Status: In progress

Randall v. Mr. Cooper Group Inc.

The plaintiff in a class action lawsuit claims Mr. Cooper failed to protect the personally identifiable information of its customers during a data breach purportedly discovered by the mortgage lender at the end of October.

  • Deadline to file a claim: TBD
  • Proof of Purchase Required: No
  • Potential Individual Reward: TBD
  • Total Settlement Amount: TBD
  • States Involved

Abraham Jewett  |  November 16, 2023

Category: Data Breach
IT worker inside of a server room, representing the Mr. Cooper data breach class action.
(Photo Credit: Gorodenkoff/Shutterstock)

Mr. Cooper data breach class action lawsuit overview: 

  • Who: Nancy Randall filed a class action lawsuit against Mr. Cooper Group Inc. 
  • Why: Randall claims Mr. Cooper failed to protect the personally identifiable information of its customers during a data breach purportedly discovered by the mortgage lender at the end of last month. 
  • Where: The class action lawsuit was filed in Texas federal court. 

Mortgage corporation Mr. Cooper failed to protect the personally identifiable information (PII) of its customers during a data breach discovered by the company at the end of last month, a new class action lawsuit alleges. 

Plaintiff Nancy Randall claims Mr. Cooper was obligated by industry standards to safeguard any information in its systems containing PII, yet allegedly failed to do so during a data breach event it purported to discover on Oct. 31. 

Randall argues Mr. Cooper also failed to provide timely, accurate and adequate notice to inform herself and other class members that their PII allegedly had been compromised during the data breach. 

“The security incident was wide-reaching, impacting a number of the Defendant’s computer systems and compromising the PII of millions of people,” the Mr. Cooper class action states. 

Randall wants to represent a nationwide class and Washington subclass of individuals who had their PII maintained by Mr. Cooper and were sent a notice regarding the data breach. 

Mr. Cooper failed to implement, follow ‘basic security procedures,’ class action says

Randall argues her and other class members PII is now “in the hands of criminals” due to an alleged failure by Mr. Cooper to “implement and follow basic security procedures.” 

“Consequently, Plaintiff and Class Members have had to spend, and will continue to spend, significant time and money in the future to protect themselves due to the Defendant’s failures,” the Mr. Cooper class action states. 

Randall claims Mr. Cooper is guilty of unjust enrichment, breach of implied contract, negligence, negligence per se and is in violation of the Washington Consumer Protection Act

The plaintiff is demanding a jury trial and requesting declaratory and injunctive relief along with an award of compensatory, statutory, treble and/or punitive damages for herself and all class members. 

In March, Nationstar — which is now known as Mr. Cooper — agreed to pay $5 million to end claims it sent incorrect automated clearing house entries to the bank accounts of mortgage borrowers in April 2021. 

Did you receive a data breach notice from Mr. Cooper? Let us know in the comments! 

The plaintiff is represented by Joe Kendall of Kendall Law Group, PLLC and Kenneth Grunfeld of Kopelowitz Ostrow PA. 

The Mr. Cooper data breach class action lawsuit is Randall v. Mr. Cooper Group Inc., Case No. 3:23-cv-02507, in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas.


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687 thoughts onMr. Cooper class action claims mortgage provider’s negligence resulting in data breach

  1. Shirley D. Denton says:

    Mr. Cooper and Nationstar handled my mortgages.

  2. Debbie Baldwin says:

    I received a letter of the data breach from Mr Cooper

  3. Yvonne says:

    Yes, I received a letter December 17, 2023, that my info was compromised.

  4. Geroge says:

    Yes, data breaches are bad. However deliberately handing my info over to a class settlement administrator without my permission is much worse.
    I have made my stance clear with Nationstar. If they pass my name over, they can expect the worst. I will not stand for it. I will stop them, and I will not let the law get into my way. More peoples should stand with me.

    You folks know you will get $10, and you will have to fill out forms and hand over more info. Do you have a clue why that is bad?

  5. Bridget says:

    I received a letter my info was compromised

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