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West Virginia drops Microsoft antitrust suit

Only Massachusetts is still fighting the case now

June 17, 2003 12:00 PM ET

IDG News Service - West Virginia will drop its appeal of last year's ruling in the federal antitrust case against Microsoft Corp. and settle a class-action lawsuit over unfair competition in a settlement worth a total of $21 million, Microsoft said in a statement yesterday.
To settle class-action consumer lawsuits brought in West Virginia's Boone and Ohio counties, Microsoft will offer consumers in that state $18 million in vouchers for hardware, software or professional development services, to be spent on Microsoft or non-Microsoft products, said company spokesman Jim Desler. Residents of West Virginia will have four months to make a claim under the settlement, and successful claimants will receive vouchers for $5 or $10, depending on what they bought. Half of any unclaimed vouchers will be given to West Virginia's most needy public schools.
In addition, the company will give vouchers for hardware, software or services worth $1 million to state schools, as well as vouchers worth $700,000 to the Office of the West Virginia Attorney General to be distributed at the attorney general's discretion, Microsoft said. The remaining $1.3 million will be paid to the state, in part to cover the administrative cost of distributing the vouchers.
The deal has received the preliminary approval of the court of settlement, Microsoft said.
The company announced the settlement June 13 of a similar class-action lawsuit in North Carolina in a deal worth $89 million.
By dropping its appeal against District Court Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly's November ruling in the federal antitrust case, West Virginia leaves Massachusetts as the only state still fighting the ruling. The two states had been holding out for a tougher ruling.





Reprinted with permission from

IDG.net
Story copyright 2009 International Data Group. All rights reserved.

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