A California company has agreed to pay a $425,000 civil penalty for concealing the fact that its Perfect Pullup exercise equipment was flawed and getting people hurt.
The settlement between Perfect Fitness of Sausalito, Calif., and the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission resolves allegations by the agency that the company violated the law by failing to promptly report the safety hazard.
Although the law requires companies to notify the CPSC within 24 hours if they discover a potentially dangerous defect, the agency said it wasn’t told by Perfect Fitness for more than two years that the product’s handles tended to break, creating a fall hazard. By the time Perfect Fitness notified the agency last December, the company knew that at least 45 people had been hurt and it had received 2,000 requests for replacements, the CPSC said.
The injuries from the product, an adjustable-height bar installed in doorways for upper-body workouts, have been described as bruises, strains and sprains.
Perfect Fitness redesigned the Perfect Pullup to correct the defect in July 2008. The CPSC says that by March 2010, nine months before the agency was notified, Perfect Fitness posted a notice on its website offering free replacement handles, telling consumers that the original handles were “inferior” and could result in an “accident.”
In February 2011, 7,000 Perfect Pullups were recalled. In agreeing to the settlement this week, Perfect Fitness denied that it knowingly violated the law.


