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New York CNN —Shein and Temu, two Chinese low-cost e-commerce websites, are the target of a proposed investigation by the United States government for selling “deadly baby and toddler products.”Two leaders from the Consumer Products Safety Commission said in an open letter Wednesday that they want commission staff to look into how the two companies comply with US safety regulations. Pointing to “recent media reports” that dangerous products sold for kids are easy to find on the websites, CPSC commissioners Peter Feldman and Douglas Dziak said they want to “better understand these firms, particularly their focus on low-value direct-to-consumer” shipmentsOne particular concern for the Commission is the companies’ use of “de minmis,” a rule that exempts shipments valued at $800 or less from tariffs. Much of the products sold on Shein and Temu are cheap and range from furniture to fast fashion. “As the Commission sets its priorities for next year, we expect agency staff to investigate the companies’ safety and compliance controls; relationships with third-party sellers and consumers; and any representations they make when products are imported,” Feldman and Dziak wrote. Last year, a US congressional commission called out Shein and Temu in a report that suggested the companies and others in China were potentially linked to the use of forced labor, exploitation of trade loopholes, product safety hazards or intellectual property theft.
Persons: New York CNN —, Peter Feldman, Douglas Dziak, ” Feldman, Dziak, Shein, ” Temu, they’re Organizations: New, New York CNN, United, Consumer Products Safety Commission, CNN Locations: New York, United States, China
Peloton fined $19 million for unsafe treadmills
  + stars: | 2023-01-05 | by ( Alexandra Peers | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +2 min
New York CNN —Peloton has agreed to pay a $19 million fine for failing to promptly report treadmill hazards and for distributing recalled treadmills, the Consumer Products Safety Commission said Thursday. The fine resolves charges that the company had “knowingly failed to immediately report” to the US regulator defects with its Tread+ treadmill, it said in a statement. The civil penalty also settles charges that Peloton distributed recalled treadmills in violation of the Consumer Product Safety Act. In May, then CEO John Foley said Peloton “made a mistake in our initial response to the CPSC’s request. Peloton had received reports of “entrapment” by its Tread+ treadmills as early as 2018, it said.
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