Los Angeles Times

Deal is rejected in tech hiring case

- By Chris O’Brien chris.obrien@latimes.com Twitter: @obrien

SAN FRANCISCO — A federal judge on Friday rejected a proposed settlement in a case involving Apple Inc. and Google Inc. in which they were accused of secretly agreeing not to hire each other’s employees.

The $324.5-million deal was part of a case that had proved to be deeply embarrassi­ng for some of the biggest Silicon Valley tech companies.

As the case moved toward a trial, the companies were forced to disclose emails from such bigwigs as Apple’s Steve Jobs and Google former Chief Executive Eric Schmidt that seemed to indicate they secretly agreed not to poach rivals’ employees.

Intel Corp. and Adobe Systems Inc. were also named in the lawsuit brought by former employees of the companies.

To thwart even more disclosure­s, the companies announced a settlement to avoid a trial. But Friday, U.S. District Judge Lucy H. Koh declined to approve the deal, saying the payment was too low

Koh noted that a separate settlement involving Intuit, Pixar and Lucasfilm required each company to pay more for their part in the hiring scheme than the settlement she was rejecting.

“The remaining defendants should, at a minimum, pay their fair share as compared to the settled defendants, who resolved their case with plaintiffs at a state of the litigation where defendants had much more leverage over plaintiffs,” Koh said Friday, according to Bloomberg.

The companies must now decide whether to renegotiat­e a new settlement or proceed to trial and hope any verdict falls short of the deal that Koh scuttled.

Apple declined to comment. A spokespers­on for Google could not be reached for comment.

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