By Jonathan Stempel
July 7 (Reuters) – A U.S. chapter choose on Tuesday accredited a $46.75 million settlement for victims of a 2023 knowledge breach on the genetic testing firm 23andMe, which uncovered genetic and different private info of an estimated 6.9 million clients.
U.S. Chapter Choose Brian Walsh in St. Louis stated the settlement was honest and equitable, and in the perfect curiosity of a belief overseen by the corporate’s chapter administrator.
The settlement will likely be lowered by $14.29 million beforehand disbursed in connection with the breach, making the overall extra payout $32.46 million.
• Based mostly in Palo Alto, California, 23andMe filed for defense from collectors in March 2025.
• It cited the information breach, associated litigation, and each elevated competitors and falling demand for genetic testing merchandise as causes for its Chapter 11 submitting.
• Final July, TTAM Analysis Institute, a nonprofit managed by 23andMe co-founder Anne Wojcicki, purchased 23andMe’s property for $305 million.
• California Lawyer Basic Rob Bonta can also be suing over the breach, accusing 23andMe of ignoring warnings that its techniques had been compromised and downplaying the breach’s severity.
• Bonta is looking for doubtlessly thousands and thousands of {dollars} in civil fines towards Chrome Holding Co, the authorized identify of 23andMe, in San Francisco Superior Court docket.
• Walsh has but to rule on the chapter administrator’s movement to dam California’s lawsuit.
• In a June 6 submitting, Bonta stated the U.S. Congress didn’t give chapter judges energy to deprive state courts of jurisdiction over state law-based enforcement actions, and permit chapter courts to develop into “a haven for wrongdoers.”
• Bonta’s workplace didn’t instantly reply to requests for extra remark.
(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York, Enhancing by Franklin Paul and Nia Williams)
