China’s booming – but so is the China-sourced lawsuit business. With everything from toothpaste contaminants to tires, cough syrup and shrimps – the crisis is spreading.

Chinese dragon

Not since exploding Ford Pintos in the 1970s has there been as incendiary a catalyst for recalls as China’s recent spate of consumer product scares. Since March a cluster of incidents involving potentially deadly, defective, or contaminated products imported from China – pet food, toys, tires, toothpaste, cough syrup, shrimp – has awakened both that country and the United States to a latent crisis.

The larger question is just who is legally responsible when a chemical used in antifreeze ends up in a tube of toothpaste. U.S. companies are starting to find out as the lawsuits roll in that the tainted ingredients may come from China, but the liability is here.

U.S. regulators – the FDA, the Consumer Product Safety Commission, and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration – generally hold U.S. importers responsible for ensuring that foreign-made products meet American safety standards.

But often the importer doesn’t have nearly the wherewithal to do so. Foreign Tire Sales (FTS), a 16- employee, family-owned business that operates from a basement in Union, N.J., is now hurtling toward bankruptcy as it begins a recall of 450,000 Chinese-made tires at a projected cost of $90 million. As things stand, when the money runs out, the recall will end.

In May, FTS was sued in state court in Philadelphia after its tires allegedly caused an accident last year in which two passengers were killed and one severely brain damaged. FTS has sued the manufacturer, Hangzhou Zhongce Rubber Co. Ltd. (HZ), in federal court in Newark, and the victims’ families have sued HZ in state court in Philadelphia. So far, HZ has responded to neither action, and it has angrily denied any defect. Even if the U.S. plaintiffs win default judgments against HZ, it’s unclear whether they will be able to enforce them anywhere.

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