Having addressed the deficiencies raised by the judge, the plaintiff’s in a data breach class-action against a collection operation have filed a renewed motion for approval of a settlement that will see the collector pay $2.45 million to settle the claims against it.
The Background: Astute readers may recall seeing details about this case back in December, when the judge certified the class, but denied the settlement motion because the terms did not disclose how much the plaintiff’s attorneys were going to make. For those who forgot or never saw this case the first time …
- Back in 2022, a third-party exfiltrated personal identifiable information from the defendant’s computer system. Approximately 640,906 individuals had their information compromised as a result of the attack.
- The breach occurred in June 2022, but the defendant did not notify anyone until October of that year.
The Settlement: The terms of the settlement remain essentially the same from December’s motion. The members of the class will split $2.45 million. Class members can make a claim for reimbursement of ordinary expenses in the amount of $1,500 per class member or extraordinary expenses of $10,000 per class member.
- Ordinary out-of-pocket expenses include lost time (compensated at $30 per hour), unreimbursed losses due to fraud or identity theft, credit monitoring costs, and bank fees, long distance phone charges, postage, or gasoline for local travel.
- Addressing the issue from last time the plaintiff’s attorneys will be entitled to receive 27% of the settlement fund, or $661,500. Courts have routinely awarded plaintiff’s lawyers between 25% and 33% of the settlement amount in similar cases, the plaintiff’s note in their filing.