Weinberg v. Advanced Data Processing, Inc. et al

Track this case

Case Number:

0:15-cv-61598

Court:

Florida Southern

Nature of Suit:

Contract: Other

Multi Party Litigation:

Class Action

Judge:

Beth Bloom

Firms

  1. May 03, 2016

    Health Data Co., Patient Settle Info Breach Suit

    Intermedix Corp. agreed Tuesday to settle a putative class suit in Florida over a security breach at the health care payment and data processing company that led to theft of patients' tax refunds.

  2. November 17, 2015

    Judge Trims Breach Suit Against Health Data Co.

    A Florida federal judge on Monday declined to toss most of a proposed class action over a security breach at a health care payment and data processing company, finding that a California man had adequately alleged the company had a duty to protect his information.

  3. November 10, 2015

    Health Data Co. Denies Duty To Protect Patient Info

    A health care payment and data processing company urged a Florida federal court Monday to toss a putative class action over a security breach that revealed patient information, saying it had no business relationship with the patients and thus no duty to protect their data.

  4. November 02, 2015

    Health Data Co. Had Duty To Victims Of Breach, Judge Told

    A proposed class of people victimized by a 2012 security breach at a health care payment and data processing company told a Florida federal judge on Friday that the company was obligated to protect their information, even if there wasn't a direct relationship between them and the company.

  5. August 06, 2015

    Fla. Judge Denies 'Premature' Health Data Breach Class Cert.

    A Florida federal judge on Wednesday denied class certification for a proposed class of people victimized by a 2012 security breach at a health care payment and data processing company, saying the motion was premature.

  6. August 05, 2015

    Health Care Data Co. Waited Years To Disclose Breach: Suit

    A Florida data processing company and health care payment processor waited up to three years to tell potentially millions of patients that their identities may have been stolen and sold by an employee, according to a proposed class action filed Tuesday in Florida federal court.