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Consumer Safety & Recalls

June 11-25 CPSC Safety Recall Ledger: Kidisle, Treatlife, Amana, Baby Oil And Busy Boards

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BadPD source-check, July 1, 2026. This ledger is built from official U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission recall notices dated June 11, June 18, and June 25, 2026. It covers Kidisle coffeemakers, Treatlife smoke and carbon monoxide detectors, MedPride Baby Oil, Small Fish Montessori Busy Board toys, Amana air conditioners and heat pumps made by Daikin Comfort Technologies Manufacturing, Super Off-Road solar wireless power banks, Bada Boom Pyro Diablo “Diablo Rising” fireworks, and Kith Kids Kithmas Plaid Lounge Sets.

This is recall-record accountability reporting, not product-use, repair, medical, legal, retailer, warranty, resale, child-care, fire-safety, fireworks, appliance, or battery-handling advice. The official CPSC pages, model numbers, UPCs where listed, purchase dates, serial numbers, seller channels, company recall processes, and later CPSC amendments control product inclusion and remedy steps. The public-interest question for BadPD is narrower: after a government recall notice is published, who can prove that the warning reached the households, job sites, gift recipients, dealers, and marketplace buyers who actually have the recalled products?

What CPSC Confirmed

The highest-injury record in this batch is CPSC recall 26-557 for Kidisle Coffeemakers. CPSC says about 17,600 coffeemakers are included. The agency says the recalled coffeemakers can become clogged, causing hot liquid or steam to build up and be released unexpectedly during use. CPSC lists at least 107 reports of hot liquid or steam release and at least 27 reported injuries, including first and second-degree burns that required medical treatment. CPSC says the coffeemakers were sold online at Amazon, Walmart, and eBay from June 2024 through April 2026 for about $49.

CPSC recall 26-582 covers Treatlife Smoke and Carbon Monoxide detectors. CPSC says about 20 units are included. The agency says the recalled detectors can fail to alert consumers of a fire, creating a risk of serious injury or death from smoke inhalation or burns. The record lists no reported incidents. CPSC says the detectors were sold on Amazon from November 2025 through April 2026 for about $40.

CPSC recall 26-577 covers MedPride Baby Oil distributed by Shield Line. CPSC says about 8,420 bottles are included. The agency says the baby oil contains low-viscosity hydrocarbons, which must be in child-resistant packaging under the Poison Prevention Packaging Act. CPSC says the recalled bottles are not in child-resistant packaging, creating a serious child-poisoning risk if swallowed. The record lists no reported incidents. CPSC says the product was sold at discount and medical-supply stores primarily in the New York tri-state area and online at Amazon by HL Medical from November 2025 through March 2026 for about $8.

CPSC recall 26-579 covers Small Fish Montessori Busy Board toys. CPSC says about 1,013 units are included. The agency says the busy boards violate the mandatory toy standard because magnets can detach, creating a deadly ingestion hazard. CPSC’s notice explains that swallowed high-powered magnets can attract each other or other metal objects inside the digestive system and cause severe injuries or death. The record lists no reported incidents. CPSC says the toys were sold on Amazon from March 2026 through May 2026 for about $16.

CPSC recall 26-581 covers Amana window-room air conditioners and through-the-wall air conditioners or heat pumps made by Daikin Comfort Technologies Manufacturing. CPSC says about 13,514 units were sold in the United States, plus about 53 in Canada. The agency says the heating element can remain energized during a ground fault even when turned off, creating fire and burn risks. DCT has received one report of plastic on a unit melting, and CPSC lists no reported injuries. The units were sold through direct sales and heating and cooling dealers nationwide from April 2025 through December 2025 for between $850 and $1,500.

CPSC recall 26-575 covers Super Off-Road 12,000 mAh Solar Wireless Power Banks imported by Spector & Co. CPSC says about 7,400 were distributed in the United States, plus about 4,964 in Canada. The agency says the lithium-ion battery can swell and overheat, posing a burn hazard. The firm received two reports of the battery swelling, and CPSC lists no reported injuries. CPSC says the power banks were given away as promotional items by various companies from January 2019 through December 2023.

CPSC recall 26-566 covers Pyro Diablo “Diablo Rising” 9 Shots fireworks imported by Bada Boom Fireworks. CPSC says about 1,060 devices are included. The agency says the recalled fireworks violate the ban for aerial fireworks devices because the products contain more than the allowed pyrotechnic material load and create explosion and burn hazards. CPSC lists no reported incidents. The devices were sold at Bada Boom Fireworks locations in Pennsylvania from March 2026 through May 2026 for about $45.

CPSC recall 26-507 covers Kids Kithmas Plaid Lounge Sets imported by Kith Retail. CPSC says about 130 sets were sold in the United States, plus nine in Canada. The agency says the children’s loungewear sets violate mandatory flammability standards for children’s sleepwear, creating a burn hazard. CPSC lists no reported incidents. The sets were sold at Kith stores nationwide and online from December 2025 through January 2026 for about $75.

What Is Still Not Proven

The recall pages do not prove direct buyer notice. Marketplace recalls usually depend on a chain of custody: the seller, the platform, the payment record, the shipping record, and the consumer all have to connect. For Kidisle, Treatlife, MedPride, Small Fish, and Kith, the missing proof is not whether CPSC posted a notice; it did. The missing proof is whether Amazon, Walmart, eBay, Kith, local stores, HL Medical, and other seller channels can document buyer notifications, search-result suppression, listing removal, refund completion, and instructions that reached households before another use.

The Daikin/Amana record has a different accountability gap. CPSC says the affected products moved through direct sales and heating and cooling dealers. That means the public record should eventually be able to show dealer notice lists, serial-number outreach, refund requests, cord-cut proof counts, inventory holds, distributor returns, and whether any installed units remained in service after notice.

The Super Off-Road power bank recall raises a gift-and-promotional-item problem. CPSC says the power banks were given away by various companies over a five-year period. Promotional items can outlive the original event, employer, or conference list. The public record still needs distribution lists, corporate notice proof, recipient outreach, and any later battery-swelling or overheating updates.

The Bada Boom fireworks recall is season-sensitive. CPSC lists no reported incidents, but the recall was published during the same month as summer fireworks sales and use. The missing proof is store-level buyer notice, product quarantine, refund counts, and whether recalled devices were removed before holiday use or resale.

Records To Pull Next

For the Kidisle coffeemaker recall, the most useful follow-up records would be marketplace buyer-notification logs, takedown proof from Amazon, Walmart, and eBay, refund totals, destruction-photo counts, and any later CPSC amendment that separates minor burns from burns requiring medical treatment. CPSC already lists the injury count. The next accountability question is whether the remedy reaches people who bought the coffeemakers over nearly two years of online sales.

For the Treatlife detector recall, the unit count is small, but the hazard is serious because a detector that fails to alert during a fire defeats the reason the product is in a home. The public record should eventually show whether Amazon sent direct notice to every buyer, whether replacement-detector timing created any gap, and whether the listing was suppressed across sponsored results, archived storefronts, and marketplace mirrors.

For MedPride Baby Oil and Small Fish busy boards, the records should show how child-safety warnings moved through marketplace and local retail channels. The baby-oil recall crosses brick-and-mortar discount and medical-supply stores plus Amazon. The busy-board recall turns on a magnet-ingestion hazard from an online toy listing. In both cases, source-cleared CPSC facts are only the first step. The missing proof is purchaser notice, product removal, refund completion, disposal proof, and whether any similar listings remained active under the same seller or related storefront names.

For Daikin/Amana units, the practical records are dealer and direct-sale outreach logs, serial-number matches, refund requests, returned or cord-cut units, inventory quarantine, and whether service contractors received field instructions. For Super Off-Road power banks, the harder record is promotional distribution. If companies handed out the units from 2019 through 2023, ordinary retail receipts may not exist, which makes corporate distribution lists and recipient notices more important.

For Bada Boom fireworks and Kith children’s loungewear, the public record should separate product recovery from announcement. Store recall signs, buyer communications, refund totals, destroyed-product photos where required, and any remaining inventory holds would show whether the recall moved beyond a web page.

Status Labels BadPD Is Using

  • Confirmed: CPSC recall 26-557 lists at least 107 reports and at least 27 reported injuries involving Kidisle coffeemakers.
  • Confirmed: CPSC recall 26-582 says Treatlife smoke and carbon monoxide detectors can fail to alert consumers of a fire.
  • Confirmed: CPSC recall 26-577 says MedPride Baby Oil is not in child-resistant packaging required for low-viscosity hydrocarbons.
  • Confirmed: CPSC recall 26-579 says Small Fish Montessori Busy Board toys violate the mandatory toy standard because magnets can detach.
  • Confirmed: CPSC recall 26-581 says certain Amana air conditioners and heat pumps can keep a heating element energized during a ground fault.
  • Confirmed: CPSC recall 26-575 says Super Off-Road solar wireless power banks can swell and overheat.
  • Confirmed: CPSC recall 26-566 says Pyro Diablo “Diablo Rising” fireworks violate the aerial fireworks ban.
  • Confirmed: CPSC recall 26-507 says Kids Kithmas Plaid Lounge Sets violate mandatory children’s sleepwear flammability standards.
  • Pending: direct buyer notice, refund completion, replacement or disposal proof, marketplace cleanup, dealer outreach, promotional-recipient outreach, and later incident amendments.
  • Not established: that any injury occurred in this batch except the Kidisle injury reports CPSC specifically lists. BadPD is not adding injuries to recalls where CPSC lists none.
  • Not established: that a seller, importer, distributor, marketplace, dealer, or store intentionally hid a recall. The record proves official recall facts and leaves follow-through questions for public proof.

Why This Belongs On The Accountability Desk

Most recall articles stop at the hazard line. That is useful, but incomplete. The public-safety failure often happens after the recall: a listing stays up, a buyer never gets the email, a dealer treats the recall like warranty paperwork, a promotional item changes hands, or a secondhand sale strips away the warning. Those are recordable events. They should be measured.

For consumers and local officials, the simplest public-interest ledger is a dated source trail. Which product? Which recall number? Which dates? Which sales channels? How many units? What incident status did CPSC publish? What proof is still missing? That structure matters because public attention moves quickly, while recalled products can stay in kitchens, bedrooms, garages, party boxes, closets, and drawers for years.

BadPD will update this ledger if CPSC, Amazon, Walmart, eBay, Kith, Kidisle, Treatlife Technology, Shield Line, HL Medical, Small Fish, Daikin Comfort Technologies Manufacturing, dealers, Spector & Co., Bada Boom Fireworks, state consumer-protection offices, court records, refund processors, or other accountable sources publish buyer-notification proof, remedy-completion data, marketplace cleanup records, dealer outreach proof, promotional-distribution notice records, incident updates, enforcement actions, amended recall instructions, or litigation tied to these recall numbers.

Source Trail

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