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Recalled Simplicity Bassinets May Carry Graco, Winnie the Pooh Brands

Two infant deaths blamed on recalled bassinets





By Joseph S. Enoch
ConsumerAffairs.com

September 11, 2008

Simplicity

Simplicity Drop-Side Cribs Recalled
CPSC Issues Warning Against Dangerous Simplicity Bassinets
Wal-Mart Selling Bassinets Blamed for Killing Two Babies
Missouri Baby's Death Blamed on Simplicity Bassinet
Nearly 1 Million Simplicity & Graco Cribs Recalled After Infant Deaths
Simplicity Nursery-in-a-Box Cribs
Simplicity White Lancaster Cribs
Graco Aspen Cribs Recalled for Suffocation Risk
---
Simplicity Complaints

The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) said today it has learned that some bassinets in the Simplicity recall announced last month carry the Graco logo and “Winnie the Pooh” motif licensed by Disney Consumer Products, as ConsumerAffairs.com reported last month.

The CPSC urged consumers to check their bassinets carefully to ensure they are not using one of the recalled models, which have been implicated in the deaths of two infants.

The Simplicity bassinets with the Graco logo were sold between 2001 and 2004. The Simplicity bassinets with the “Winnie the Pooh” motif were sold between 2002 and 2008.

The following retailers have voluntarily agreed to recall the product and provide a refund or store credit to consumers who return the product to the store where purchased:

  • Wal-Mart Stores Inc., Bentonville, Ark.


  • Toys “R” Us Inc., Wayne, N.J.


  • Kmart Corp., Hoffman Estates, Ill.


  • Big Lots!, Columbus, Ohio


  • Target, Minneapolis, Minnesota


  • J.C. Penney, Plano, Texas


  • AAFES, Dallas, Texas


  • Amazon.com, LLC Seattle, WA


  • Bed Bath & Beyond, Union, NJ


  • Burlington Coat Factory, Burlington, NC


  • Buy Buy Baby Garden City, NY


  • Chelsea&Scott LTD (One Step Ahead),
    Lake Bluff, IL
  • CSN Stores of Boston, MA


  • Fingerhut Direct Marketing, Eden Prairie, MN


  • Frogs and Lily Pads, St. Johnsbury, VT


  • Kohl’s Department Stores, Menomonee Falls, WI


  • ShopKo Stores, Inc., Green Bay, WI


  • Sweet Pea Décor, North Beach, MD


  • USA Baby #47, Overland Park, KS


  • USA Baby #58, Brookfield, WI


  • USA Baby #136, Berlin, CT


  • USA Baby #141, Waipahu, HI


  • USA Baby #142, Virginia Beach, VA


  • USA Baby #147, Clovis, CA

CPSC learned that on August 21, 2008, a 6 1/2-month-old girl from Shawnee, Kan. was strangled when she became entrapped between the bassinet’s metal bars. On September 29, 2007, a 4-month-old girl from Noel, Mo. became entrapped in the metal bars of the bassinet and died.

It issued its first warning urging parents and caregivers to stop using the bassinets on August 29. That warning came eight hours after an exclusive ConsumerAffairs.com report about the dangers of the Simplicity bassinets, sold largely at Wal-Mart.

Critics said the agency had known about the dangers of the bassinets for months and could have prevented the recent death of six-month-old Kennedy Brotherton.

The Simplicity 3-in-1 and 4-in-1 convertible bassinets contain metal bars that are covered by an adjustable fabric flap which is attached by velcro. The fabric is folded down when the bassinet is converted into a bed-side co-sleeping position. If the velcro is not properly re-secured when the flap is adjusted, an infant can slip through the opening and become entrapped in the metal bars and suffocate. This warning does not cover bassinets produced in recent months that have fabric permanently attached over the lower bar.

Due to the serious hazard these bassinets pose to babies, CPSC said it urges all consumers to share this safety warning with day care centers, consignment stores, family and friends to ensure that no child is placed to sleep in a Simplicity convertible bassinet covered by this warning.

Below is a listing of Simplicity 3-in-1 and 4-in-1 Convertible "Close-Sleeper" model bassinets that are included in the recall. The model number can be found on a label on the underside of the bassinet.

RECALLED Model Numbers

3000CL3112DOH63011WHE9250A3016LAU3046GTM
3010BIJ3112DOH73011WHK3012SOM3016MIR3046HAN
3010HAV3122BAN3012BIJ5750SAR3017NCB3047MON
3010NGS3122TGC3012OXF3012TGT3020SFB3050LIL
3010TGT3010BIJC3012SFD3013PRO3025BER3050SAR
3010WHE343-83633040SAR9250B3025C3060GFS
3040LAU343-83993040SPR3014LOL3026CRT3060TFS
TD25003045FEL3050SWT3014NGS3027MIS8393
3040WDS3111DPC3060BTL3015GFR3030SAR3040SPRC
3045DRM3012LLTC3112BDY3070MAN3040CLA3040LAC
3111ZOL3050SWTC3045OXFC3112DOH5730FKB3045DRMC

An apparently faulty frame on the Winnie the Pooh 4-in-1 Simplicity Bassinet crushed and suffocated two babies according to family members and a police report. The Simplicity 3-in-1 and 4-in-1 convertible bassinets had a removable flap of cloth that separated a side railing and the bed. Babies could slip through the space between the mattress and the railing.

The most recent death occurred last month when Kennedy Brotherton slipped between the mattress and the side railing after the mattress came loose from the frame, her aunt, Melissa Brotherton, told ConsumerAffairs.com in a phone interview.

Kennedy's body slipped through a space between the mattress and the railing until she dangled by her head on the lower bar of the railing and choked, according to Capt. Ron Copeland of the Shawnee Police Department in Kansas.

"She was laughing and smiling when her parents put her to bed," Brotherton said. "They checked on her three times within an hour period. They were in the living room less than 10 feet away. She never cried."

The first death occurred last fall when Katelynn Simon suffered a similar fate in the same bassinet. "The rail design allowed her to slip her legs through and as she kept inching out she slipped lower," Simon's grandmother, Lori Crammond, wrote in a complaint to ConsumerAffairs.com. "Finally, her lungs were unable to expand."

The product appears to be sold exclusively at Wal-Mart and on Wal-Mart's Web site. Late last month, ConsumerAffairs.com found the product at two Washington, D.C.-area Wal-Marts we visited. The bassinet comes in two different Winnie the Pooh fabrics with the product identifications 3123DOH8 and 3112DOH7 and sells for between $100 and $110.

Pictures of bassinets on sale at Wal-Mart.

Crammond wrote that she warned Wal-Mart of the dangerous bassinet last fall. "Wal-Mart is very aware of what happened but continues to sell it with a five star rating," she wrote.

The Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) is simply issuing a warning rather than a recall because SFCA, the company that owns the defunct Simplicity, Inc. and the products it manufactured, refused to cooperate.

"SFCA maintains that it is not responsible for products previously manufactured by Simplicity Inc.," according to a CPSC press release. Simplicity's lawyer, Rick Locker, has not responded to multiple requests for comment.

A phone call to the company's headquarters was met with a prerecorded message stating "Simplicity, Inc. is no longer in business and we no longer service Simplicity, Inc. products."

Using authority recently granted to the agency under a new law, the two standing commissioners were able to vote to release the warning. Further action may be taken against SFCA, Inc. to force it to recall the products.

An attorney for the Simons notified the CPSC a few days after Katelynn's death about the dangers of the Simplicity bassinet, but never heard back from the agency, he told the Chicago Tribune.

Agency spokeswoman Julie Vallese told the paper they are still investigating the death of Simon because “there are still questions surrounding the circumstances of that baby's death."

But McDonald County, Mo. coroner B.J. Goodwin III told the Tribune there was no doubt the death was an accident. "It was clear-cut," he said. "We all felt it was the crib that caused the passing."

Both the Brotherton and Simon families said their goal is to warn as many consumers as possible."Our main concern is to get the product recalled," Brotherton said.

More than a million Simplicity cribs were recalled for the same reason from May 2005 to September 2007 in four separate recalls, after four children died and countless others were injured when they were trapped between the mattress and the railing.

The product also is under the Baby Disney product line since the bassinet is adorned in Disney's Winnie the Pooh characters. Disney responded last night but has not returned a subsequent phone call.



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