Medical bills. Lost wages. Pain and suffering. California's strict liability law means you don't need to prove Amazon was negligent — only that the product was defective.
Click any question to read the answer.
Yes — and the law is now even clearer. The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) issued a landmark ruling in July 2024 finding that Amazon can be held legally responsible for defective products sold by third-party sellers under its "Fulfilled by Amazon" program. Amazon controls product listings, warehousing, and fulfillment — making it legally accountable.
California courts went even further in Bolger v. Amazon.com, LLC (2020): Angela Bolger purchased a replacement laptop battery from a third-party Amazon seller. The battery exploded, causing serious injuries. The California Court of Appeal ruled Amazon strictly liable because it controlled the payment, the listing, and played a role in shipping. California Civil Code §1714(a) establishes that anyone in the chain of distribution — from manufacturer to retailer — can be held accountable.
Your case is built on four categories of evidence. Preserve all of these immediately:
Critical: Do NOT return the product to Amazon. Once returned, the evidence is gone. Even if you no longer have the product, a case may still be possible with order records, medical documentation, and expert testimony.
Three legal theories apply under California product liability law:
Recent CPSC cases involving Amazon-sold products include: faulty carbon monoxide detectors that failed to alert users, hairdryers lacking electrocution protection, and children's sleepwear that failed federal flammability standards. If your product falls into any defect category, you likely have a claim.
Yes. The CPSC's 2024 ruling specifically addresses "Fulfilled by Amazon" (FBA) products — where Amazon handles storage, packaging, and shipping even for third-party sellers. Amazon argued it was "just a platform," but both the CPSC and California courts rejected this position.
Under Bolger v. Amazon.com, Amazon's control over the transaction makes it part of the product's chain of distribution. You can name Amazon, the third-party seller, and the manufacturer as defendants simultaneously. California's strict liability doctrine means you only need to prove the product was defective and caused your injury — not that any party was careless.
Under California Code of Civil Procedure §335.1, you have two years from the date of injury to file a personal injury lawsuit. The discovery rule may extend this if the defect wasn't immediately apparent.
For injured minors, the two-year clock does not start until their 18th birthday. However, acting immediately is critical for a different reason: Amazon regularly modifies or removes product listings after injury reports, destroying key evidence. The longer you wait, the harder it is to establish which product version injured you. Contact Compass Law Group for a free same-day consultation.
Past results do not guarantee a similar outcome.
Joseph Shirazi founded Compass Law Group with one conviction: injured Californians deserve the same caliber of legal representation as the corporations on the other side. $13M trial verdict. $14.5M product liability verdict. $250M+ total recovered.






Medical bills, lost wages, and pain and suffering. California's strict liability law means you don't need to prove Amazon was negligent — only that the product was defective.
Most people don't realize how powerful California's consumer protection laws are. Here's why you likely have a strong case.
Click any question to read the answer.
Yes — and the law is now even clearer. The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) issued a landmark ruling in July 2024 finding that Amazon can be held legally responsible for defective products sold by third-party sellers under its "Fulfilled by Amazon" program. Amazon controls product listings, warehousing, and fulfillment — making it legally accountable.
California courts went even further in Bolger v. Amazon.com, LLC (2020): Angela Bolger purchased a replacement laptop battery from a third-party Amazon seller. The battery exploded, causing serious injuries. The California Court of Appeal ruled Amazon strictly liable because it controlled the payment, the listing, and played a role in shipping. California Civil Code §1714(a) establishes that anyone in the chain of distribution — from manufacturer to retailer — can be held accountable.
Your case is built on four categories of evidence. Preserve all of these immediately:
Critical: Do NOT return the product to Amazon. Once returned, the evidence is gone. Even if you no longer have the product, a case may still be possible with order records, medical documentation, and expert testimony.
Three legal theories apply under California product liability law:
Recent CPSC cases involving Amazon-sold products include: faulty carbon monoxide detectors that failed to alert users, hairdryers lacking electrocution protection, and children's sleepwear that failed federal flammability standards. If your product falls into any defect category, you likely have a claim.
Yes. The CPSC's 2024 ruling specifically addresses "Fulfilled by Amazon" (FBA) products — where Amazon handles storage, packaging, and shipping even for third-party sellers. Amazon argued it was "just a platform," but both the CPSC and California courts rejected this position.
Under Bolger v. Amazon.com, Amazon's control over the transaction makes it part of the product's chain of distribution. You can name Amazon, the third-party seller, and the manufacturer as defendants simultaneously. California's strict liability doctrine means you only need to prove the product was defective and caused your injury — not that any party was careless.
Under California Code of Civil Procedure §335.1, you have two years from the date of injury to file a personal injury lawsuit. The discovery rule may extend this if the defect wasn't immediately apparent.
For injured minors, the two-year clock does not start until their 18th birthday. However, acting immediately is critical for a different reason: Amazon regularly modifies or removes product listings after injury reports, destroying key evidence. The longer you wait, the harder it is to establish which product version injured you. Contact Compass Law Group for a free same-day consultation.
Past results do not guarantee a similar outcome.
(866) 692-1701$250,000,000+ recovered for California injury victims. No fee unless we win.
Joseph Shirazi founded Compass Law Group with one conviction: injured Californians deserve the same caliber of legal representation as the corporations and insurers on the other side. Over his career he has taken cases to jury verdict — including a $13,000,000 trial verdict and a $14,500,000 product liability verdict — and has led a firm that has collectively recovered $250,000,000+ for California injury victims.
National Top 100 Trial Lawyers · Super Lawyers · Avvo Rating 10.0. Licensed by the California State Bar. Speaks English and Farsi. Serves clients in English, Spanish, Farsi, and Korean across seven California offices.





