2 Million Baby Swings Recalled After Suffocating 5 Babies To Death

Mattel’s $336 Million Swing: The Price of Five Dead Babies

Mattel and its subsidiary Fisher-Price are household names, brands built on the idea of trust. Parents across the nation spend their hard-earned money on these products believing they are buying safety for their children. That trust was betrayed. The companies manufactured and sold over 2.1 million “Snuga Swings,” a line of infant products with a hidden, fatal flaw. For years, while collecting hundreds of millions in revenue, they knew the product posed a suffocation risk and said nothing. Now, a class-action lawsuit filed in the Western District of New York (Case 1:24-cv-00992) aims to expose the depth of this corporate negligence.

The Non-Financial Ledger: A Betrayal of Trust

The price of the Snuga Swing wasn’t just the $160 sticker price. The true cost is measured in fear, trauma, and the violation of a sacred trust between a parent and a product manufacturer. When a family brings a newborn home, every purchase is an act of protection. They chose Fisher-Price because the name was supposed to mean “safe.” Instead, they brought a potential killer into their nursery.

Consider the story of plaintiff Destini Bigelow. She bought a Snuga Swing for her newborn daughter in July 2021. Her daughter fell out of the swing twice, the second time suffering a minor bump to her forehead. Ms. Bigelow stopped using the product, shaken by the incident. She, like millions of others, had no idea the danger was far worse than a fall. She would never have purchased the product had she known about the suffocation risk. This is the story of a near-miss, a stroke of luck. For five other families, there was no such luck.

This is the non-financial ledger: the sleepless nights, the frantic checks on a breathing baby, the gut-wrenching “what if” that haunts every parent who ever owned one of these swings. This damage cannot be quantified in a quarterly report, but it is the most profound harm Mattel and Fisher-Price have caused.

Societal Impact: Profit Over Public Health

Public Health Hazard by Design

The Snuga Swing is a public health crisis hiding in plain sight in millions of American homes. Five reported deaths are a tragedy; they also represent only the cases that have been officially linked and recorded. The CPSC recall notice itself is chillingly direct, stating the “headrest and body support insert on the seat pad can increase the risk of suffocation.” This was not a manufacturing defect in a single batch; it was a feature of the product’s core design, sold for over a decade.

Economic Exploitation of Families

The business model is clear: exploit the trust of new parents, charge a premium for a product masquerading as safe, and when the lethal consequences emerge, offer a pittance to avoid true accountability. Selling 2.1 million units at $160 each generated an estimated $336 million in revenue. The recall’s offer of $25 is not a remedy; it is an insult. It forces the consumer, the victim of the deception, to bear the financial loss for a hazardous product, while the corporation protects its profits.

What Now? The Watchlist

Accountability does not come from corporate press releases. It is demanded and enforced by the people. This is not just about one dangerous product; it is about a system that allows corporations to treat human lives as a cost of doing business.

sources:
[1] https://evilcorporations.com/category/product-safety-violations/
[2] attached PDF 🙂
[3] https://journal.upaep.mx/index.php/EthicsEconomicsandCommonGoods/article/download/279/253/494
[4] https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC10178243/
[5] https://www.cpsc.gov/Recalls/2025/Fisher-Price-Recalls-More-than-2-Million-Snuga-Infant-Swings-Due-to-Suffocation-Hazard-After-5-Deaths-Reported
[6] https://www. evilcorporations.com

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Aleeia
Aleeia

I'm Aleeia, the creator of this website.

I have 6+ years of experience as an independent researcher covering corporate misconduct, sourced from legal documents, regulatory filings, and professional legal databases.

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