Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Center_for_Class_Action_Fairness> ?p ?o }
- Center_for_Class_Action_Fairness abstract "The Center for Class Action Fairness (CCAF) is a Washington, D.C.-based public-interest law firm, founded by Ted Frank in June 2009 to represent consumers dissatisfied with their counsel in class actions and class action settlements. It is a 501(c)(3) organization. According to The American Lawyer, as of March 2011, the CCAF had filed objections to 17 settlements, with eight objections pending in federal district courts, and had been successful on six of them. The CCAF has objected to settlements throughout the United States, particularly in cases where class action lawyers receive cash payments but the plaintiff class receives only discount coupons for further products and services from the defendant company. It has distanced itself from other firms that make money by holding up class action settlements until they themselves are paid off. The CCAF has raised objections to class action settlements involving the Grand Theft Auto \"Hot Coffee\" minigame, Honda Civic Hybrids, Apple backdating, A.G. Edwards, Bluetooth headsets, and the Cobell Indian Trust.".
- Center_for_Class_Action_Fairness foundedBy Ted_Frank.
- Center_for_Class_Action_Fairness foundingYear "2009".
- Center_for_Class_Action_Fairness locationCountry United_States.
- Center_for_Class_Action_Fairness wikiPageExternalLink centerforclassactionfairness.blogspot.com.
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- Center_for_Class_Action_Fairness wikiPageWikiLink Ted_Frank.
- Center_for_Class_Action_Fairness wikiPageWikiLink The_American_Lawyer.
- Center_for_Class_Action_Fairness wikiPageWikiLink United_States.
- Center_for_Class_Action_Fairness wikiPageWikiLink United_States_District_Court_for_the_Central_District_of_California.
- Center_for_Class_Action_Fairness wikiPageWikiLink Vaughn_Walker.
- Center_for_Class_Action_Fairness wikiPageWikiLink Washington,_D.C..
- Center_for_Class_Action_Fairness wikiPageWikiLinkText "Center for Class Action Fairness".
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- Center_for_Class_Action_Fairness bgcolor "#c6dbf7".
- Center_for_Class_Action_Fairness date "February 2013".
- Center_for_Class_Action_Fairness foundation "June 2009".
- Center_for_Class_Action_Fairness founder Ted_Frank.
- Center_for_Class_Action_Fairness homepage centerforclassactionfairness.blogspot.com.
- Center_for_Class_Action_Fairness inaccurate "yes".
- Center_for_Class_Action_Fairness industry "Law".
- Center_for_Class_Action_Fairness locationCity "Washington, D.C.".
- Center_for_Class_Action_Fairness locationCountry United_States.
- Center_for_Class_Action_Fairness name "Center for Class Action Fairness".
- Center_for_Class_Action_Fairness quote ""Even when a lawsuit is plainly meritless, it costs defendants a lot of money to have litigators dealing with the case. Without a loser pays rule, it's cheaper for the defendants to pay trial lawyers protection money to go away. Because no one has an incentive to object, the settlements get rubber-stamped, and the trial lawyers go on to file the next extortionate lawsuit. And we all pay higher prices as a result. In other cases, the lawsuit has merit, but the class lawyers would prefer to maximize their share of the settlement than do what is right for their putative clients: they structure the settlement in tricky ways that will minimize the total cost to the defendant while making it seem like their own outsized fees are justified. The defendant just wants the suit to go away as cheaply as possible, and doesn't care whether lawyers or consumers get the money. The class notice might be misleading: we successfully objected in one case where the notice implied that the class would get $9.5 million , when the class in fact got about $117,000. CCAF hopes to change this by giving consumers another option: object, with a lawyer standing behind them to explain to a court why the law doesn't permit such an extortionate settlement that fails to benefit consumers."".
- Center_for_Class_Action_Fairness quote ""In these desperate economic times, we're looking for ways to stimulate the economy. One cheap way to do so without increasing government debt is to stop making it profitable for trial lawyers to bring meritless cases that impose what is effectively a multibillion-dollar litigation tax on productive sectors of the economy. We can't litigate our way to prosperity."".
- Center_for_Class_Action_Fairness quote ""Operating largely on donations, the CCAF in a short period has gained a reputation as a formidable check on highly questionable practices that have gone unchallenged precisely because they are the product of collusive parties and allied judges. The advent of a committed and aggressive watchdog like CCAF is, to those familiar with these scams, like sunlight and Lysol."".
- Center_for_Class_Action_Fairness source "— Karen Lee Torre of the Connecticut Law Tribune describing the Center for Class Action Fairness .".
- Center_for_Class_Action_Fairness source "—Frank on the purpose of the CCAF.".
- Center_for_Class_Action_Fairness source "—Frank, on tort reform. August 2011.".
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- Center_for_Class_Action_Fairness subject Category:Class_action_lawsuits.
- Center_for_Class_Action_Fairness subject Category:Law_firms_based_in_Washington,_D.C..
- Center_for_Class_Action_Fairness subject Category:Organizations_established_in_2009.
- Center_for_Class_Action_Fairness hypernym Washington.
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- Center_for_Class_Action_Fairness comment "The Center for Class Action Fairness (CCAF) is a Washington, D.C.-based public-interest law firm, founded by Ted Frank in June 2009 to represent consumers dissatisfied with their counsel in class actions and class action settlements. It is a 501(c)(3) organization. According to The American Lawyer, as of March 2011, the CCAF had filed objections to 17 settlements, with eight objections pending in federal district courts, and had been successful on six of them.".