Albuquerque Journal

Most get nothing from Google suit

Case in which lawyers got millions goes to Supreme Court

- BY ROBERT BARNES THE WASHINGTON POST

The approximat­ely 129 million people who Googled in the U.S. between the fall of 2006 and the spring of 2014 may have had their privacy rights violated. Some lawyers thought so, and filed a class-action suit on their behalf. The search-engine giant coughed up $8.5 million as a settlement.

The Supreme Court reviewed the math Wednesday, and the payout for each class member was even smaller than one might expect: $0.00. More than $2.12 million of the settlement went to the lawyers who brought the case, some went to administra­tive costs and the rest went to a handful of organizati­ons and universiti­es that pledged to use it for Internet privacy education.

The whole thing, Chief Justice John Roberts suggested during the hourlong oral argument, might be “a little bit fishy.”

Roberts was specifical­ly talking about the fact that some of the groups that received part of the settlement had already received donations from Google. But, in the past, he has voiced general reservatio­ns about what are called cy pres awards in class-action settlement­s, in which lawyers get paid, organizati­ons and charities get what’s left over and the folks supposedly harmed by the challenged wrongdoing get nothing at all.

His concerns were shared by some of his fellow conservati­ves on the court.

“The attorneys get money, and a lot of it. The class members get no money whatsoever,” said Justice Samuel Alito. “And money is given to organizati­ons that they may or may not like and that may or may not ever do anything that is of even indirect benefit to them.

“How can such a system be regarded as a sensible system?”

Justice Brett Kavanaugh noted an “appearance” problem in this case. Three of the organizati­ons that received funds were affiliated with Harvard, Stanford and the Chicago-Kent College of Law, which happened to be the alma maters of lawyers representi­ng the class.

Kavanaugh suggested that it might be better to distribute the money to only some of the class members, drawn perhaps in a lottery.

“Imperfect or strange as that may be, it seems to me potentiall­y less strange — or why isn’t it less strange — than giving it to people who weren’t injured at all, who have affiliatio­ns with the counsel, and who in many cases don’t need the money?” he asked.

Washington lawyer Andrew J. Pincus, representi­ng Google, and Jeffrey Lamken, representi­ng those who agreed to the settlement, defended the process.

“If it’s not possible to give this money out to people without it becoming practicall­y zero, or there’s a grave risk of that happening, then you can take the money and give it to institutio­ns for particular uses that serve the interests of the individual class members,” said Lamken.

That resonated with some justices.

“Practicall­y, the class members would get nothing, nothing at all, and, here, at least they get an indirect benefit,” said Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg.

Justice Sonia Sotomayor said it has been estimated that after deducting for identifyin­g the millions of people in the class, preparing and executing a mailing telling them of the settlement and then processing the claims, the payout would be in the neighborho­od of 67 cents per person.

Sotomayor said it did not seem odd that a California district judge and a panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit would find the settlement met the requiremen­t that class settlement­s be “fair, adequate and reasonable.”

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