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Asweets Recalls its Baby Activity Push Walker

Parents may be alarmed to learn that Asweets has recalled its wooden baby activity push walker due to a strangulation hazard. The rubber rings on the rear wheels of a walker may separate from the wheels and detach, and this can result in a young child being at risk of strangulation. Asweets has received 10 reports of the rubber rings detaching from the wheels, though no injuries to babies have been reported. On June 2, 2022, the company recalled these walkers. If your baby is injured by an Asweets walker, or another walker that may be defective, you should give the experienced product liability lawyers of Moll Law Group a call. Cases with which we’ve been involved have resulted in damages in the billions.

Contact Moll Law Group About Your Claim

The remedy for the recalled Asweets baby walkers is a repair of the walker. The repair involves free replacement rear wheels. It’s important to take recalled walkers away from your children and stop using them until they are repaired. Around 13,300 units were affected by this recall. You can contact Asweets directly to get instructions on how to get replacement rear wheels. Retailers that sold the affected walker included Crate and Barrel, Nordstrom, Albee Baby, Bloomingdale’s, The Tot, and children’s boutiques.

However, in some instances, babies are injured by defective walkers, and a simple replacement really part doesn’t address the family’s needs. When you buy your baby a walker, you anticipate that it will be reasonably safe to use, and you don’t expect to incur medical bills because you allowed your baby to use it. Unfortunately, babies have been seriously injured while using various types of walkers their parents or caregivers assumed were safe. If your baby is injured by an Asweets walker, or any other kind of walker, you may not have enough saved to address the injuries and you may wish to consider bringing a product liability lawsuit for damages.

Products, such as baby walkers, may be defective in terms of their manufacturing, marketing, or design. When a rubber ring detaches from the wheel of a walker, it is likely there is either a design or a manufacturing flaw. With design defects, every unit of the product or model is affected because there has been some type of flaw in the way the designer intended to have the product work. However, a manufacturing flaw, or deviation from the design, may be found in a single unit, or multiple units within a single batch. In the course of litigating a product liability claim related to defects, it is likely we’ll need to retain an expert to provide opinion testimony about whether there was a defect, what type, and whether the defect caused your baby’s injury.

We may be able to pursue damages for you and your injured baby under a theory of negligence, strict liability, breach of warranty, or breach of contract. Each state has its own rules about which theories would be appropriate to apply in a product liability context. In order to recover damages under a theory of negligence, we will need to show it’s more likely than not the defendant owed you and your baby a duty of care, but breached it, thereby causing your baby’s injuries. Generally, strict liability cases are more straightforward requiring our lawyers to prove: (1) there was a defect and (2) the defect caused your injuries.

Call the Product Liability Lawyers of Moll Group

If your baby was injured by a defective Asweets or other baby walker, you should call the seasoned Chicago-based product liability lawyers of Moll Law Group. We represent children and their families around the country. Please complete our online form or give us a call at 312.462.1700.