More than two dozen lawsuits have been filed in the United States against Equifax after the credit reporting company said thieves may have stolen personal information for 143 million Americans, in one of the largest hacks ever.
At least 24 federal lawsuits had been filed by Sunday in connection with the breach, which Equifax had publicly revealed three days earlier, and more were filed on Monday, court records show. Most will likely be combined into a single piece of nationwide litigation.
Equifax said it learned of the hack on July 29, and had set up procedures it said are intended to help people protect their Social Security numbers and other identifying information.
Some lawsuits criticised Equifax’s offer of a year of free credit monitoring with its TrustedID product, with one complaint filed in San Jose, California, suggesting Equifax might do this to lay a “foundation” to pitch costlier services.
It cited a Feb. 22 regulatory filing in which Equifax said more companies are offering free or low-cost services such as credit scores, reports and monitoring “as a means to introduce consumers to premium products and services".
In afternoon trading, Equifax shares were down US$10.03, or 8.1 percent, at US$113.20. They closed at US$142.72 on Sept. 7, before the breach was disclosed.
Some lawyers have said they may file securities fraud lawsuits over the share price decline.