Anne Bucher  |  December 20, 2013

Category: Consumer News

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Target class action lawsuit

UPDATE 1: A federal judge has set a number of key dates in the Target Data Breach MDL, including an April 1, 2016 deadline to have the consolidated class action lawsuit ready for trial.

UPDATE 2: A federal judge has preliminarily approved a $10 million class action settlement. Details on how to file a claim for the Target data breach settlement can be found here.

UPDATE 3: The Target data breach class action settlement received final approval on Nov. 17, 2015.

UPDATE 4: On Jan. 27, 2016, an objection to the $10 million Target data breach class action lawsuit settlement deal was dismissed by the 8th Circuit on appeal.

UPDATE 5: On Feb. 1, 2017, the Eighth Circuit Court of appeals reversed the class certification and directed the district court to make a new ruling and explain its findings. According to the settlement website, claims will not be paid until class certification is resolved. This could take several more months. Please keep checking Top Class Actions for updates. We are following the case and will let our viewers know as soon as the class certification decision is made!

Hours after the company acknowledged that 40 million customers’ credit and debit card information was lifted during point-of-sale transactions over the past few weeks, Target Corp. was hit with a class action lawsuit over the breach.

In a statement, Target confirmed that data was stolen from credit and debit cards swiped in its U.S. brick-and-mortar stores between Nov. 27 and Dec. 15—prime holiday shopping season. According to the company’s investigation, customer names, credit or debit card numbers, expiration dates and CVV security codes were compromised. As many as 40 million customers are likely to be affected by the breach.

On Thursday, Jennifer Kirk filed a class action lawsuit accusing Target of breaking California’s unfair competition and data breach reporting laws. She also alleged the company “failed to implement and maintain reasonable security procedures and practices appropriate to the nature and scope of the information compromised in the data breach.”

According to the proposed class action lawsuit, news of the Target data breach was first published on Wednesday by blogger Brian Krebs, before Target had made any effort to notify customers who may have been affected by the Target credit card theft. News outlets began reporting that the data was likely gathered through the use of software installed on the machines customers use to swipe their credit and debit cards while paying.

The data that was allegedly exposed is known as “track data,” which allows criminals to create counterfeit cards by encoding the credit or debit card information onto any card with a magnetic strip. The Target data breach lawsuit also mentions that the thieves may have captured PIN numbers from customers who paid with debit cards, which could allow them to withdraw money directly from those customers’ bank accounts.

On Thursday, Target posted a notice on its corporate website, confirming that customers’ credit and debit card information had been compromised. The company reportedly took no steps to notify the customers who were affected by the Target credit card theft. “In its December 19 statement concerning the data breach, Target also claimed to ‘have identified and resolved the issue,’ conveying a false sense of security to affected customers,” Kirk says in her class action lawsuit.

Because of the Target data breach, customers are now at risk of identity theft. The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) estimates that as many a 9 million Americans are victims of identity theft each year. “Identity thieves can use identifying data to open new financial accounts and incur charges in another person’s name, take out loans in another person’s name, incur charges on existing accounts, or clone ATM, debit or credit cards,” the class action lawsuit says.

Not only are identity theft victims subjected to financial harm, but their identities can also become implicated in fraud. Identity thieves can use stolen data to commit immigration fraud, obtain government identification in the victim’s name, obtain government benefits in the victim’s name, file fraudulent tax returns, and a variety of other fraudulent activities. When personal data is compromised, the victims must constantly monitor their financial and personal records.

Kirk is represented by Tina Wolfson, Robert Ahdoot and Theodore Maya of Ahdoot & Wolfson PC.

The Target Customer Data Breach Class Action Lawsuit is Jennifer Kirk v. Target Corp., et al., Case No. 13-cv-05885, in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California.

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144 thoughts onTarget Hit with Class Action Lawsuit Over Massive Data Theft

  1. Felecia says:

    I used my Red Card twice during the time period to purchase household items like Tide, I want to be apart of the Class action suit, Target should inspected for glitches in their security systems prior to Black Friday.

  2. Mel says:

    After Attorneys “settle” their fees, and potentially 40 million folks are looking at restitution, you might get a Target Gift Card for $5.00, if you are extremely lucky. I recall a billing error by a Utility that ran into the millions. They settled a suit and because I was a customer I received a $5.18 credit out of hundred of millions overcharged. The only winners were Attorneys, they get their cut on the gross, which averages about 40% in most action suits. Most likely all petitioners will be combined into one negotiated or ordered settlement. Remember this, most of our Representatives elected to Office are Attorneys, that might say something. The rest of us seem to wait for that “Holy Grail” of an action or personal injury suit to provide us with a fat settlement check, whether we were harmed in some way, or not. That helps explain why this country is prone to hair trigger litigation and nuisance lawsuits over nearly every issue that presents itself. Most folks would be surprised to find out how much personal information about themselves is floating around on the internet regardless of this breach.

  3. Judy Stevens says:

    I am stressed now, as My bank Chase said my debt card was compromised, and I also used my target card, plus other major credit cards at Target, I want to know how to get in this lawsuit. I am afraid they will steal my idenity.

  4. Christian says:

    Jennifer, we used our debit cards at Target on Dec. 12 and Dec. 15th, We would like to join the lawsuit, Target hasn’t sent us an email or notified us in any way to let us now we may have been compromised.

  5. Doris says:

    I used my card Dec. 11 in Houston. Need to join the Class Action Suit.

  6. Laura says:

    I want to join the class action suit.

  7. Geneva says:

    I need to be apart of this class action lawsuit. I used my debit card

  8. Devon says:

    I shopped during this time and my info was stolen and used. My account is now frozen until the fraud department can sort it out. Really bad timing with holiday shopping and travel. I want to be a part of this suit.

  9. nancy bryan says:

    I also shopped there and bank has let me know so yes lawsuite is nesserary. Im a senior and cant afford all this..

  10. Jennifer says:

    I was affected 2 weeks ago… Someone bought a 100 dollar gift card from Starbucks and opened an account and placed an order with 1-800PETMEDS. Thank god I caught it and notified my bank right away. The card is cancelled but I would like to join this class action lawsuit! I’m out all this money until my bank refunds me!

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