Ten other defendants in the Closed Loop stockpile lawsuit objected to the Sony settlement amount. | Boonchuay1970 / Shutterstock[/caption]
A federal judge denied Sony's $1.2 million settlement in the Closed Loop cleanup case, saying the dollar amount may not cover all the pounds connected to the OEM.
The decision marks the first time a settlement agreement has been rejected in the years-long Closed Loop Refining and Recovery case.
U.S. District Court Judge Edmund Sargus, Jr. on Sept. 27 rejected the proposed deal between Sony Electronics and the warehouse owners, Garrison Southfield Park and Olymbec USA. Under the agreement, Sony would have paid $1.2 million to help fund the cleanup of tens of millions of pounds of CRT materials abandoned by Closed Loop Refining and Recovery in Columbus, Ohio.
Sargus agreed with OEMs and e-scrap companies that had objected to the Sony settlement. He ruled that the settlement was premature and approving it would be unfair to the other defendants.
"[Evidence] suggests that Sony may be in possession of records showing that it is responsible for a greater share of the e-waste at the Closed Loop facilities than the current proposed settlement accounts for," Sargus wrote.
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Ten other defendants in the Closed Loop stockpile lawsuit objected to the Sony settlement amount. | Boonchuay1970 / Shutterstock[/caption]
A federal judge denied Sony's $1.2 million settlement in the Closed Loop cleanup case, saying the dollar amount may not cover all the pounds connected to the OEM.
The decision marks the first time a settlement agreement has been rejected in the years-long Closed Loop Refining and Recovery case.
U.S. District Court Judge Edmund Sargus, Jr. on Sept. 27 rejected the proposed deal between Sony Electronics and the warehouse owners, Garrison Southfield Park and Olymbec USA. Under the agreement, Sony would have paid $1.2 million to help fund the cleanup of tens of millions of pounds of CRT materials abandoned by Closed Loop Refining and Recovery in Columbus, Ohio.
Sargus agreed with OEMs and e-scrap companies that had objected to the Sony settlement. He ruled that the settlement was premature and approving it would be unfair to the other defendants.
"[Evidence] suggests that Sony may be in possession of records showing that it is responsible for a greater share of the e-waste at the Closed Loop facilities than the current proposed settlement accounts for," Sargus wrote.
Ten other defendants in the Closed Loop stockpile lawsuit objected to the Sony settlement amount. | Boonchuay1970 / Shutterstock[/caption]
A federal judge denied Sony's $1.2 million settlement in the Closed Loop cleanup case, saying the dollar amount may not cover all the pounds connected to the OEM.
The decision marks the first time a settlement agreement has been rejected in the years-long Closed Loop Refining and Recovery case.
U.S. District Court Judge Edmund Sargus, Jr. on Sept. 27 rejected the proposed deal between Sony Electronics and the warehouse owners, Garrison Southfield Park and Olymbec USA. Under the agreement, Sony would have paid $1.2 million to help fund the cleanup of tens of millions of pounds of CRT materials abandoned by Closed Loop Refining and Recovery in Columbus, Ohio.
Sargus agreed with OEMs and e-scrap companies that had objected to the Sony settlement. He ruled that the settlement was premature and approving it would be unfair to the other defendants.
"[Evidence] suggests that Sony may be in possession of records showing that it is responsible for a greater share of the e-waste at the Closed Loop facilities than the current proposed settlement accounts for," Sargus wrote.
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