Singerman Was Convicted Of Product Mislabeling In 2022. Ex-Redcon Employee Claims Redcon1 Products Lie About Veteran Donations.

BY: ANDREW COLTON | Editor and Publisher | BOCA RATON, FL (BocaNewsNow.com) (Copyright © 2025 MetroDesk Media, LLC) — A former high-level finance executive is suing sports supplement company REDCON1, LLC, claiming Aaron Singerman fired her just days after she blew the whistle on what she says are the company’s false and misleading charity advertisements. Nicole Tall, who served as Vice President of Finance from March to July 2025, just filed the complaint in Palm Beach County Circuit Court. Obtained by BocaNewsNow.com, the complaint states that Tall is seeking damages for lost wages, benefits, and emotional distress, alleging REDCON1 violated the Florida Whistleblower Act (FWA) by retaliating against her for objecting to the company’s practices.
Tall’s complaint centers on REDCON1’s energy drink, which is advertised with the phrase, “Every can supports the military,” and promises to donate 5 cents from every can sold to a military charity. The cans include a QR code directing consumers to a community voting page to decide where the money goes. However, Tall, in her capacity as VP of Finance, claims she never witnessed any disbursement or donation to any military charity during her four-month tenure at the company. She alleges that the company is committing fraud and/or a violating Florida’s consumer protection laws.
Tall says she reached out to REDCON1’s CEO and convicted felon Aaron Singerman to inquire about the lack of donations and to object to the company’s “unscrupulous practice.” According to court documents, Tall received no response from the CEO regarding her inquiry. She was then terminated just three days later. Tall states that she was praised for her work prior to asking the question.
REDCON1, LLC, based in Boca Raton, markets and sells its sports supplements nationwide. Aaron Singerman was convicted back in 2022 of mislabeling nutritional supplement while involved with another company. Singerman was sentenced to several years in federal prison, but served just months before being released. A request to end his supervised release was denied over the summer. That supervised release is set to end before the end of the year. Redcon1 had not filed a response to the suit as of Friday, November 21, 2025.
Read the complete lawsuit here:
