By Robert Storace | December 28, 2018
On Friday, the 50 states and the District of Columbia announced they had reached a $575 million settlement with Wells Fargo over state consumer protection claims.
By Katheryn Tucker | December 4, 2018
Attorney General Chris Carr says the settlement requires Midland to completely eliminate or reduce the judgment balances of approximately 5,136 Georgia consumers for a value of $8.73 million.
By R. Robin McDonald | September 5, 2018
Attorneys representing hundreds of consumer plaintiffs whose financial and personal information was exposed in a massive data breach at Equifax last year challenged arguments by the credit bureau's lawyers that no one suffered harm, and if they did, Equifax is not at fault.
By Katheryn Tucker | August 13, 2018
“Consumers who seek out title pawns are already in financial straits,” AG Chris Carr said. “Our office is committed to protecting vulnerable consumers from companies that try to take advantage of them."
By R. Robin McDonald | June 19, 2018
The Campaign for Accountability sought to review communications between the Consumer Credit Research Foundation and Jennifer Lewis Priestley, a KSU professor hired to research the effects of payday loans on consumer finances.
By C. Ryan Barber | June 1, 2018
The two FTC lawyers did not violate rights of LabMD's chief-executive, the D.C. Circuit said Friday, because the agency's enforcement action against had an alternative cause: a data breach that exposed a file containing the personal information of nearly 10,000 patients.
By Kristen Rasmussen | May 31, 2018
On June 13, all five SEC commissioners will participate in a public discussion on “Investing in America” at Atlanta's Georgia State University College of Law.
By Katheryn Tucker | May 9, 2018
The Georgia Supreme Court has been asked to decide whether litigation funding agreements amount to illegally high interest loans or investment contracts that reward risk—and industry groups are watching and filing amicus briefs in support of the practice.
By Greg Land | May 7, 2018
The attorney for a woman injured at an apartment complex said the appellate decision allowing a lease to reduce Georgia's two-year statute of limitations to one year "doesn't make any legal or logical sense to me."
By R. Robin McDonald | May 3, 2018
U.S. District Chief Judge Thomas Thrash issued a 34-page protective order in the Equifax data breach multidistrict litigation but warned lawyers and their clients that they should treat documents filed in the case as "presumptively public" and use their "best efforts" to limit confidential filings.
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