Steven Cohen  |  November 21, 2019

Category: Data Breach

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The class action watchdog Center for Class Action Fairness has filed an objection to the Equifax data breach class action settlement, claiming that the attorney fee request should be reduced and that the settling parties suppressed the claims process.

Equifax settled the case in July 2019 in what is considered one of the largest data breaches of personal and financial information in American history.

The objection, filed in Georgia federal court by Ted Frank and David Watkins, states that Class counsel structured the settlement and claims process unfairly which will deter objections and stifle monetary claims.

Frank is the Director of Litigation and Senior Attorney at the Center for Class Action Fairness, which is a part of the Hamilton Lincoln Law Institute.

The objection states that “there are fundamental intraclass conflicts regarding statutory-damages claims that require separate subclassing and separate counsel.”

The Equifax settlement includes a single Class of around 147 million customers whose personal information was stolen due to a data breach in September 2017. 

The objection filed by Frank and Watkins states that the court ruled that the plaintiffs would be able to go forward with data breach claims from 25 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands. In addition, the court stated that the plaintiffs could proceed with claims from consumer protection statutes from 33 states, including the District of Columbia and the Virgin Islands.

“Rule 23(a)(4) requires class members with different statutory claims to be subclassed with separate representation so that a group of class members’ claims are not favored at the expense of another’s,” the objection states.

In addition, the objection notes that Class Members should have representatives and Class attorneys who are not conflicted. Frank says the Equifax settlement involves dozens of different statutes that vary in the amount of available damages.

“Without separate counsel to help press their most compelling case, their respective subgroups could not maximize the litigation values of their statutory claims,” Frank states.

In addition, the court documents state that the requirements for objecting to the settlement are too burdensome and were designed to lower the number of objections that are filed.

First, the settlement requires that any individual who would like to object to the settlement must provide four dates between Nov. 19, 2019 and Dec. 5, 2019 when they would be available to be deposed.

Also, objectors are required to identify all class actions that they have objected to within the past five years.

In addition, Frank argues that Class counsel’s fee request should be reduced and the excess amounts should be returned to the Class. He states that the fee request of 21 percent of the settlement amount is more than twice the average percentage awarded in settlements of this size.

Frank argues that “while the settlement may be the ‘largest data breach settlement in history,’ that is only because of the class size” and not because of the amount of money that each Class Member will receive.

The Equifax data breach settlement initially offered Class Members a choice of either $125 in cash or 10 years of credit monitoring. However, the Federal Trade Commission has warned that due to an “overwhelming” and “unexpected” amount of Class Members filing claims, those choosing the cash option are expected to receive an amount that’s a lot lower than $125. 

Do you think the Equifax data breach settlement is fair? Leave a message in the comments section below.

The plaintiffs are represented by co-lead counsel Amy Keller of DiCello Levitt Gutzler LLC, Kenneth Canfield of Doffermyre Shields Canfield & Knowles LLC and Norman Siegel of Stueve Siegel Hanson LLP. Barnes Law Group LLC and Evangelista Worley LLC  serve as co-liaison counsel. Cohen Milstein Sellers & Toll PLLC, Girard Gibbs LLP, Hausfeld LLP, Tadler Law LLP, Morgan & Morgan Complex Litigation Group, Murphy Falcon & Murphy and The Doss Firm LLC are on the plaintiffs’ steering committee. Griffin & Strong PC serves as state court coordinating counsel.

The Equifax Data Breach Class Action Lawsuit is In re: Equifax Inc. Customer Data Security Breach Litigation, Case No. 1:17-md-02800, in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Georgia.

UPDATE: On Dec. 20, 2019, a federal judge gave a $425 million Equifax class action settlement final approval despite objections from consumer advocacy groups.

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170 thoughts onEquifax Settlement Faces Objection From Watchdog Group

  1. Dawn Osburn says:

    This settlement is ridiculous. They want to give us either way less than $125 or 10 years of free credit monitoring.They want me to trust them to monitor my credit when they are the reason it needs to be monitored to begin with. We had no choice in them being one of the big 3 places that access to all of our information and therefore their responsibility in keeping that information safe is far more than a few dollars or 10 years of free credit monitoring. I do not trust them anymore and I think they should not be allowed to to continue to operate . This reach could have far reaching affects , more than 10 years because the people who stole the information now knows everything about us. We have to freeze our credit and go through other problems because they didn’t update their security well enough. Give me a break. I would like to object to this myself if I had the time, money and resources. We should have the option of no longer letting them have any access to any more of our information. The amount that was settled for does not even come close to what they should have to pay and on top of that if you want to get more money for all this crap you have to keep receipts, logs and prove it was due to their breach. So now on top of all the other crap I have to do because of them , I have to prove to them it was because of them. They have made made billions of dollars off the information that they have and we deserve to get some of that back, not just a few dollars. The amount they have to pay is nothing compared to what it will cost all of us and what it already has.

    1. Gina Gentry says:

      I totally agree!!

  2. Michael E Thomas Jr says:

    Definitely not fair $125 is not enough. Our information is out there all because of this company $125 dont make it right. But you can give 10 years of free credit monitoring which is worth more then $125 sounds like were still getting it stuck to us

  3. Lisa says:

    I don’t thank the settlement being offer in this case is fair and just due to the information taken due to the Equifax breach.

  4. Maxine Dicks says:

    I dont think it’s fair at all, $125.00 is not enough. Now your info is published on the dark web.

  5. Latoya says:

    This is fair at all to those who experience this data breach. Now reading the initial payment will not be $125 but much lower wow Injustice.

  6. Carol says:

    No I don’t believe that the amount of $125.00 is enough for all the problems that Breach has cause. And now they’re talking about giving less then that. All of this is wrong

  7. Latoya Robinson says:

    Please add me

  8. Katherine L Ward says:

    I do not think that offer of $125 is enough due to the Equifax breach and that you get 10 years or credit monitoring for that long I need to be a better solution anyways these companies TransUnion Experian Equifax makes lots of money and are involved caused many great harm to their credit because of these I talked with some lawyers already about my credit in the concerns I have with the breeches and all and already know that they’re people that are and have sued and and one big money for these lawsuits with Experian I do not think it’s right to offer $125. There’s a lot more here about these breaches than meets the eye

  9. Brie says:

    No, it is absolutely ridiculous! Even if I received the $125, that is not nearly enough for having my information on the dark web…and I received notification that it was. Any person with ALL of their personal information verified on the dark web should absolutely be compensated WAY better.

  10. Brenda Williams says:

    I received a letter from Equifax stating my credit file was one of the ones that were breached. I agreed to the $125 dollar settlement even though it does not look like it will be that amount. Is there anything else I should do?

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