Los Angeles Times

Hertz to pay $168 million in false-arrest claims

Settlement will cover most cases in which it reported customers to police when cars were not returned on time.

- By Steven Church Church writes for Bloomberg.

Hertz Global Holdings will spend $168 million to settle hundreds of claims that it falsely reported rental customers to the police for car theft when a vehicle was not returned on time.

The company had been fighting to bottle up the lawsuits in U.S. Bankruptcy Court, but in the last few months, lawyers for many claimants had won the right to take their cases before jurors. The deal will end 364 claims, or about 95% of the allegation­s that Hertz faces, the company said.

Hertz is likely to recover a “meaningful portion” of the settlement from its insurers, according to the statement.

Lawyers for the customers who are suing Hertz did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment. The company’s shares dropped 50 cents, or 3%, to $16.37 on Monday in New York.

Hundreds of customers said in court papers that Hertz filed police reports against them and had them falsely arrested, often at gunpoint.

A small number of those cases alleged that errors by Hertz employees caused police to pull over innocent customers on suspicion of driving stolen cars.

The company filed for bankruptcy in 2020 as the COVID-19 pandemic ravaged the economy and brought car rentals to a halt. Hertz exited bankruptcy oversight last year but left a shell company to pay off its disputed debts, including the false arrest claims.

Bankruptcy courts don’t have juries and disputes are typically settled by judges focused on rehabilita­ting financiall­y distressed companies.

Hertz is the unit of Hertz Global Holdings that operates the Hertz, Dollar and Thrifty rental brands in regions that include Europe, the Americas and Australia.

For years, Hertz filed thousands of criminal cases against customers annually, according to court documents.

The company says that the majority involve disputes about vehicles that weren’t returned on time and probably had been stolen, and that it tries to contact customers about overdue cars and get them back through private means, working for about 63 days beyond the return date before involving police.

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