California Judge Halts Litigation Over 23andMe Data Breach
On Thursday, U.S. District Judge Edward Chen, who is overseeing most of the 35 lawsuits against 23andMe in the Northern District of California, said he planned to wait until the U.S. Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation decides next month whether to coordinate the cases into multidistrict litigation.
February 23, 2024 at 09:09 AM
4 minute read
What You Need to Know
- Although stay orders are common in cases facing potential multidistrict litigation, many plaintiffs firms had opposed the move, citing concerns about future privacy violations.
- Edelson's Eli Wade-Scott raised concerns that 23andMe was selling its users' genetic information to third parties, including pharmaceutical firms.
- 23andMe participated in an early mediation last month with most of the lawyers, one of whom, Gayle Blatt, sought a 'carve out' in the stay order.
A federal judge in California stayed lawsuits brought over 23andMe's data breach, despite concerns raised by some plaintiffs lawyers about the possibility of continuing privacy violations.
At a Thursday hearing, U.S. District Judge Edward Chen, who is overseeing most of the 35 lawsuits against 23andMe in the Northern District of California, said he planned to wait until the U.S. Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation decides whether to coordinate the cases into multidistrict litigation. The panel has scheduled the cases, which 23andMe wants transferred to California's Northern District, for its March 28 hearing in Charleston, South Carolina.
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