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CPSC Furniture Tip-Over Recall Ledger: Hasuit, Timechee And Childcraft Strap Records

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Status, July 1 source check: source-cleared for a BadPD public-safety recall ledger. The official records are three CPSC June 11, 2026 furniture tip-over and entrapment recalls: Hasuit 7-Drawer Dressers / CPSC 26-552, Timechee Changing Table Dressers / CPSC 26-541, and School Specialty plastic tip restraint kits included in Childcraft furniture / CPSC 26-540.

This is recall-record accountability reporting, not furniture-installation, repair, childproofing, legal, resale, refund, school-procurement, daycare-compliance, interior-design, or purchase advice. The official CPSC records, seller or company remedy instructions, purchase records, product labels, and any later CPSC amendments control whether a specific item is included and what remedy proof is accepted.

Three Different Records, Same Public-Safety Lane

The Hasuit recall covers about 3,000 black 7-drawer dressers sold on Amazon.com by Hasuit Direct from September 2023 through May 2026 for about $160. The recalled dressers are made of wood, measure 27.6 inches wide, 44.5 inches tall, and 15.8 inches long, and weigh 102 pounds. CPSC’s record says SKU AJ-DJ502571_1 is printed on the product packaging.

The Timechee recall covers about 10,354 changing table dressers sold on Amazon by Timechee from September 2023 through May 2026 for about $190. The recalled dresser is white, made of wood, has five drawers, two shelves, and a two-section changing-table top. It measures 47.2 inches long, 19.5 inches wide, and 36.1 inches tall, and weighs 160 pounds. The box is marked KF200066US-01XN-003. The manufacturer is listed as Fujian Xiniuniu Home Furnishing Co. Ltd., of China.

The School Specialty recall is different. It is not a whole-dresser recall. It covers about 15,616 plastic tip restraint kits, also referred to as furniture straps, that were included in Childcraft furniture sold by School Specialty. The furniture came with two plastic tip restraint kits and installation instructions. The recalled kits include two white plastic brackets or mounts, a white plastic cable zip tie, two pairs of screws, and two drywall anchors.

Those distinctions matter. The Hasuit and Timechee records say the dressers themselves are unstable if not anchored to the wall. The School Specialty record says the plastic tip restraints can break or degrade, creating a hidden defect because consumers may believe furniture is secured against tip-over when the restraint is not reliable. All three records belong in the same accountability lane because the public risk is furniture instability around children, but the remedy and proof path are not the same.

What CPSC Says About The Hazards

For the Hasuit and Timechee dressers, CPSC says the recalled dressers are unstable if they are not anchored to the wall. The records describe tip-over and entrapment hazards that can result in serious injury or death to children. Both dresser records say the products violate the mandatory safety standards required by the STURDY Act.

The School Specialty record says the plastic tip restraint kits can break or degrade, posing tip-over and entrapment hazards. It adds an important accountability phrase: this is a hidden defect because consumers who purchase and install the product may be under a false sense of security that their furniture is safe from a tip-over incident.

None of the three records reports injuries or incidents as of the CPSC recall postings. That source status should be preserved exactly. No reported incident does not erase the federal hazard finding. The CPSC records still identify serious injury or death risks, and two of the three records identify mandatory clothing-storage-unit standard violations.

The difference between an unanchored dresser and a defective restraint kit is also practical. A consumer can sometimes see that a dresser is not anchored. A defective plastic restraint can be less visible after installation. In a school, daycare, clinic, playroom, or home setting, that distinction affects how the inventory should be checked and how proof of correction should be documented.

Remedies And Proof Requirements

For the Hasuit dresser recall, CPSC says consumers should stop using the recalled dressers immediately if they are not anchored to the wall and place them in an area that children cannot access. Consumers are asked to pull out all seven drawers for destruction, write RECALLED on the cabinet in permanent marker, photograph the cabinet and drawers, and email the photo to hasuitrecall@outlook.com. The record then says consumers should dispose of the product. The remedy option is refund.

For the Timechee changing-table dresser recall, CPSC says consumers should stop using the recalled dressers immediately if they are not anchored to the wall and place them somewhere children cannot access. Consumers should contact Timechee for instructions to identify affected units and dispose of the dressers to receive a full refund. Consumers are asked to email a photo showing disposal to TimecheeRecall@timechee.com.

For the School Specialty/Childcraft tip restraint kit recall, the remedy is replacement rather than refund. CPSC says consumers should stop using the recalled plastic tip restraints immediately and contact School Specialty for a free replacement tip restraint kit made of stainless steel. Consumers should keep children away from furniture secured with the recalled plastic restraints while waiting for replacement kits. The record says School Specialty is contacting direct purchasers and mailing two replacement tip restraint kits with the notice.

These remedy details create different records to watch. Hasuit and Timechee require destruction or disposal proof and refund processing. School Specialty requires replacement shipment and installation of stainless steel restraint kits. A complete accountability file would show purchaser notice delivery, refund completion, replacement-kit delivery, installation proof where available, and any follow-up notice for institutions that bought Childcraft furniture through procurement channels.

Amazon, Schools, And Secondary Possession

The Hasuit and Timechee records identify Amazon sales. That creates a buyer-notification question. Marketplace recall notices should be traceable to the buyer account, product listing, order date, seller name, recall number, and remedy instructions. A household that moved, gave away furniture, or bought the product for a nursery or rental unit may not still have the packaging or order email.

The School Specialty record raises a different problem. Childcraft furniture can sit in classrooms, early-childhood spaces, libraries, offices, clinics, and institutional settings. The recall is not limited to a household buyer looking up an Amazon order. It may require inventory checks by purchasing departments, facilities teams, school administrators, and childcare operators.

CPSC’s record says School Specialty is contacting all consumers who purchased Childcraft furniture directly and mailing two replacement tip restraint kits. That is useful, but it does not answer every public question. It does not show whether furniture was resold, reassigned, moved between rooms, donated, stored, or installed by a contractor. It also does not prove replacement kits were installed after delivery.

The common public-safety point is documentation. For a dresser, the stronger proof is a recall-specific refund or disposal record. For a restraint kit, the stronger proof is replacement-kit receipt and installation. For institutional furniture, the strongest proof is an inventory log that ties item numbers, rooms, replacement kit installation, and follow-up inspection.

Plain-Language File Check

These recalls are about furniture that can tip over or give a false sense of protection against tip-over. CPSC says the Hasuit and Timechee dressers are unstable if they are not anchored. CPSC says the School Specialty plastic tip restraint kits can break or degrade.

The Hasuit product is a black seven-drawer dresser sold through Amazon. The Timechee product is a white changing-table dresser sold through Amazon. The School Specialty product is a plastic tip restraint kit included with Childcraft furniture. That third recall is easy to miss because the recalled item may already be installed behind or under furniture.

The source records say no incidents or injuries were reported for these three recalls at posting. That is good source status, not a reason to ignore the recalls. Tip-over and entrapment hazards are high-consequence risks for children. The School Specialty record also says the restraint-kit defect can be hidden because a consumer may believe the furniture is secured.

For households and institutions, the useful question is not simply whether furniture has a strap. The useful question is whether the dresser or strap is part of a CPSC recall, whether the remedy instruction was followed, and whether there is proof tied to the specific recall number.

Confirmed, Pending, Not Established

Confirmed by CPSC records

  • CPSC 26-552 covers about 3,000 Hasuit 7-Drawer Dressers sold on Amazon.com by Hasuit Direct.
  • CPSC 26-541 covers about 10,354 Timechee Changing Table Dressers sold on Amazon by Timechee.
  • CPSC 26-540 covers about 15,616 plastic tip restraint kits included with Childcraft furniture sold by School Specialty.
  • The Hasuit and Timechee dresser records cite STURDY Act mandatory clothing-storage-unit standard violations.
  • The Hasuit and Timechee records identify tip-over and entrapment hazards that can cause serious injury or death to children.
  • The School Specialty record says the plastic tip restraints can break or degrade and can create a hidden false sense of security.
  • All three records list no reported incidents or injuries at posting.
  • The Hasuit and Timechee remedies are refunds tied to destruction or disposal proof.
  • The School Specialty remedy is a free stainless steel replacement tip restraint kit.

Pending or missing records

  • Amazon purchaser-notification proof for Hasuit and Timechee buyers.
  • Refund completion counts for Hasuit and Timechee.
  • School Specialty replacement-kit shipment and installation completion records.
  • Room-by-room institutional inventory records for Childcraft furniture where applicable.
  • Any later CPSC incident update, amended recall, enforcement action, import record, procurement record, or court record.

Not established by this source set

  • That every Hasuit, Timechee, School Specialty, or Childcraft furniture product is included.
  • That any child was injured by these recalled products.
  • That every affected purchaser has been notified.
  • That every recalled dresser has been destroyed, disposed of, or refunded.
  • That every recalled plastic tip restraint kit has been replaced with stainless steel and installed.
  • That any seller, school, daycare, or institutional buyer failed to act after notice.

BadPD Bottom Line

CPSC 26-552, 26-541, and 26-540 belong in one BadPD furniture tip-over accountability ledger because they show three different ways a child-safety furniture record can fail: an unstable dresser, an unstable changing-table dresser, and a defective tip restraint kit that may make secured furniture appear safer than it is. The official records are clear enough to publish now, and the follow-up records are concrete: purchaser notices, refunds, replacement kits, installation proof, and any later incident or enforcement updates.

BadPD will update this ledger if CPSC, Amazon, Hasuit Direct, Timechee, School Specialty, Childcraft purchasers, school districts, childcare operators, public procurement records, consumer-protection agencies, court filings, or other accountable records add purchaser-notification proof, refund completion, replacement-kit installation evidence, incident updates, amended recall instructions, enforcement records, or product-testing records tied to these three CPSC recalls.

Source Ledger

Featured image is symbolic editorial artwork created for BadPD. It is not CPSC, Hasuit, Timechee, School Specialty, Childcraft, Amazon, school, daycare, purchaser, child, furniture, incident, injury, death, entrapment, tip-over, installation, refund, or replacement-kit photography and is not a depiction of any specific recalled product.

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