Melissa LaFreniere  |  October 6, 2015

Category: Consumer News

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T-Mobile, Experian class action lawsuitT-Mobile and Experian North America Inc. have been hit with a potential class action lawsuit over allegations that due to substandard security practices, more than 15 million T-Mobile customers had their sensitive data hacked.

Experian states in an FAQ about the incident that it discovered on Sept. 15, 2015 that hackers had accessed T-Mobile data housed on an Experian server. T-Mobile used Experian to conduct credit checks on its customers. As a result, anyone who applied for a T-Mobile prostpaid services or device financing between Sept. 1, 2013 and Sept. 16, 2015 might be affected.

Lead plaintiffs Brendan Moore and Matthew DeVito filed the T-Mobile/Experian data breach class action lawsuit on October 2, claiming that Experian notified T-Mobile about the data hack on or about October 1, and that Experian and T-Mobile were negligent in their duty to protect the confidential information of their customers.

According to the Experian class action lawsuit, personal information including names, addresses, birth dates, Social Security numbers, driver’s licenses numbers and passport numbers were taken in the data breach.

Plaintiffs Moore and DeVito claim that they have already experienced suspicious activity related to the T-Mobile data hack. The class action lawsuit states that the plaintiffs have noticed that fraudulent home loan applications have appeared on their credit reports. The T-Mobile class action lawsuit claims that due to the security breach both the plaintiffs and future Class Members will incur actual damages in an attempt to prevent identity theft.

The T-Mobile data hack class action lawsuit alleges that the cell phone company misled the plaintiffs into believing that their sensitive information would be protected.

The plaintiffs have accused Experian of recklessly violating the Fair Credit Reporting Act, stating that “It was reasonably foreseeable to defendant that its failure to identify, implement, maintain and monitor the proper data security measures, policies, procedures, protocols, and software and hardware systems to safeguard and protect plaintiffs’ and Class Members’ consumer credit information would result in a security lapse, whereby unauthorized third parties would gain access to, and disseminate, plaintiffs’ and class members’ consumer credit information into the public domain for no permissible purpose under FCRA.”

Both Experian and T-Mobile have already offered two free years of credit monitoring and identity restoration services for consumers affected by the breach. Go to www.protectmyID.com/securityincident or call Experian at 866-369-0422 to enroll. Consumers are asked to enroll by April 30, 2016.

According to plaintiffs, however, two years of free credit monitoring is not enough.

The data breach class action lawsuit is seeking injunctive relief that would force Experian to notify all possible victims of the data hack and provide free credit monitoring to all future Class Members for at least the next six years. In addition, the plaintiffs are also requesting that Experian conduct on-going tests and audits in order to improve their security.

This is not the first time Experian has experienced a data hack. In 2012, a security breach attack on an Experian subsidiary exposed the Social Security numbers of 200 million U.S. residents.

Plaintiffs Moore and DeVito filed the T-Mobile class action lawsuit just one day after the cell phone company announced that the data hack had occurred and the private information of their customers used for credit checks had been stolen. The data breach class action lawsuit is seeking more than $5 million in damages from both Experian and T-Mobile to financially compensate potential Class Members.

Once approved, the T-Mobile class action lawsuit will be open to all Class Members who who applied for credit with the phone company between Sept. 1, 2013 and Sept. 16, 2015.

The plaintiffs are represented by Edward Anthony Wallace of Wexler Wallace LLP.

The T-Mobile Data Hack Class Action Lawsuit is Moore, et al. v. Experian North America Inc., et al., Case No. 1:15-cv-08771, in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois.

UPDATE: On Nov. 12, 2018, T-Mobile customers and Experian have reached a settlement which requires the credit monitoring company to pay $22 million to exit a data breach class action.

UPDATE 2: January 2019, the Experian data breach class action settlement is now open. Click here to file a claim.

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69 thoughts onT-Mobile, Experian Hit with Data Breach Class Action Lawsuit

  1. sandra says:

    I received a letter just got it today how do I sign up.

  2. Call me Dill says:

    Just 5 mil? They should put Experian out of business. T-Mobile just a customer of Experian, but they should be punished for ignoring previous Experian flops (200mil records breach)

  3. Rafael Colon says:

    No letter from them yet but got one from IRS about someone using tax information

    1. Hilda Aranda says:

      Omg I am having the same problem with the IRS, I have had inquiry and loan purchases under my name, I had to file a police report; I am a victim of identity theft. This year has been a nightmare for me to try and clean it up. I hired Lexington law for 6 months only they are too slow and take there time so they can get paid more the longer they take. Let me tell you all three credit bureaus are useless because all they do is monitor but not protect; someone can still use your information and it shows up on the credit report instantly, all creditor does is mail you an alert what was added to your TRW, the big problem is removing it. I have to contact the creditors, get the address and some require an affidavit, so get have to pay for a notary, get police report and cops don’t like doing this until you get an attitude for them to do it, and send it to the creditor and bureaus. Plus I had to change my bank account 4 times in one year. My credit was at 800 and now it is at 690 due to all this mess.

      1. Sarah says:

        I completely understand what you’re going through! Sounds EXACTLY like my situation. I also hired Lexington Law and paid them so much money, for nothing! I am now working with Score Cure. Its rediculous!

  4. Trish says:

    we JUST got a letter letting us know about this today from experian. we didnt even know there was a class action.

  5. Michael C. Shada says:

    Experian is clearly at fault! Their’s was the site for approving credit for T mobile applicant’s and for MAINTAINING that credit information. The LEAST Experian should do is LIFETIME monitoring of affected customers. (THE LEAST!)

  6. cheryl says:

    I have been with them for 10+ yrs and am paying for 2 phones as of last year I think they should do more than free credit monitoring seeing as its there incompetents

  7. Markeisha says:

    Experian sent be a notice offering protection,but says not their fault it’s T-Mobile fault basically

  8. gurinder summan says:

    How do I get in on this law suit?

  9. chris miner says:

    I have been with t mobile since 06 so I’m pretty sure I qualify. I have several devices I’m still paying for.

    1. Stefanie Glover says:

      You wouldn’t apply to this. This only for customers who signed up for service during said dates at which point their social security numbers were non-securely put into the system that to perform credit checks. Both parties involved (Experian/T-Mobile) dropped the ball and now our personal info has been leaked. Lots of potential for fraud/identity theft

  10. Angela Broxton says:

    How do I get in on this law suit? Do they automaticlly include you by an audit of t mobile or do I have to contact someone?

    1. V says:

      If it becomes a class action suit you would contact the overseeing lawyer[s] and add your name to the list. Be sure that it was between the dates posted, they will investigate your information to be sure that you obtained or applied for a t-mobile contract during that time period.

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