Suggesting malice, based on your "feelings" alone, with apparently no fault seen yet, nor anomalies measured.
The only solution is to do everything yourself.
Start by digging a hole in the ground (with your bare hands of course) to get to the resources to make your electronics. Chips are made of sillicon, which is just ordinary sand so it should be easy.
Also, in addition to Daixiwen's post:
For any decent review, the whole system must be taken into consideration. Not just some cable and whether there is an inductor somewhere on the PCB. It just don't mean much.
A little deeper, still simplified:
If your led driver has an inductor, then (at high frequencies) the current through the inductor is sort of constant.
Some part of the time the inductor is connected to the power supply (and current increases a bit), at other times the inductor is connected to the LED, where it dumps that current (and energy)
When the inductor is connected to the filter capacitor, then the capacitor deliveres most of the current to the inductor. When the inductor is connected to the LED, then the input filter capacitor recharges from the current from the main supply. Total result is that the current through your cable to the LED driver already is near DC. More filtering probably is not needed. If you really want / need to add an extra RLC filter, then make sure it's Q is low enough to prevent oscillations.
I am of opinion that any uC should have some kind of inductor or ferrite core in it's power supply. I've had too many problems with a simple wallwart to a breadboard or matrix board with a uC in the past to ever skip this step for non trivial applications.