Anne Bucher  |  April 30, 2014

Category: Consumer News

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Experian LogoOn Tuesday, a California federal judge preliminarily approved an $8 million class action settlement that would resolve claims that Experian Information Solutions Inc. illegally disclosed consumers’ credit reports to a debt collection agency.

The Experian class action lawsuit was initially filed by plaintiff Roane Holman in 2011. It was later amended to include plaintiffs Narciso Navarro and Miguel A. Alvarez. The plaintiffs alleged that Experian provided their consumer reports to collection agency Finex Group LLC, which was attempting to collect on debts it incurred for towed vehicles. The agency entered into a subscriber agreement with Experian that lasted from January 2008 until November 2010.

The class action lawsuit alleged that Experian violated the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) when it failed to confirm that Finex was using the credit reports for a permissible purpose, despite the fact that Experian had reason to believe Finex was not doing so. If a jury were to find that Experian willfully violated the FCRA, it could award each Class Member statutory damages of $100 to $1,000.

According to court documents, Finex received more than 40,000 consumer credit reports from Experian that contained a “recovery score,” which ranks accounts based on the likelihood that the debtors will pay the debt they owe.

Under the terms of the Experian class action settlement, Class Members who submit valid claims will receive up to $375. Class Members include all consumers whose credit reports were provided to Finex stemming from Finex’s efforts to collect on a towing deficiency claim since Jan. 12, 2009. Individuals who subsequently filed for bankruptcy are excluded.

U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken approved the Experian class action settlement on April 29 after finding that its terms were fair, reasonable and adequate. A final fairness hearing has been scheduled for Dec. 11, 2014.

Class Members have until Sept. 2, 2014 to submit a claim for the Experian class action settlement. Under the terms of the agreement, Class Members must be able to show that they owned a vehicle that was towed, that they did not initiate the towing and that the debt has not been reduced.

The plaintiffs are represented by Andrew J. Ogilvie and Mark F. Anderson of Anderson Ogilvie & Brewer LLP and Balam Osberto Letona of the Law Offices of Balam O. Letona.

The Experian Credit Report Disclosure Class Action Lawsuit is Holman v. Experian Information Solutions Inc., et al., Case No. 4:11-cv-00180, in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California.

 

UPDATE 5/27/14: One of the attorneys representing the plaintiffs reported in a May 13 blog post that Claim Forms will be mailed to Settlement Class Members in early June 2014.

Please note: Some viewers have erroneously included information in the comments section about a separate Experian class action settlement (Sapp v. Experian). That settlement was granted final approval on May 15, 2013. The Settlement Administrator’s website states that Class Members automatically received Experian’s credit monitoring service called Protect My ID, for a period of 24 months. Class Members received a written communication from the Claims Administrator providing instructions on how to access Experian’s Protect My ID credit monitoring or equivalent service. More information on that Experian class action settlement can be found at www.experianclassaction.com.

There is currently no Administrator Website for the Homan v. Experian class action settlement that we’re aware of. We’ll update readers with claim filing instructions as soon as we receive them. Keep checking TopClassActions.com or sign up for our free newsletter for the latest updates. You can also mark this article as a “Favorite” using your free Top Class Actions account to receive automatic notifications when this article is updated.

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52 thoughts onExperian Reaches $8M Credit Report Disclosure Class Action Settlement

  1. Angelica Romero says:

    Add me

  2. Bobby Whaley says:

    I need an attorney that has previously dealt with Finex in resolving their unlawful attempts to collect money that is not owed and removing their collection item from credit reports. Any recommendations are welcome and appreciated.

  3. Carlos says:

    Can all you people asking to be signed up chill the heck out??
    #1 Class actions can not sign you up for anything, you have to do it yourself.
    #2 be patient as soon as a way comes out for you to sign up they will post it as they always have.
    You all seem like a bunch of children begging for a piece of candy sheesh.

  4. Top Class Actions says:

    UPDATE 5/27/14: One of the attorneys representing the plaintiffs reported in a May 13 blog post that Claim Forms will be mailed to Settlement Class Members in early June 2014.

    Please note: Some viewers have erroneously included information in the comments section about a separate Experian class action settlement (Sapp v. Experian). That settlement was granted final approval on May 15, 2013. The Settlement Administrator’s website states that Class Members automatically received Experian’s credit monitoring service called Protect My ID, for a period of 24 months. Class Members received a written communication from the Claims Administrator providing instructions on how to access Experian’s Protect My ID credit monitoring or equivalent service. More information on that Experian class action settlement can be found at http://www.experianclassaction.com.

    There is currently no Administrator Website for the Homan v. Experian class action settlement that we’re aware of. We’ll update readers with claim filing instructions as soon as we receive them. Keep checking TopClassActions.com or sign up for our free newsletter for the latest updates. You can also mark this article as a “Favorite” using your free Top Class Actions account to receive automatic notifications when this article is updated.

  5. Wilma Padin says:

    Me and my fiancé would like to be included as well.

  6. anna says:

    My husband and I both went through this, we would like to be included in this law suit.

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