Consumer Alert: Dozens of Dangerous Products Recalled in November — Many Popular Holiday Gifts Included 

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    Attorney General Todd Rokita urges Hoosiers to check toys, furniture, clothing, vehicles, and household items before wrapping gifts or using them this holiday season.

    Just weeks before Christmas, Attorney General Todd Rokita is sounding the alarm on dozens of dangerous products recalled nationwide in November 2025 — many of them top-selling holiday gifts and everyday items already in Indiana homes.

    “The holidays should be a time of togetherness, not a time to worry about defective products that could cause you or your family harm,” Attorney General Todd Rokita said. “Hoosiers need to know if purchased items are flawed or have the potential to hurt them or their families. If you have purchased one of these recalled products, you should stop using them immediately and follow the manufacturer’s recall instructions.”

    The Consumer Product Safety Commission reports the following products were recalled in November:  

    Outdoor Products and Vehicles

    These products pose a risk of serious injuries.

    • Baby High Chairs (convertible) : Product was sold without the required attached restraint system, posing a deadly fall hazard and entrapment hazard to babies and children; sold online on Amazon. 
    • Certain Tesla Powerwall 2 AC Battery Power System: The lithium-ion battery cells in certain Powerwall 2 systems can cause the unit to stop functioning during normal use, which can result in overheating and, in some cases, smoke or flame and can cause death or serious injury due to fire and burn hazards; sold at Tesla.com/ powerwall and through certified Tesla installers nationwide. 

    Children Products:

    These products present a risk of fire, serious injury or death.

    • Alinux Baby Loungers: Product poses serious risks of fall and entrapment hazards to infants as sides are too low; sold on Amazon.
    • Anzmtosn Magnet Fidget Spinner Sets: Magnets are swallowed, they can attract each other, or other metal objects, and become lodged in the digestive system resulting in perforations, twisting, and/or blockage of the intestines, blood poisoning and death; sold on Amazon. 
    • Bettina Doll Set with Magic Light Unicorn: Battery compartment of the unicorn contains button cell batteries that can be easily accessed by children. When button cell or coin batteries are swallowed, the ingested batteries can cause serious injuries, internal chemical burns and death; sold at Amazon. 
    • Children’s WYBITNY Bed Rails: When installed adjacent to the bed, the child can become entrapped in the enclosed openings posing a risk of serious injury or death due to entrapment; sold at Amazon. 
    • Inkari Plush Alpaca Toys: The recalled toys are intended for children under three years of age, and the eyes can detach, which violates the small parts ban, posing a choking hazard to children.
    • Macardac Baby Loungers: The sides are too low to contain an infant and the enclosed openings at the foot of the loungers are wider than allowed, posing serious risks of fall and entrapment hazards to infants; sold online on Amazon. 
    • Mallimoda Children’s Pajama Sets: Product violates the mandatory standards for children’s sleepwear, posing a risk of serious injuries or deadly burn hazard to children ; sold on Amazon.
    • Napei Collapsible Infant Bath Tubs : Product violates mandatory standards and contains button cell or coin batteries that can be accessed easily by children. If batteries are swallowed, the ingested batteries can cause serious injuries, internal chemical burns and death; sold at Amazon. 
    • Play Yards: Infants can become entrapped under the mattress or between the side of the play yard and the mattress, posing a risk of serious injury or deadly suffocation hazard; sold on Amazon. 
    • Sofoliana and Glotika Baby Loungers: The sides of the product are too low to contain an infant and the enclosed openings at the foot of the loungers are wider than allowed, posing serious risks of fall and entrapment hazards to infants; sold at Amazon.
    • Umeyda Nightgowns: The product violates the mandatory flammability standards for children’s sleepwear, posing a risk of burn injuries to children; sold at Amazon.  
    • Zippee Activity Toys: The toys contain spherical ends that can reach the back of the throat, posing a serious choking hazard to children; sold at Amazon.com and PlayMobi.com and other online platforms and in specialty toy stores. 

    Home Products: 

    These products present fire, burn or laceration risks in household settings.  

    • Great Lakes Select Button Cell and Coin Batteries: The button cell and lithium coin batteries are not in child-resistant packaging and do not bear the warning labels required under  Reese’s Law . If a child swallows button cell or coin batteries, the ingested batteries can cause serious injuries, including internal chemical burns and death; sold at Downeast Wholesalers Renys, International Wholesale, Lots & More, Northwoods Wholesale Outlet, a Ben Franklin store in Tennessee, and other stores.
    • MyOnlyStyler Root Booster Hair Dryers: The handheld hair dryers lack an immersion protection device, which presents a substantial product hazard to consumers, posing the risk of death or serious injury from electrocution or shock if the hair dryers fall into water while plugged in ; sold online at Amazon.com .
    • Neaude Adult Portable Bed Rails: The product violates the mandatory standard for adult portable bed rails, posing a serious entrapment hazard and risk of death by asphyxiation. The bed rails do not have the required warning labels; sold on Amazon.
    • STIHL BR 800 Backpack Blower: The fan wheel inside the backpack blower can break apart, posing a laceration hazard; sold at a uthorized STIHL independent dealers nationwide.
    • Vivohome Adult Portable Bed Rails: When the bed rails are attached to a bed, users can become entrapped within the bed rail or between the bed rail and the side of the mattress posing a serious entrapment hazard and risk of death by asphyxiation; sold at Amazon.com

    If you believe you recently purchased a recalled product, stop using it, and check its recall notice (linked above for all products). Then follow the notice’s instructions, including where to return the product, how to get the product fixed, how to dispose of the product, how to receive a refund for the product or what steps must be taken to receive a replacement product.  

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