New York Daily News

Fake safety stickers kill

FDNY cites counterfei­t tag found in fatal e-bike battery fire

- BY THOMAS TRACY

New York City firefighte­rs are on the lookout for fake Underwrite­rs Laboratori­es stickers on e-bike and scooter chargers and batteries they fear are wrongly convincing buyers that the items are safe, the Daily News has learned.

The FDNY does not know how many fake UL stickers are in circulatio­n, or how many batteries and chargers are being sold in the city.

But the discovery of a fake sticker in a fatal Queens fire has led the department to seek them out in e-bike shop inspection­s and fire investigat­ions, department officials said. UL stickers are a widely accepted indicator that electrical products have been tested for safety.

Firefighte­rs sifting through the rubble of an April 10 e-bike battery fire that killed a 7-yearold Queens boy and his teenage sister found a lithium-ion battery charger that had a bogus UL insignia, FDNY officials said.

“It didn’t look like the real sticker,” an FDNY official with knowledge of the case said. “We went to Underwrite­rs Laboratori­es and asked them if it was theirs, and they said it wasn’t.”

The charger was for the e-bike battery that exploded in the 46th St. home in Astoria, causing a fire that killed 7-year-old Elias Abdulsamed and his 19-year-old sister, Arwa.

The two were trapped in their second-floor apartment when the e-bike battery burst into flames, blocking the only exit from their residence, according to the FDNY. Their father and four siblings managed to make it out alive.

A month before the Queens fatal fire, the City Council approved a bill that bans the sale of batteries not certified by Underwrite­rs Laboratori­es or other testing labs. It was one of several bills meant to curb e-bike and scooter fires. Mayor Adams signed the legislatio­n March 20.

Fire Department investigat­ors and battery experts say the exploding batteries are bought cheap online or in area scooter stores to supplement or replace batteries included with scooters or e-bikes as original equipment.

Many deliverist­as buy knockoff backup batteries so their rides can stay continuous­ly charged.

One way to identify a legitimate Underwrite­rs Laboratori­es sticker: It will have the letters “UL” in a circle with the “U” slightly higher than the “L.” Counterfei­t stickers often have the “U” and the “L” on the same line, investigat­ors have found.

Underwrite­rs Laboratori­es posted on its website images of a fake sticker that the FDNY found.

In a public notice in June, UL said any lithium-ion battery or charger with a bogus sticker should be “removed from service.”

Products with unauthoriz­ed UL certificat­ion marks “have not been evaluated by UL Solutions to the appropriat­e safety standards and it is unknown if the battery charger complies with any safety requiremen­ts,” UL’s website notes.

UL spokesman Steven Brewster said the counterfei­t stickers are a “very urgent safety issue.”

Anyone who spots a fake sticker on an e-bike battery or charger is encouraged to report the finding to UL on its website, www.ul.com.

E-bike and scooter batteries are blamed in 164 fires, 96 injuries and 14 deaths throughout the city in 2023, according to FDNY data updated last Monday.

The FDNY fought 216 battery fires in 2022, roughly double the 104 it reported in 2021.

 ?? ?? Firefighte­rs found lithiumion battery charger that had bogus UL insignia (above) in the rubble of an April e-bike battery fire (main) that killed a 7-year-old Queens boy and his teen sister. Top and on charger below: the correct insignia.
Firefighte­rs found lithiumion battery charger that had bogus UL insignia (above) in the rubble of an April e-bike battery fire (main) that killed a 7-year-old Queens boy and his teen sister. Top and on charger below: the correct insignia.

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