Zhu Zhu Pets safe, US government says
Consumer Product Safety Commission says Zhu Zhu Pets are safe after consumer group questioned metal levels.
Mark Lennihan/AP/File
You're safe, Mr. Squiggles.
The popular Zhu Zhu Pet got the all-clear from the US Consumer Product Safety Commission late Monday, which confirmed that metal levels in the robotic hamster were compliant with government safety standards. "The popular Zhu Zhu toy is not out of compliance with the antimony or other heavy-metal limits of the new US mandatory toy standard," the agency said in a statement.
Mr. Squiggles and the three other Zhu Zhu Pets have become the hit toy this Christmas season. But a report on Saturday from consumer group GoodGuide raised concerns about high levels of antimony in the toy, leading to fears of a recall. As it turned out, GoodGuide used a different methodology than federal standards called for. On Monday, the consumer group issued a correction and said it regretted its error.
If the brouhaha caused a slowdown in sales, it wasn't evident online. All four toys were still out of stock on the websites of big Zhu Zhu retailers Toys R Us and Wal-Mart. And retailers on eBay were still selling the $10 toys at four times (or more) of that price.
A shortage of Zhu Zhu Pets has led to an explosion of secondary marketers offering the toys at inflated prices.
See also:
Zhu Zhu Pets unsafe? Hardly, says manufacturer, as consumer group backtracks.
How to find a cheap Zhu Zhu Pet
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