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Product Liability Lawyers: We have a national practice and have been interviewed by CNN, CBS News, Fox News, Associated Press and others. Contact a lawyer at our firm for a free consultation: 1-888-377-8900.
Defective Products
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- Graco Stroller Recall Due to Amputation Risk
- Caramia Crib Recall
- Amby Baby Bed Recall Due to Suffication Wrongful D...
- LaJobi Crib Recall Re-Announced
- Gander Mountain Treestand Recall
- Adventure Playsets Recall
- Arctic Cat Turbo Recall
- SI Tech Diving Hose Recall Lawsuit
- Resale of Recalled Products Illegal and Potentiall...
- Blair Robe Recall and Lawsuit
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Pritzker Olsen Attorneys Product Liability Blog
Pritzker Olsen attorneys have appeared on CBS News, Fox news, and numerous local television stations throughout the country. They have recovered millions for people injured by defective products. To contact our law firm, please call 1-888-377-8900 (toll free) or submit our free consultation form.
SI Tech Diving Hose Recall Lawsuit
According to SI Tech AB, the hose contains an insert that can dislodge during diving and restrict air flow to the diver, posing a drowning hazard.
SI Tech has received six reports of hose inserts dislodging, including one that was involved in the death of a diver in Los Angeles, California.If you have been injured using a diving hose or if your loved one has drowned while diving, contact our lawyers for a free consultation about a recall lawsuit: call 1-888-377-8900 (toll free), email Attorney Fred Pritzker or submit our online free consultation form.
Is Your Diving Hose Subject to This Recall?
This recall involves a dry suit inflation hose that connects a diver’s dry suit to the air supply and allows for the pumping of air into the suit to set up a positive pressure arrangement to help keep it watertight. The hose contains an air flow restricting insert that may be either black, blue or green in color. The batch code is stamped on the threaded metal end of the hose. They were sold with dry suits and also sold separately.Instructions on how to determine if hose is subject to the recall and interpretation of batchcode and sheet for all batches that are subject for removal.
What Should I Do if My Diving Hose is Subject to
the SI Tech Diving Hose Recall?
Consumers should immediately stop using diving equipment that contains the recalled low pressure inflation hoses and contact SI Tech for the location of an authorized dealer for a free repair which involves removal of the hose insert, or to receive instructions on how to repair the hose.SI Tech recommends "When filing a recall at your dealer use 'Form Customer LP Hose Insert Removal.'"
Labels: lawsuit, product liability lawyer, wrongful death
Resale of Recalled Products Illegal and Potentially Deadly
“Companies that re-sell recalled children’s products are putting profit before the safety of children. Children's lives at at risk from this practice, and it has to be stopped,” said attorney Elliot Olsen, who has two young children of his own and has represented children and their families. “Resale stores should make safety their business and check for recalled products and hazards to children.”
Before re-selling products, CPSC encourages re-sellers to check its Web site, www.cpsc.gov, to determine if the product has been recalled.
In addition to the education campaign, CPSC’s Internet surveillance team is monitoring online retailers and auction sites for sales of recalled and hazardous products. Re-sellers are reminded that they must comply with the federal law which will be enforced for in-store and online sales.
CPSC has released a new “Handbook for Resale Stores and Product Re-sellers” to help resellers comply with the law. It can be found at www.cpsc.gov/cpscpub/pubs/thrift/thrguid.pdf or can be ordered by calling CPSC’s Hotline at (800) 638-2772.Labels: lawyer, product liability lawyer, wrongful death
Tip-Over Deaths: Ovens, Furniture and TVs
Last year, CPSC identified this issue as one of the “top five hidden home hazards.” According to a new report out from the CPSC, there were at least 180 tip-over related deaths between 2000 and 2006, 80 percent involving children younger than 10. The report also indicates that between 2005 and 2006 there were at least 40 reports of television or television and furniture related tip-over deaths.
These deaths and injuries frequently occur when children climb onto, fall against or pull themselves up on television stands, shelves, bookcases, dressers, desks, chests and stove oven doors. Televisions placed on top of furniture can tip over and cause a child to suffer traumatic and sometimes fatal injuries. Stove tip-over deaths have occurred when children stand on oven doors.
“Tip-over related deaths continue to be a problem. These tragedies can be prevented by taking precautions,” said Acting Chairman Nancy Nord.
To help prevent tip-over hazards, CPSC recommends the following safety tips below:
- Verify that furniture is stable on its own. For added security, anchor all entertainment units, TV stands, bookcases, shelving and bureaus to the wall or floor using appropriate hardware, such as brackets, screws, or toggles.
- Place televisions on sturdy furniture appropriate for the size of the TV or on a low-rise base.
- Push the TV as far back as possible from the front of its stand.
- Place electrical cords out of a child's reach, and teach children not to play with the cords.
- Remove items from the top of the TV and furniture that might tempt kids to climb, such as toys and remote controls.
Labels: Furniture Safety, Oven Safety, wrongful death
Childs Death Prompts Soccor Goal Net Recall
- All products should be required to be tested for safety before they are put on the market. People do not realize that most products are not tested for safety.
- The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission needs to have broad authority to immediately recall products when there has been a serious injury or death or when it is evident that the product is not safe. Now, in most cases, manufacturers have to voluntarily recall products. In the case below (we will get to it), a toddler was strangled to death by a soccer goal net while his mother struggled in vain to free him. This happened last year, but the recall of the product was not initiated by the manufacturer until this month. There is something horrifically wrong with this.
Last year in Texas, a 21-month-old boy tried to climb on one of the MacGregor nets from the back of the goal. He fell through the mesh, and the polyethylene cord contracted around his neck.Also according to the NPR report:
The toddler was in a fenced-in treeless backyard that contained only the soccer goal and carpet grass. By the time the mother realized what had happened, the cord around his neck was so tight, she was unable to pull his head back through.
She sent another child back into the house for a pair of scissors while she held her dying son's head, her hands straining at the cord.
The difference in cost between making a goal with the deadly 5-inch mesh and a goal made with the smaller, safer mesh is estimated at less than 20 cents of polyethylene cord.The recall of the soccer goals as reported by the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission:
September 16, 2008 - The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission, in cooperation with the firm named below, today announced a voluntary recall of the following consumer product. Consumers should stop using recalled products immediately unless otherwise instructed.
Name of Products: MacGregor Folding Soccer Goals, Mitre Folding Soccer Goals
Units: About 190,000 units
Distributor: Regent Sports Corporation, of Hauppauge, N.Y.
Hazard: The fixed knot flexible openings in the soccer goal net can pose a head and neck entrapment or strangulation hazard to young children.
Incidents/Injuries: Regent Sports and CPSC have received two reports of head entanglement, including the strangulation death of a 20-month-old child who was found with his arm and neck tangled in the soccer goal net.
Description: Both soccer goals have a foldable white frame with a white net that is attached by Velcro strips. When upright, the MacGregor goal measures 6 feet wide by 3 feet high and the Mitre net measures 8 feet wide by 6 feet high. Each has a recalled net with squares measuring 5 inches on each side. The MacGregor soccer goal has model number 97236 printed on the assembly instructions and UPC code number 029807972365 printed on the net’s packaging. The Mitre soccer goal has model number 89186 printed on the assembly instructions and UPC code number 029807891864 printed on the net’s packaging. Nets manufactured after April 2007 with 4 inch by 4 inch square openings are not included in the recall.
Sold at: Wal-Mart, Ace Hardware and sports and toy stores nationwide from May 2002 through May 2008 for $26.
Manufactured in: China
Remedy: [Do not do this if your child has been injured.] Consumers should stop using the recalled soccer goal nets immediately and return them to Regent Sports to receive a free replacement net. [If your child has been injured or strangled to death in a soccer goal net, do not contact the retailer or Regent Sports. Contact us immediately about a lawsuit. These cases are strict liability cases and punitive damages may be available.]
Labels: infant death, lawyer, Strangulation Death, wrongful death
Air Mattresses and Infant Deaths
Deadly Danger: CPSC Urges Parents To Not Place Infants on Air Mattresses
WASHINGTON, D.C. - This is the season when homes fill up with gifts and guests. When traveling, parents may choose alternative sleeping environments for babies. The U. S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) is warning families nationwide that air mattresses are too soft for use with sleeping infants. Never place infants to sleep on air mattresses or other soft surfaces (such as water beds and adult beds), which are not specifically designed or safe for infant use.Since 2002, CPSC has received reports of 16 tragic deaths, mostly infants younger than 8 months of age who were placed to sleep on air mattresses: 11 suffocated in a face down position on an air mattress and 5 died due to suffocation after falling into gaps between the mattress and bed frame and mattress and adjacent furniture or wall.
Generic twin-, full-, or queen-sized inflatable mattresses are usually intended for adults and older children. Even properly inflated air mattresses are usually too soft for infants to maintain a clear airway. Air leaks and under-inflation also contribute to incidents.
Wherever your baby sleeps should be as safe as possible. CPSC recommends these safe sleeping tips:
- Always place your baby to sleep on his or her back to reduce the risk of SIDS.
- Never place baby to sleep on an adult bed. Infants can suffocate on bedding or can become entrapped between the mattress and bed frame or mattress and wall.
- When using a crib, make sure it meets current safety standards, has a firm, tight-fitting mattress and tight-fitting bottom sheet.
- When using a portable crib or play yard, be sure to use only the mattress or pad provided by the manufacturer.
Labels: infant death, infant suffocation, lawyer, wrongful death
Pritzker Olsen attorneys have appeared on national television and have been quoted by national publications, including The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Associated Press and Lawyers USA. Attorneys Fred Pritzker, Elliot Olsen and Eric Hageman have been named "Super Lawyers" by Law and Politics magazine (2008 and previous years). Attorney Fred Pritzker is also listed in the current edition (2008) of The Best Lawyers in America. To contact Pritzker Olsen Attorneys, please call 1-888-377-8900 (toll free) or submit the firm's free consultation form.
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Firm News
Yamaha Rhino Lawsuit
NBC affiliate KSBY interviewed Fred Pritzker regarding Yamaha Rhino rollovers. There has not been a Yamaha Rhino recall.
Fred Pritzker Listed in The Best Lawyers in America
Fred Pritzker has been notified that he will again be listed in The Best Lawyers in America for his work in personal injury and wrongful death litigation.
Traumatic Brain Injury
Attorneys Fred Pritzker and Elliot Olsen spoke at the annual Minnesota Association for Justice Brain Injury Seminar. They represent brain injury survivors in product liability cases throughout the nation.
Medtronic Recall and Medtronic Lawsuit
FDA has annonced a Medtronic Spring Fidelis defibrillator lead recall. Two of our clients with defective Medtronic leads were shocked over twenty times before medical professionals were able to turn off the defibrillator.
Ortho Evra Lawsuit: Ortho Evra Birth Control Patch
The Ortho Evra birth control patch has been linked to an increased risk of blood clots that can lead to pulmonary embolism, stroke and heart attack.
Trasylol Recall
Bayer has agreed to a marketing suspension of Trasylol, a drug used to control bleeding during heart surgery, pending detailed review of preliminary results from a Canadian study that suggested an increased risk for death.
Fentanyl Lawsuit and Fentanyl Recall
There have been a number of recalls regarding fentanyl due to the risk of a fentanyl overdose.
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