Amazon Must Face Price Gouging Lawsuit, US Judge Rules
U.S. District Judge Robert Lasnik in Seattle, Amazon’s hometown, found “unpersuasive” a claim that Washington state consumer protection laws were vague as applied to pricing, and did not cover the alleged price gouging.
Lasnik said it was plausible to infer that product shortages, public health directives and the shift to online purchasing left consumers “no meaningful choice but to purchase from Amazon despite the allegedly unfair prices it was charging.”
Consumers accused Amazon of failing to prevent sellers from using its platform to charge “flagrantly unlawful” prices for food and other staples.
They also said Amazon inflated prices on its own product inventory to “profiteer off consumers in desperate need.”
Prices rose 233% on Aleve pain relief tablets, 1,044% on Quilted Northern toilet paper, 1,523% on Arm & Hammer baking soda and 1,800% on some face masks, according to the complaint.
Amazon and its lawyers did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
Steve Berman, a lawyer for the plaintiffs, called the decision “an important win for consumers.” He also said internal Amazon documents demonstrated that the retailer knew what price gouging was and assured state attorneys general it was trying to prevent it.
The lawsuit seeks damages for people who paid “unfair” prices for food and other consumer goods on Amazon between January 31, 2020 and October 20, 2022, around when Washington and other states ended COVID-related states of emergency.
(Reporting by Stempel in New York, Editing by Franklin Paul and Lisa Shumaker)
- New Made-in-USA Cars Qualify for Trump Tax Perk, IRS Says
- World’s Top 10 Extreme Weather Events in 2025
- As Swiss Fire Survivors Fight for Life, Sparklers Eyed as Cause of Blaze
- US Lawmaker Unveils Bill Requiring Manual Car-Door Releases
- Abbott Presses Congress for Shield Over Preemie Baby Formula Litigation That Could Cost It Billions
- Severity Was up, But How Will Falling Claims Volume Impact The Profession?
- J&J Talc Jury Awards $1.56 Billion to Asbestos Cancer Victim
- Zillow Deleting Climate Risk Scores Reveals Limits of Flood, Fire Data