City
Epaper

US safety regulator, Amazon in tussle over hazardous products' recall

By IANS | Updated: July 19, 2021 10:40 IST

San Francisco, July 19 The US safety regulator has sued Amazon for not recalling hazardous products being offered ...

Open in App

San Francisco, July 19 The US safety regulator has sued Amazon for not recalling hazardous products being offered by its third-party sellers in the right manner, a charge the e-commerce giant has rejected.

Since 2019, Amazon has sold nearly 4 lakh 'faulty' hair dryers, 24,000 carbon monoxide detectors that didn't detect carbon monoxide and an unspecified number of "children's sleepwear garments" that didn't meet flammability requirements, according to the US Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC).

The Verge reports that the US safety regulator wants to force Amazon to recall those products.

Amazon said that it has already stopped selling these products, notified its customers and provided full refunds.

"As the CPSC's own complaint acknowledges, for the vast majority of the products in question, Amazon already immediately removed the products from our store, notified customers about potential safety concerns, advised customers to destroy the products, and provided customers with full refunds," the company said in a statement.

"For the remaining few products in question, the CPSC did not provide Amazon with enough information for us to take action and despite our requests, CPSC has remained unresponsive," it argued.

The US safety regulator, however, appears not happy with Amazon's action on recalling dangerous products.

"For every product which CPSC determines a recall is necessary, a lengthy negotiation must first take place about the threshold question of whether that sales platform is even subject to our laws," said CPSC acting chairman Robert Adler in a statement.

"We are seeking Amazon to be responsible for the 'fulfilled by Amazon' products on their site; Amazon does not see themselves legally responsible for these products. We assert Amazon has legal responsibility as a distributor for the safety of these products," the CPSC told The Verge.

Amazon disagreed on being categorised as a distributor.

"We disagree with CPSC's assertion that we are a distributor under this statute, and our perspective was reinforced by Chairman Adler's statement. However, more importantly, Amazon has always believed that we have an obligation to our customers to provide the safest shopping experience," the company said.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: U.S. Consumer Product Safety CommissionRobert adlerusamazonSan FranciscoSan francisco bayJose d'sa
Open in App

Related Stories

MumbaiAI Voice Scam in Mumbai: Juhu Trader Duped of Rs 50,000 as Fraudster Mimics Brother’s Voice

MumbaiCockroaches Spotted on Air India Flight from San Francisco to Mumbai; Plane Cleaned in Kolkata

InternationalEarthquake in Russia: Quake of Magnitude 8.0 Strikes Kamchatka Peninsula; Tsunami Warning Issued

InternationalNASA Layoffs: 20% or 3,870 Employees to Exit US Space Agency

InternationalMichigan Plane Crash: 2 Killed After Small Aircraft Crashes Into Storage Facility Near Lowell City Airport in US

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologyDefence Ministry gives nod for military hardware worth Rs 67,000 crore to beef up armed forces

TechnologyTorrent Power clocks 24.7 pc drop in net profit, revenue falls 12.5 pc

TechnologyParacetamol drug not banned in India, says Anupriya Patel

TechnologyBharti Hexacom Q1 profit drops 23 pc, revenue rises over 18 pc YoY

TechnologyBharti Airtel’s Q1 net profit jumps 57 pc to Rs 7,421.8 crore, revenue rises 28 pc