AOL ad revenue class action suit settled for $2.6 billion
A judge approved a $2.65 billion class-action settlement of claims that ad revenue was counted in a fraudulent manner prior to the merger of America Online and Time Warner.
U.S. District Judge Shirley Wohl Kram signed a ruling approving the deal. She had given the settlement tentative approval in September 2005.
The settlement resulted from lawsuits brought by shareholders who complained that AOL improperly accounted for dozens of advertising transactions, inflating revenue for 15 quarters from 1998 to 2002.
AOL and Time Warner announced they were merging in early 2000. AOL’s steadily declining dial-up subscriber base became a drain on Time Warner, although the Internet provider has risen in stature with the boom in online advertising.
According to the deal approved by Kram, Time Warner will pay the bulk of the settlement while its auditor, Ernst & Young, will pay $100 million.
The judge noted in her ruling that the settlement resulted from seven months of intense negotiations overseen by a court-appointed special master.
She said it was clear that class members will not recover their entire loss. She said the settlement had received overwhelming support by nearly all of the estimated 600,000 claimants.
The lead plaintiff was the Minnesota State Board of Investment, which manages the investment of retirement fund assets of the Minnesota State Retirement System, Teachers Retirement Association and the Public Employees Retirement Association.
The Minnesota board lost an estimated $249 million and had the largest financial stake in the litigation, Kram said.
Copyright 2006 Associated Press.
- Palm Beach Revolt Forces Sylvester Stallone to Abandon Mansion Sea Barrier
- Three Dozen High-Rise Buildings in South Florida Are Sinking, Study Says
- Cleveland Clinic Plans New Hospital, Larger Outpatient Center in South Florida
- Advocacy Groups Ask FIO to Release Homeowners Insurance Data Collected by NAIC