Product Safety News
Hearing Confirms Asbestos Bill is Bad for Victims, Bad for Taxpayers
June 7 Today the Senate Judiciary Committee held a hearing on
the re-introduced asbestos bailout bill. In response, Ken Suggs, President
of the American Association for Justice (AAJ), issued the following
statement. Read
the statement
Asbestos Bill Remains $20 Billion Corporate Bailout for Asbestos
Companies That Knowingly Poisoned People
June 2 In response to the re-introduction of the asbestos
bailout bill in the U.S. Senate, Ken Suggs, President of the American Association for Justice (AAJ), issued the following statement.
Read their story
Auto Executives Knowingly Endangered Customers to Increase Corporate
Profits
Mar 14 The Anderson family's terrifying experience in a
Chevy Malibu that exploded into flames shows the need for the civil
justice system to hold manufacturers of dangerous products accountable.
Read their story
Rhode Island Civil Justice System Protects Children from Dangers
of Lead Paint
Mar 1 On February 2, a Rhode Island jury ruled that three
paint companies endangered children by selling lead paint they knew
for decades to be deadly, and today the judge in the case ordered
the companies to clean up lead paint problems in over 300,000 homes.
Read
the facts
Auto Manufacturers Know How to Make Stronger Roofs, but Choose Not
To
December 6 Under the Transportation Equity Act of 2005,
Congress directed the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
(NHTSA) to establish rules to reduce deaths and injuries caused
by vehicle rollover accidents and to specifically propose a new
standard for how strong a vehicles roof must be.
Currently, 10,000 people die and 24,000 people are injured every
year in rollover accidents. Instead of acting to significantly reduce
injuries, NHTSA proposed a weak roof crush standard
that leaves safety at the status quo70% of vehicles on the
road currently meet the new proposed standard.
Still worse, the proposed rule marks an unprecedented power grab
by a federal agency, preempting all state requirements and
state tort law. The result: as long as a car manufacturer meets
the proposed standard, no individual may bring a claim in any court
if they are injured or killed because of a badly made roof.
NHTSA Rolls Over for the
Auto Industry
Background
Laws that hold manufacturers of defective products liable for
harming consumers are a powerful warning to wrongdoers that they
cannot market and sell products that injure or kill consumers and
expect to get away with it. AAJ fights for families. We oppose
efforts that would limit consumers' access to court to confront
wrongdoers, as well as efforts to restrict remedies for consumers
who bring legitimate products liability claims against manufacturers.
Product Liability Laws
Make America Safer
Cases That Have Made
Families Safer