A $500 Email Mistake? The Brown v. Old Navy Case Every Marketer Needs to Know
A $500 Email Mistake? The Brown v. Old Navy Case Every Marketer Needs to Know  
Podcast: Special Ops with Emma Rainville
Published On: Fri Sep 19 2025
Description: False urgency isn’t just bad marketing — it could now cost you $500 per email in Washington. In this episode of Marketing on Trial, Emma Rainville and compliance attorney Ryan Poteet dissect the landmark Brown v. Old Navy ruling and what it means for subject lines that use misleading language like “Today Only” or “Act Now.” This isn’t just theory — the Washington Supreme Court confirmed that even if the body of your email clarifies the offer, the subject line must stand on its own as factually accurate under CEMA.We cover:The legal definition of “false or misleading” under Washington’s CEMAWhat marketers misunderstand about puffery vs. factual claimsHow statutory damages stack up: $500 per email per recipientThe audit checklist you should run immediately on your ESPHow traceability works: what sender data must be included Timestamps:(0:00) Intro & What Happened in Brown v. Old Navy(1:42) What counts as a misleading subject line?(4:10) Washington’s CEMA vs federal CAN-SPAM(6:33) What “false urgency” really costs you(9:05) Puffery vs factual claims in subject lines(11:20) Opt-ins, ESP headers, and legal sender identity(14:08) The compliance checklist every email marketer needsDownload the Email Subject Line Compliance Checklist inside the Visionary Vault: https://specialopspodcast.com/visionary-vaultExplore Free Resources at the Visionary Vault:https://specialopspodcast.com/visionary-vault Get in Touch with Ryan Poteet:Website: https://www.grsm.com/   LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ryan-poteet-43098ba  Get in Touch with Emma Rainville: Website: https://specialopspodcast.com/    YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@specialopspodcast   Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/emma_rainville512/  LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/emmarainvilleoperationsguru