$384 Million is chump change to these companies.
Judges MUST be active in these types of cases.
So is "reasonableness"a technical term or.....
How hard it is to find good writers. "The Court finds the total settlement amount falls below the range of reasonableness."
I believe the correct last word is reason.
That word raised my eyebrow too. Shouldn't it be 'reason'? But apparently it is a legit word, because I found it in the dictionary :S
Exactly, this era of corporatism is terrible for the average person.
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Countrywide. Although the feds strongly encourage them to do so.
The judge has to have a say in the matter because this is a class action lawsuit.
Class action lawsuits are different because the plaintiffs (people who got screwed) aren't really involved in the suit themselves. There are a few "named plaintiffs" who might be, but it is likely only five people out of the tens of thousands who were harmed by this practice.
Class actions are often settled so that the attorneys make a TON of money; like tens of millions of dollars in fees. The proposed settlements actually include an agreement of how much money goes to the attorneys who brought the lawsuit against Apple and Google.
It is possible that:
1) The judge didn't feel that the class of harmed individuals (everybody who was underpaid as a result of the anti-poaching agreement) was being served by the terms of the agreement, or
2) That the attorneys' fees were way too high.
There are actual cases where the class gets pennies on the dollar while some of the attorneys walked away with $5k/hr for their work. Judges MUST be active in these types of cases.
Excellent points. I applaud the judge for this decision.
I propose cutting Lucy Koh's salary because I think it is too damn high.
I propose cutting Lucy Koh's salary because I think it is too damn high.
Countrywide, but you know that now.Not their acts, B of A was just stupid enough to buy Nationwide.
Jobs was apparently the ringleader in this criminal scheme, and his email trail of threats could prove to be fatal for apple.
In the end, the fanboys will be the ones who pay after apple doubles their prices to make up for the billions they will lose in fines.
It's time to start cutting most large corporations down to size to limit their ability to prey on consumers and rig the economy for their benefit while they throw the average customer under the bus.