CONNECTICUT: A judge has thrown out a $75 million lawsuit filed against the Kardashian sisters after they yanked their endorsement of a prepaid debit card that was criticized for its high fees, saying the reality show stars had no duty to promote a product that might be considered unlawful. The ruling issued June 7 by Fresno Superior Court Judge Jeff Hamilton states attorneys for Revenue Resource Group LLC hadn't sufficiently shown they could win their breach of contract case. The ruling also states the sisters could not be sued for voicing concerns about the debit card because the claims would violate their First Amendment rights. The Fresno-based company sued sisters Kim, Khloe and Kourtney in January, blaming them for heavy losses after the “Keeping Up With the Kardashians” stars publicly severed ties with the company. A phone message for the company's attorney Nathan Miller was not immediately returned. The sisters withdrew their support for the debit card three weeks after the product launched following a warning from Connecticut Attorney General Richard Blumenthal that the card's fees were “predatory.”