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Ikea paying $50 million for dresser tip-over deaths Lawsuits claimed furniture ‘defective and dangerous’
Philadelphia Inquirer
Dec. 22, 2016 11:41 am
Ikea will pay $50 million to the parents of three toddlers who died when its dressers toppled onto them, lawyers for the families said.
The settlement ends wrongful-death suits filed by the families and comes six months after those deaths and others prompted the unprecedented recall of 29 million Ikea dressers. At the time, the company acknowledged the dressers were at serious risk of tipping onto and killing children.
'Ted's death was completely preventable,' Janet McGee of Apple Valley, Minn., whose 22-month-old son Theodore died last February when a Malm dresser fell on him, said in a statement. 'We would never want other parents to have to experience what we have been forced to endure. This has been a tragic, heartbreaking season for us and our family, and no amount of money will make up for the loss of our sweet little boy.'
The plaintiffs also include the parents of Curren Collas, a 2-year-old from West Chester, Pa., and Camden Ellis, a 2-year-old from Snohomish, Wash. Both died in 2014.
The $50 million will be split equally among the three families, with an undisclosed share going to the attorneys.
As part of the settlement, Ikea has also agreed to make $50,000 donations to three children's hospitals in the name of the boys. One will go to the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia in memory of Curren Collas.
The lawsuits, filed in Philadelphia court, claimed the Ikea dressers were 'defective and dangerous' and that the Sweden-based retailing giant continued to sell them despite the risk, while not properly warning consumers.
In all, seven deaths have been publicly linked to unstable Ikea dressers, the first in 1989.
Ikea has made previous payouts to the parents of at least two other children killed in tip-overs of their furniture.
The IKEA logo is seen outside IKEA Concept Center, a furniture store and headquarters of the IKEA brand owner Inter IKEA, in Delft, the Netherlands March 16, 2016. REUTERS/Yves Herman/File Photo

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