By Erik Gunn | Wisconsin Examiner

A bipartisan congressional team has gone to bat for a small Wisconsin manufacturer that won a federal lawsuit against a Chinese furniture giant accused of stealing its intellectual property.

Sen. Tammy Baldwin (D-Wis.) and U.S. Reps. Glenn Grothman (R-Glenbeulah) and Scott Fitzgerald (R-Juneau) joined in letters to three federal agencies urging action against Man Wah Holdings and its American subsidiary. 

Raffel Systems LLC in Germantown was awarded $106 million in damages in federal court in June after a jury found that Man Wah sold knockoffs of Raffel’s patented, lighted cup holder to be installed in furniture. 

In letters to the Consumer Products Safety Commission (CSPC), the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and the U.S. International Trade Commission (ITC), Baldwin, Grothman and Fitzgerald are asking the agencies to investigate Man Wah for violations of various federal laws.

The letter to the CSPC states that Raffel was receiving consumer safety complaints because of defective copies of its cup holders made by Man Wah.  The defects “included electrical faults that could have exposed consumers to potential safety risks,” according to the letter. 

It asks the product safety commission to investigate whether the knockoff manufacturer broke federal consumer protection laws by not reporting its own “potentially defective and dangerous products” to the agency.

The FTC letter asks for Man Wah to be investigated for possible violations of the federal law prohibiting unfair actions or deception in commerce. The ITC letter seeks an investigation of “harmful trade practices” by the company. 

Both letters cite testimony from the federal lawsuit that the Chinese manufacturer produced “cup holders that fraudulently included Raffel’s patent number and manufacturing information.” The knockoff company also sold “dangerously defective knockoffs to unsuspecting suppliers and customers,” the letters state.

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This story first appeared in the Wisconsin Examiner and is being republished with permission through a Creative Commons License. See the original story, here.