"At no time has any First Choice body armor vest failed to protect law enforcement officers, including those models that contained the component Zylon (made by Toyobo) and that were discontinued by First Choice in 2005 and withdrawn from the market," according to a statement from Dan Walsh, First Armor's president. "The claims asserted yesterday by the Department of Justice are completely without merit. Additionally, not a single First Choice vest has ever failed to protect the individual wearing it."
First Choice, which manufactured and sold bullet-proof vests containing Zylon fiber from 2000-2005, marketed its vests to law enforcement agencies as a thinner and more lightweight alternative to other bullet-proof vests.
The federal complaint alleges that the company and its founder knew of significant manufacturing and degradation problems in the Zylon fiber that rendered the material unsafe for ballistic use. When the Justice Department's National Institute of Justice (NIJ) tested eight of First Choice's bullet-proof vests in 2005, all failed, according to the complaint.
"By providing defective bulletproof vests to the nation’s law enforcement officers, First Choice put the lives of those officers at risk," stated Tony West, assistant attorney general for the Civil Division of the Department of Justice. "The government’s investigation has determined that bulletproof vest manufacturers, such as First Choice, wasted taxpayer dollars by failing to address these problems even after they were warned about them."
The federal government is also pursuing legal action against the company's founders and Japanese manufacturer. The DOJ has sued Dovner and Karen Herman, Dovner's wife and First Choice’s president, for a fraudulent conveyance—a transfer of property that is made to swindle, hinder, or delay a creditor, or to put such property beyond his or her reach—in violation of the Federal Debt Collection Procedures Act.