A $39.5 million price-fixing class action settlement has been reached with eight out of 13 airlines accused of conspiring to fix the prices of airline tickets for travel between the United States and Asia/Oceania. As a result, ticket purchasers may have paid more than necessary.
If you purchased an airline ticket that included at least one flight between the United States and Asia, Australia, New Zealand or the Pacific Islands, and the airline ticket was purchased from Jan. 1, 2000 and the present, you may be eligible for benefits from the transpacific airline class action settlement.
The settling defendants include: Air France, Cathay Pacific, Japan Airlines, Malaysian Airlines, Qantas, Singapore Airlines, Thai Airways, and Vietnam Airlines. However, there are still five non-settling airlines, who are also defendants in this class action lawsuit: Air New Zealand, All Nippon Airways, China Airlines, EVA Airways and Philippines Airlines.
The consolidated class action lawsuit, called In re Transpacific Passenger Air Transportation Antitrust Litigation, MDL No. 1913, was filed in 2009, alleging “a long-running, international conspiracy” by several airlines that fly from the United States to Asia and the region to impose “airfair increases, including surcharge increases, on international air passengers that were in substantial lockstep both in timing and amount.” The class action lawsuit alleged that the airlines violated antitrust laws.
The consolidated transpacific airline class action lawsuit came after several lawsuits were filed against some of the airlines by the U.S. government and investigations by the Justice Department.
The plaintiffs included residents from California, Washington State, New York, Canada and Japan, and the defendants in the initial complaint included 19 airlines.
The airlines in the price-fixing class action lawsuit were charged with violating the The Sherman Act, which includes the federal antitrust laws.
Both the Class Members and the airlines in this class action settlement believe that the terms of the settlement are fair, reasonable, and adequate.
The airlines have agreed to pay $39,502,000 into the settlement fund. There are separate subclasses for each of the named airlines above [see below for more details on who is included in the settlement].
The airlines denies any wrongdoing and say that the class action settlement is not an admission of guilt, but they agreed to the class action settlement to avoid a long and costly legal battle. The price-fixing class action settlement was preliminary approved by a California federal judge on Dec. 15, 2014.
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