A federal judge has reportedly expressed concern about approving tech companies’ settlement offer proposed to end a lawsuit filed against the firms’ non-poaching agreements.
US District Judge Lucy Koh said Thursday that the plaintiffs have leverage against the companies, Apple, Google, Adobe and Intel, should they go to trial. The companies offered a $324.5 million settlement to plaintiffs to end litigation after plaintiffs, thousands of Silicon Valley workers, sued the companies in 2011 for antitrust violations, accusing the companies of illegally colluding with each other not to hire each other’s employees.
The plaintiffs were seeking $3 billion in damages, which could be trebled to $9 billion.
But the settlement was reached last April. Now, reports say that deal may not get a pass.
”I just have concerns about whether this is really fair to the class,” Judge Koh said Thursday regarding the settlement. She added that she has not yet made a decision regarding the offer’s approval.
A lawyer for the plaintiffs, however, said that a settlement was likely their best option, noting that the $324.5 million offer is “bar far” the largest antitrust employee settlement ever reached, and that the plaintiffs are facing significant risks if and when the case is appealed.
The lawyer added that the Supreme Court is not likely to hear a case with such a large class.
But Judge Koh was reportedly skeptical that the case would reach the nation’s top court. “if there was gong to be a good case for further restricting class actions, I’m no sure this is the one,” she said.
Full content: Reuters
Want more news? Subscribe to CPI’s free daily newsletter for more headlines and updates on antitrust developments around the world.
Featured News
Meta Begins Defense After FTC Concludes Case in Landmark Antitrust Trial
May 15, 2025 by
CPI
UK Data Bill Still No Closer to Passage As Parliamentary ‘Ping-Pong’ Drags On
May 15, 2025 by
CPI
Regeneron Pharmaceuticals Awarded $271.2M in Damages Against Amgen
May 15, 2025 by
CPI
FTC Chair Proposes 15% Staff Reduction Amid Budget Constraints
May 15, 2025 by
CPI
UK Urges Antitrust Watchdog to Prioritize Growth and Clarity in Business Regulation
May 15, 2025 by
CPI
Antitrust Mix by CPI
Antitrust Chronicle® – Healthcare Antitrust
May 14, 2025 by
CPI
Healthcare & Antitrust: What to Expect in the New Trump Administration
May 14, 2025 by
Nana Wilberforce, John W O'Toole & Sarah Pugh
Patent Gaming and Disparagement: Commission Fines Teva For Improperly Protecting Its Blockbuster Medicine
May 14, 2025 by
Blaž Višnar, Boris Andrejaš, Apostolos Baltzopoulos, Rieke Kaup, Laura Nistor & Gianluca Vassallo
Strategic Alliances in the Pharma Sector: An EU Competition Law Perspective
May 14, 2025 by
Christian Ritz & Benedikt Weiss
Monopsony Power in the Hospital Labor Market
May 14, 2025 by
Kevin E. Pflum & Christian Salas