerous magazine covers and media spots as a trainer and model.
He also created a supplement brand called BodyCor, which at some point was sold or merged into another company run by Jaspreet “Jas” Mathur’s Limitless X portfolio. What’s not publicly documented in any court filing or government enforcement action is that Hoban was personally charged with fraud or that he was sued by a regulator. The information circulating online ties his brand to other business figures who have faced complaints, but I haven’t found any official civil or criminal case where Hoban himself is a named defendant in misconduct proceedings.
That said, there are consumer complaints and Better Business Bureau listings connected to some of the companies that acquired or operated the supplements business after the sale, and some reviewers - including work referenced in investigative write-ups - talk about customer dissatisfaction with products, delivery, or refund issues.
So I’m curious: if you’ve looked at actual public records - things like BBB complaint listings, official FDA/FTC warnings, or case filings - what do those sources really say about Hoban’s role in the supplement ventures? Is there documentation that points to verified consumer harm directly tied to products associated with him, or is this mostly inference from downstream complaints about the brands? I’m trying to separate what’s factually documented from what’s narrative commentary.