Amazon sues Consumer Product Safety
Commission over recall order for hazardous products
[March 20, 2025]
By WYATTE
GRANTHAM-PHILIPS
NEW YORK
(AP) — Amazon has sued the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission for
finding the e-commerce giant legally responsible for the recalls of
hundreds of thousands of products sold on its site. |

An Amazon company logo marks the facade of a building, March 18, 2022,
in Schoenefeld near Berlin. AP Photo/Michael Sohn, File) |
The
independent federal agency ordered Amazon in January to take
several actions, including notifying customers who bought more
than 400,000 items covered by recalls and giving refunds to
those who could prove the products were properly disposed of or
destroyed.
The order followed the commission's unanimous determination last
summer that Amazon was a “distributor” of faulty items sold on
its website by third-party sellers and shipped through the
company’s fulfillment service
But Amazon has long disputed it qualifies as a “distributor” of
products offered by other sellers. In its lawsuit filed on March
14, the company maintained it serves as a “third-party logistics
provider" and therefore should not be held liable for recalls of
products that were made, owned and sold by others.
The commission sued Amazon in 2021 for allegedly distributing
hazardous items, accusing the company of putting consumer safety
at risk by failing to properly notify the public about recalled
products that included defective carbon monoxide detectors and
flammable children’s pajamas.
Amazon said in its lawsuit that it issued previous recall
notices and some refunds shortly after the CPSC raised safety
concerns several years ago. The company argues the commission is
an “unconstitutionally structured agency” that overstepped its
authority with the new directive.
“The remedies ordered by the CPSC are largely duplicative of the
steps we took several years ago to protect customers, which are
the same steps we take whenever we learn about unsafe products,”
Amazon said in a statement sent to The Associated Press. The
Seattle-based company said it could not comment further on its
lawsuit filed last week.
Amazon and Elon Musk’s SpaceX also have active lawsuits
challenging the structure of the National Labor Relations Board
as unconstitutional. The two companies initiated the cases after
the labor agency filed complaints against them in disputes about
workers’ rights and union organizing.
The Consumer Product Safety Commission declined to comment
Wednesday on Amazon's lawsuit complaint. In a Jan. 17 statement
about the hazardous products order, Commissioner Richard L.
Trumka Jr. said it was the CPSC's job to “hold companies like
Amazon accountable" and “no company is above the law.”
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