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BackNew Jersey Company Sentenced to $8 Million Fine for Failing to Report Defective Air Conditioners Linked to Fires and Death
New Jersey Company Sentenced to $8 Million Fine for Failing to Report Defective Air Conditioners Linked to Fires and Death
NEWS
Times of India5/3/2026Crime2 min readIndia

New Jersey Company Sentenced to $8 Million Fine for Failing to Report Defective Air Conditioners Linked to Fires and Death

Royal Sovereign International Inc pleaded guilty to violating Consumer Product Safety Act after selling 33,000 defective ACs that caused over 40 fires

Quick Look

  • Royal Sovereign International Inc, a New Jersey company doing business as Royal Centurian Inc, has been sentenced to pay $8 million in criminal fines and $395,786 in restitution after pleading guilty to failing to report dangerously defective air conditioners to the U.S.
  • Consumer Product Safety Commission.
  • The company imported and sold over 33,000 defective ACs manufactured in China between 2008 and 2014, which were linked to more than 40 fires and one death.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

This case represents one of the largest consumer product safety penalties in recent years. The company deliberately misled regulators about product defects over multiple years, continuing to sell dangerous products even after being aware of fire hazards.

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Representative Image Royal Sovereign International Inc, a New Jersey company that sold office and home electronic appliances, has been recently sentenced to pay $395,786 in restitution to victims and a criminal fine of $8 million for failing to report to the US Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) dangerously defective Air Conditioners (ACs) allegedly linked to more than 40 fires and one death. According to court documents, Royal Sovereign, which also did business as Royal Centurian Inc, imported and sold more than 33,000 defective ACs manufactured in China between 2008 and 2014. The air conditioners used a faulty drain motor that could short circuit, causing them to catch fire and burn uncontrollably. Royal Sovereign recalled the defective air conditioner models in 2021. Royal Sovereign pleaded guilty in August 2025 to a criminal information charging the company under the Consumer Product Safety Act (CPSA). In pleading guilty, the company admitted that it willfully failed to report information about the air conditioners immediately to the CPSC. How Royal Sovereign misled agencies over the years about its ACs According to the information, the company misled the CPSC in November 2010 by telling the agency that it was aware of only two fire incidents related to the air conditioners, and that it was no longer selling them. In reality, as alleged, the company knew of at least 16 fires and continued to sell the air conditioners. According to the CPSC recall notice, a woman died in August 2016 from smoke inhalation and her two children were injured after their Royal Sovereign air conditioner caught fire. In addition to pleading guilty in the criminal case, Royal Sovereign previously agreed to a civil settlement with the United States that included a $16,025,000 civil penalty, the maximum authorized by the CPSA. The company has permanently ceased all operations involving the marketing, sale or distribution of consumer products. Assistant Attorney General A Tysen Duva of the Justice Department's Criminal Division, U.S. Attorney Peter Robert Frazer for the District of New Jersey, and Acting Chairman Peter A. Feldman of the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission made the announcement. Trial Attorney Ethan Carroll of the Criminal Division's Fraud Section prosecuted the case. Renee McCune of CPSC's Office of the General Counsel and Assistant U.S. Attorney Fatime Meka Cano for the District of New Jersey provided valuable assistance. Actions involving violative products imported into the United States are coordinated through the Department of Justice Trade Fraud Task Force, a cross-agency law enforcement effort involving the Criminal Division's Fraud Section, the Civil Division, the Department of Homeland Security and U.S. Attorney's Offices nationwide. The Task Force is designed to pursue enforcement actions against parties who seek to evade tariffs and other duties, as well as smugglers who seek to import prohibited goods into the American economy. The Criminal Division, in coordination with the Task Force, leverages all the department's tools and authorities to fight fraud on the federal government and recover funds for the public fisc.

Open Questions

  • How did the defective drain motors fail to be detected during initial quality checks?
  • What specific internal communications revealed the company's knowledge of fire incidents?
  • Were there any intermediate regulatory actions taken between 2010 and 2021?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by Times of India.

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