Uber Offers $7.5M to Settle Lawsuit Over Drivers’ Background Checks
The case in San Francisco federal court involved allegations that Uber terminated drivers from its platform after obtaining their consumer background reports without authorization.
The settlement is the latest in an effort by Uber to remove some of the litigation risk facing the company. Uber agreed in April to pay up to $100 million to settle a separate class action lawsuit involving drivers who claimed they were employees entitled to benefits, not independent contractors.
An Uber spokesman declined to comment.
Lawyers representing drivers in the background check case filed a memorandum of understanding in court on Wednesday, and said they are in the process of drafting a formal settlement.
Those attorneys had previously raised concerns that the $100 million settlement could make it harder for their clients to pursue claims over the background checks.
An attorney for the drivers could not immediately be reached for comment.
Both settlements must be approved by a San Francisco federal court judge.
(Reporting by Dan Levine; Editing by Alan Crosby)
- NTSB Unclear Who Was at Controls in Jet Crash That Killed Biffle and 6 Others
- Aon Adds to List of Brokers Suing Howden US for Alleged Poaching, Theft
- AIG Partners With Amwins, Blackstone to Launch Lloyd’s Syndicate Using Palantir
- CEO Sentenced in Miami to 15 Years in One of the Largest Health Care Fraud Cases