Crown Chemical Sold Banned Pesticides for Years After Cancellation
Illinois chemical company distributed unregistered and cancelled disinfectants to hospitals and industrial facilities, exposing workers and patients to potentially unsafe products while evading federal safety reviews.
Crown Chemical, Inc. sold two disinfectant products without valid federal registration. The company distributed Ready Quat Ready-to-Use Sanitizer three times despite it never being registered. Even worse, Crown Chemical continued producing and selling Blue Lagoon Acid Bowl Cleaner at least six times after EPA cancelled its registration in April 2021. The EPA fined the company $56,000 for nine separate violations of federal pesticide law.
This case shows how regulatory penalties often fail to deter corporate misconduct when fines become just another cost of doing business.
The Allegations: A Breakdown
| 01 | Crown Chemical sold Ready Quat Ready-to-Use Sanitizer three times between May 15, 2024 and June 12, 2024, even though the product was never registered under federal pesticide law. The company marketed this unregistered product as a sanitizer intended to prevent, destroy, or repel pests. | high |
| 02 | The company continued producing Blue Lagoon Acid Bowl Cleaner after EPA cancelled its registration on April 2, 2021. This product claimed to kill HIV and other pathogens in healthcare settings, yet Crown Chemical manufactured it without valid federal authorization. | high |
| 03 | Crown Chemical distributed or sold the cancelled Blue Lagoon product at least six times between May 24, 2022 and June 13, 2022. Each sale occurred more than a year after EPA had cancelled the product’s registration. | high |
| 04 | The company marketed Blue Lagoon Acid Bowl Cleaner with claims that it disinfects, deodorizes, and kills germs commonly found in hospitals and industrial environments. The label specifically stated the product kills HIV on toilet bowls and urinals in healthcare settings. | high |
| 05 | EPA and Illinois Department of Agriculture inspectors found these unregistered pesticide products during a facility inspection on July 9, 2024. The inspectors collected product labels showing the illegal registration numbers and pesticidal claims. | medium |
| 06 | Crown Chemical neither admitted nor denied the factual allegations in the consent agreement. The company settled the case without any admission of wrongdoing while agreeing to pay the penalty. | medium |
| 01 | Federal law requires all pesticides to be registered with EPA before distribution or sale to ensure safety and effectiveness. Crown Chemical bypassed this entire registration process for Ready Quat Ready-to-Use Sanitizer. | high |
| 02 | The consent agreement structure allowed Crown Chemical to settle without admitting liability. This procedural approach prioritizes administrative closure over deterrence and public accountability. | medium |
| 03 | The EPA assessed penalties of $56,000 for nine violations, far below the potential maximum of $224,000 if each violation carried the full statutory penalty. The reduced amount reflects consideration of the company’s business size and ability to continue operations. | medium |
| 04 | The settlement provides no criminal prosecution despite repeated willful violations over multiple years. The administrative penalty system treats pesticide law violations as routine regulatory matters rather than serious public health threats. | high |
| 05 | Crown Chemical waived all rights to a hearing, to contest allegations, and to appeal the final order. This waiver also eliminated any opportunity for federal court review or jury trial regarding the violations. | low |
| 06 | The company certified it is now complying with FIFRA regulations, but the consent agreement contains no ongoing monitoring requirements or enhanced oversight to verify continued compliance. | medium |
| 01 | Crown Chemical made deliberate business decisions to continue selling inventory of Blue Lagoon Acid Bowl Cleaner for more than a year after EPA cancelled its registration. These were not accidental sales but conscious choices to move products that should have been withdrawn from the market. | high |
| 02 | The company targeted sensitive public health markets with unregistered products. Blue Lagoon’s label specifically marketed the product for use in hospitals and healthcare settings where vulnerable populations face infection risks. | high |
| 03 | Crown Chemical avoided the costs and delays of proper pesticide registration by simply selling unregistered products. This gave the company an unfair competitive advantage over law-abiding manufacturers who invest in safety testing and regulatory compliance. | medium |
| 04 | The $56,000 penalty represents a minor cost relative to potential profit margins in the industrial cleaning sector. Crown Chemical sold these products across nine separate transactions, suggesting the violations generated revenue exceeding the eventual fine. | medium |
| 05 | The consent agreement allows Crown Chemical to treat federal pesticide violations as a routine business expense. The company paid a fee, admitted no wrongdoing, and faced no structural changes to its business operations. | medium |
| 01 | Unregistered pesticide products bypass EPA review for toxicity, safe disposal practices, and ecological impact. Crown Chemical’s violations eliminated the safety review process designed to protect workers and consumers from harmful chemical exposures. | high |
| 02 | Blue Lagoon Acid Bowl Cleaner was marketed for use on toilet bowls and urinals in healthcare facilities. Hospital workers and patients were exposed to a product whose safety had not been verified through federal registration processes. | high |
| 03 | The product label claimed Blue Lagoon kills HIV on surfaces previously soiled with blood and body fluids. Healthcare facilities relied on these efficacy claims without the EPA testing and verification that registration requires. | high |
| 04 | Ready Quat Ready-to-Use Sanitizer was sold as a pesticide intended to prevent, destroy, or repel pests. Users of this product had no way to verify its safety or effectiveness because it never underwent federal review. | medium |
| 05 | The cancelled registration status of Blue Lagoon meant the product’s chemical composition, labeling accuracy, and environmental safety were not subject to ongoing EPA oversight. Changes to the formula could have occurred without regulatory knowledge or approval. | medium |
| 06 | Consumers and institutional purchasers were kept in the dark about the registration status of these products. The illegal EPA registration number on Blue Lagoon’s label created a false appearance of federal approval and safety compliance. | medium |
| 01 | Crown Chemical operates its facility at 4701 W. 136th Street in Crestwood, Illinois, a working-class community with industrial history. When local manufacturers violate federal environmental regulations, nearby residents bear the burden through potential contamination and pollution. | medium |
| 02 | The EPA’s settlement provides no restitution or remediation funding for the Crestwood community. The $56,000 penalty goes to the federal government, not to local residents who face ongoing environmental risks from the facility. | medium |
| 03 | Administrative enforcement actions prioritize federal regulatory compliance over local environmental justice. Communities absorb the ecological and health consequences while companies pay distant bureaucratic fines. | medium |
| 04 | The consent agreement contains no requirements for community notification about the violations. Local residents have no formal mechanism to learn about pesticide law violations at nearby industrial facilities. | low |
| 01 | Crown Chemical’s consent agreement explicitly states the company neither admits nor denies the factual allegations. This non-admission settlement allows the company to maintain public-facing legitimacy while accepting only minor financial consequences. | high |
| 02 | No individual executives or managers faced personal liability for the pesticide violations. The corporate entity paid a fine, but the people who made decisions to sell unregistered and cancelled products faced no consequences. | high |
| 03 | The EPA characterized settling without filing a formal complaint as being in the public interest. This administrative efficiency prioritizes case closure over deterrence and accountability. | medium |
| 04 | The final order concludes the proceeding immediately upon filing with no ongoing compliance monitoring. Crown Chemical certified it is now following the law, but faces no enhanced oversight to verify this claim. | medium |
| 05 | The settlement waived Crown Chemical’s rights to challenge the lawfulness of the final order. This procedural waiver eliminates any opportunity for judicial review of whether the penalty adequately serves public protection. | low |
| 06 | EPA’s penalty calculation considered the effect on Crown Chemical’s ability to continue in business. The regulatory framework explicitly limits fines to levels that preserve corporate viability rather than maximizing deterrence. | medium |
| 01 | The consent agreement’s neither-admit-nor-deny structure functions as a corporate reputation protection mechanism. Crown Chemical avoided any public admission that could damage its brand or expose it to customer litigation. | medium |
| 02 | The settlement allowed Crown Chemical to resolve nine federal violations through a single administrative transaction. This efficiency minimizes media attention and public scrutiny compared to protracted litigation. | medium |
| 03 | Crown Chemical’s legal strategy demonstrates how procedural compliance becomes a shield against moral accountability. The company checked all the settlement boxes while avoiding any acknowledgment of wrongdoing or harm. | medium |
| 04 | The technical legal language of the consent agreement obscures the basic facts from public understanding. Terms like cancelled registration and unregistered pesticide hide the reality that the company sold potentially dangerous products to hospitals. | low |
| 01 | The $56,000 penalty is negligible compared to the systemic costs of regulatory evasion. These costs include public exposure to unsafe products, reduced market fairness for compliant competitors, and potential environmental contamination. | medium |
| 02 | Crown Chemical externalized the costs of safety testing and regulatory compliance onto the public. Taxpayers funded the EPA inspection and enforcement while the company profited from avoiding registration expenses. | medium |
| 03 | The penalty structure treats pesticide law violations as tolerable business costs rather than serious deterrents. Companies can calculate that occasional fines cost less than full regulatory compliance. | medium |
| 04 | Workers and community members bear health risks from unregistered pesticides while corporate shareholders capture profits. The wealth generated from cutting regulatory corners flows upward, while exposure risks flow downward. | medium |
| 05 | The settlement terms are not tax-deductible, but this restriction provides minimal deterrent effect. The prohibition on deducting penalties and interest does not fundamentally alter the cost-benefit analysis of violating pesticide laws. | low |
| 01 | Crown Chemical repeatedly broke federal pesticide laws over multiple years and across nine separate transactions. The company paid a modest fine, admitted no wrongdoing, and continued operating without structural changes. | high |
| 02 | The regulatory system functioned exactly as designed under current law. EPA followed proper procedures, assessed appropriate penalties, and closed the case efficiently without protecting workers or communities from future violations. | high |
| 03 | This case demonstrates how contemporary enforcement treats corporate harm as a manageable administrative matter. Procedural compliance replaces moral accountability, and settlements prioritize closure over deterrence. | medium |
| 04 | Communities, workers, and consumers paid the real costs through exposure to unverified chemical products. Corporate executives and shareholders faced no personal consequences for decisions that generated profit by evading safety regulations. | high |
| 05 | The EPA’s enforcement action represents necessary but insufficient accountability. Without criminal prosecution, personal liability for executives, or enhanced monitoring, similar violations remain economically rational business decisions. | medium |
Timeline of Events
Direct Quotes from the Legal Record
“Section 12(a)(1)(A) of FIFRA, 7 U.S.C. § 136j(a)(1)(A), states it is unlawful for any person in any state to distribute or sell to any person any pesticide that is not registered under Section 3 of FIFRA or whose registration has been cancelled or suspended, except to the extent that distribution or sale otherwise has been authorized by EPA.”
💡 This statute makes Crown Chemical’s conduct clearly illegal under federal law with no ambiguity or gray area.
“On or about April 2, 2021, the EPA registration for Blue Lagoon Acid Bowl Cleaner, EPA Reg. No. 10324-158-35772, was cancelled.”
💡 EPA had officially revoked authorization to sell this product more than a year before Crown Chemical’s documented sales.
“Respondent produced Blue Lagoon Acid Bowl Cleaner, EPA Reg. No. 10324-158-35772, after April 2, 2021.”
💡 Crown Chemical did not just sell existing inventory but actively manufactured a product whose registration EPA had cancelled.
“From on or about June 6, 2022 through June 13, 2022, Respondent distributed or sold Blue Lagoon Acid Bowl Cleaner, EPA Reg. No. 10324-158-35772, which was produced after the product registration was cancelled on April 2, 2021, on at least 6 separate occasions.”
💡 These were not isolated mistakes but a pattern of deliberate sales over multiple days and transactions.
“This product is an acid disinfectant bathroom toilet bowl cleaner, especially formulated to kill many germs* commonly found in hospitals and industrial environments.”
💡 Crown Chemical targeted vulnerable populations in healthcare facilities with an unverified product claiming to kill pathogens.
“*KILLS HIV ON PRECLEANED ENVIRONMENTAL TOILET BOWLS/URINALS PREVIOUSLY SOILD WITH BLOOD/BODY FLUIDS in health care settings or other settings in which there is an expected likelihood of soiling of inanimate toilet bowls/urinals with body fluids and in which the toilet bowl/urinal likely to be soiled with blood or bodily fluids can be associated with the potential for transmission of human immunodeficiency virus Type 1 (HIV-1) associated with AIDS.”
💡 Healthcare workers relied on unverified efficacy claims about killing deadly viruses without EPA testing or approval.
“Respondent admits the jurisdictional allegations in this CAFO and neither admits nor denies the factual allegations in this CAFO.”
💡 Crown Chemical avoided any public admission of fault despite documented violations spanning multiple years.
“Respondent waives its right to request a hearing as provided at 40 C.F.R. § 22.15(c), any right to contest the allegations in this CAFO and its right to appeal this CAFO.”
💡 The settlement eliminated any opportunity for judicial review or public examination of the evidence.
“In determining the penalty amount, Complainant considered the appropriateness of the penalty to the size of Respondent’s business, the effect on Respondent’s ability to continue in business, and the gravity of the violation.”
💡 The regulatory framework explicitly limits penalties to protect corporate viability rather than maximize deterrence.
“Penalties, interest, and other charges paid pursuant to this CAFO shall not be deductible for purposes of federal taxes.”
💡 This restriction prevents Crown Chemical from further reducing the effective cost of violations through tax writeoffs.
“Respondent’s full compliance with this CAFO resolves only Respondent’s liability under FIFRA for federal civil penalties for the violations alleged in the CAFO.”
💡 The settlement leaves open potential state enforcement actions and does not prevent criminal prosecution.
“Respondent certifies that it is complying with FIFRA, 7 U.S.C. §§ 136-136y, and the regulations at 40 C.F.R. § 152.”
💡 Crown Chemical simply certified current compliance with no requirement for enhanced oversight or verification.
“Where the parties agree to settle one or more causes of action before the filing of a complaint, the administrative action may be commenced and concluded simultaneously by the issuance of a consent agreement and final order (CAFO).”
💡 The procedural structure rewards quick settlements that minimize public scrutiny and avoid formal complaint filing.
“This Consent Agreement and Final Order, as agreed to by the parties, shall become effective immediately upon filing with the Regional Hearing Clerk. This Final Order concludes this proceeding pursuant to 40 C.F.R. §§ 22.18 and 22.31.”
💡 The enforcement action ended the moment it began with no period for public comment or review.
“Section 14(a)(1) of FIFRA, 7 U.S.C. § 136l(a)(1), and 40 C.F.R. Part 19, provides that any registrant, commercial applicator, wholesaler, dealer, retailer or other distributor who violates any provision of FIFRA may be assessed a civil penalty by EPA of up to $24,885 for each offense where penalties are assessed on or after January 8, 2025.”
💡 Crown Chemical faced potential fines of $223,965 for nine violations but paid only $56,000, demonstrating significant penalty reduction.
Frequently Asked Questions
I was able to find the EPA’s source for the above article by visiting this link: https://yosemite.epa.gov/OA/RHC/EPAAdmin.nsf/Filings/89673C7E7F9F815185258D220041F413/$File/FIFRA-05-2026-0001_CAFO_CrownChemicalInc_CrestwoodIllinois_15PGS.pdf
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