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One day after lawyers presented a proposed settlement in the Ameritrade 6.2 million-customer data breach, a U.S. federal court judge has tentatively rejected the settlement (on June 13), questioning the value of the deal for the consumer victims and the size of the $1.87 million attorneys’ fees. San Francisco-based U.S. District Court Chief Judge Vaughn R. Walker gave lawyers on both sides until June 26 to address his concerns. The judge didn’t specifically say that the lawyer’s fees were too high, but merely that “plaintiffs’ counsel has not established the basis for its fee request,” leaving himself the opportunity to potentially approve the figure if he is satisfied with a justification. Read more. |
June 16th, 2008 at 8:16 am
The plaintiffs would have fared better in small claims court.