© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: The Library at Vanderbilt College in Nashville, Tennessee, U.S., September 18, 2018. REUTERS/Harrison McClary/File Picture
By Mike Scarcella
(Reuters) -Dartmouth, Northwestern (NASDAQ:), Rice and Vanderbilt universities have agreed to pay a mixed $166 million to resolve claims that they favored rich pupil candidates, pushing whole settlements in a federal antitrust lawsuit over faculty monetary support practices to $284 million.
Legal professionals for a proposed class of tons of of hundreds of present and former U.S. college students disclosed the newest settlements in a submitting late Friday in Chicago federal courtroom.
The 2022 lawsuit stated 17 outstanding faculties and universities violated U.S. antitrust legislation by violating a pledge to not contemplate college students’ funds in making admissions selections, giving rich college students an edge.
Dartmouth and Rice stated they might every pay $33.75 million. Northwestern agreed to pay $43.5 million, and Vanderbilt can pay $55 million.
Brown, Yale and Columbia universities earlier agreed to pay a mixed $62 million to resolve claims towards them.
The faculties, together with those who have reached settlements, have denied wrongdoing.
Northwestern, Dartmouth, Vanderbilt and Rice in statements stated settling with the plaintiffs allowed them to maneuver previous the case and concentrate on their educational missions.
The case will proceed towards seven faculties, together with Cornell College, College of Pennsylvania and Georgetown College.
Ted Normand, a lawyer for the plaintiffs, in an announcement stated, “These new settlements will considerably improve the compensation to the category members for the hurt we allege the defendants’ cartel triggered.”
Common payouts to members of the category are anticipated to be $750, in response to a courtroom submitting.
The settlements are topic to a choose’s consideration and approval.