Presto Pressure Cooker Lawsuit Filed After Serious Burns Caused By Defective Safety Features
The manufacturer knew about the defective safety features, but sold the devices anyway, according to the Presto pressure cooker lawsuit.
The manufacturer knew about the defective safety features, but sold the devices anyway, according to the Presto pressure cooker lawsuit.
Pressure cooker explosion was caused by defective and unreasonably dangerous condition when it was sold without warnings about the risk of severe burns, injuries.
The CPSC is investigating property damage and injury reports linked to the Best Buy air fryer recall.
Plaintiff claims failed Instant Pot pressure cooker safety measures allowed the lid to be removed while the contents were pressurized, leading to severe burns.
Almost a million pressure cookers were subject to a Crock-Pot recall in November 2020, only a few months before the plaintiff suffered devastating burns in a pressure cooker explosion.
Safety features designed to keep the lid from being removed while the contents were under pressure did not work as advertised, the lawsuit claims
Lawsuit claims the Oster pressure cooker exploded due to a lack of sufficient safety features.
During a November 2020 recall, the CPSC reported it received 99 reports of burn injuries linked to the lids coming off of Sunbeam Crock-Pot pressure cookers.
SharkNinja made false and misleading claims about the safety features, according to the Ninja Foodie lawsuit
Plaintiffs claim coffee pot warranties contain illegal repair restrictions.