Bags of clothes are piled up in Liz Keenan’s home office, racks of clothes are taking over Kimberly Jarrett’s family room. Both women invested thousands of dollars in the popular clothing company LuLaRoe and now worry they could be out some serious cash.

Denver7 talked to and exchanged messages with at least 15 different women, they all told a similar story about a business they loved and broken promises.

The California-based company was slapped with a class-action lawsuit accusing it of running a pyramid scheme. The company fired back saying that the lawsuits are “factually inaccurate and misinformed,” The Associated Press reported.

“Plaintiffs and so many other consultants were never able to realize any actual profit and, as a result, they failed,” the Oct. 23 filing says. “They failed even though they were committed and put in the time and effort. They failed because they were doomed from the start.”

Keenan said started selling LuLaRoe about a year ago after she fell in love with the company’s comfy dresses. “You heard stories. You know, I know one lady — she was able to buy her house full out, and her husband was able to retire.”

She spent about $6,500 to start up her business and estimates she has bought somewhere around $15,000 in clothes. She resigned this summer and the company sent her an email stating she would get a 100-percent refund if she mailed the leftover clothes back.

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