California Tobacco Company Agrees to Pay $225,000 Fine for Selling
Dangerous Cigarette Lighters
NEWS from CPSC
U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission
Office of Information and Public Affairs
Washington, DC 20207
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CPSC Consumer Hotline: (800) 638-2772
October 4, 2001
CPSC CONTACT: Melissa Hampshire
Release # 02-005
(301) 504-7631
California Tobacco Company Agrees to Pay $225,000 Fine for Selling
Dangerous Cigarette Lighters
WASHINGTON, D.C. - The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC)
announced today that The Customer Company and Cigarettes Cheaper, both
headquartered in Benicia, Calif., have agreed to pay $225,000 to settle
allegations that it knowingly violated the Consumer Product Safety Act
by selling disposable cigarette lighters that failed to meet government
requirements for child resistance. The fine settles a lawsuit that was
filed by the U.S. Department of Justice in the U.S. District Court for
the Eastern District of California.
The CPSC alleged that The Customer Company and Cigarettes Cheaper, which
operates more than 224 retail tobacco stores throughout California,
violated the law in 1996 by selling cigarette lighters that were labeled
as having a child-resistant safety mechanism, but in fact did not
contain the mechanism. The Customer Company and Cigarette Cheaper
illegally sold more than 27,000 such lighters.
In 1999, the CPSC again discovered that the defendants were illegally
selling lighters in stores in Los Angeles, Daly City, Alameda, Redondo
Beach, Gardena, Petaluma, Santa Ana, Walnut Creek, Oceanside, San
Marcos, and Encinitas. In some stores the lighters were offered for
sale without child-resistant safety mechanisms and in other stores
employees were removing the safety mechanisms before selling them to
consumers.
"Those selling cigarette lighters are on notice that the CPSC will not
tolerate the flagrant disregard of laws intended to protect children and
their families," said CPSC Chairman Ann Brown. "The CPSC will
vigorously investigate and seek prosecution of any company that
knowingly violates our safety standards."
Since the enactment of the safety standard for cigarette lighters in
July 1994, deaths to children are down 43%. Before cigarette lighters
were required to be child-resistant, fire loss data revealed an
estimated annual average of 7,250 residential structure fires, 190
deaths and 1,290 injuries that resulted from children under 5 playing
with lighters. The resulting risk of death in those fires was more than
three times the risk in residential fires generally.
In agreeing to settle this matter, Cigarettes Cheaper denies the CPSC's
allegations and denies that it violated the Consumer Product Safety Act
or any other laws administered by the CPSC.