{"ok":true,"report":{"slug":"cPn92XvE","publishedAt":1780061354490,"post":{"text":"Amid criticism that claims administrators have secretly profited from class action payouts, Philadelphia-based Angeion agreed not to accept rebates from prepaid card issuers, banks or other vendors in a Kansas City data breach case.","uri":"at://did:plc:2w45zyhuklwihpdc7oj3mi63/app.bsky.feed.post/3mmyi7n2zzk2v","authorHandle":"forbes.com"},"verdict":{"verdict":"True","confidence":95,"summary":"The post accurately summarizes a May 29, 2026 Forbes article reporting that Philadelphia-based claims administrator Angeion agreed to stop accepting vendor rebates in a Kansas City data breach settlement involving Clay Platte Family Medicine. The reporting is corroborated by court filings and prior investigative coverage of kickback practices in class action administration.","claims":[{"claim":"Claims administrators have faced criticism for secretly profiting from class action payouts.","assessment":"True. Multiple sources, including Forbes and Law.com, have reported on lawsuits and scrutiny alleging that claims administrators like Angeion, Epiq, and JND received undisclosed kickbacks from fintech card issuers such as Blackhawk and Tremendous."},{"claim":"Angeion is a Philadelphia-based claims administrator.","assessment":"True. Angeion Group is headquartered in Philadelphia, as confirmed by the Forbes article and the company's own website."},{"claim":"Angeion agreed not to accept rebates from prepaid card issuers, banks, or other vendors in a Kansas City data breach case.","assessment":"True. According to the Forbes article, on May 7, 2026, Angeion agreed in the Clay Platte Family Medicine data breach settlement (a Kansas City medical practice with a $1 million settlement fund) that it would not take rebates or discounts from vendors, banks, or other financial institutions."}],"caveats":"The post is essentially a direct excerpt from the linked Forbes article. While the specific agreement in the Clay Platte case is documented in that reporting, the broader industry practice of accepting rebates remains common among other administrators and in other settlements.","sources":[{"title":"Class Action Claims Administrator Agrees To Stop Taking Vendor Rebates After Kickback Scrutiny","url":"https://www.forbes.com/sites/jeffkauflin/2026/05/29/class-action-claims-administrator-agrees-to-stop-taking-vendor-rebates-after-kickback-scrutiny"},{"title":"Lawsuit: Claims Administrators Get Kickbacks for Digital Payments","url":"https://www.law.com/2025/04/25/lawsuit-claims-administrators-get-kickbacks-for-digital-payments"},{"title":"Clay Platte, Summit Family and Other Clinics Data Breach Lawsuit","url":"https://www.classaction.org/data-breach-lawsuits/clay-platte-summit-cobblestone-barry-pointe-october-2024"}]},"communityNote":"True. Court filings and reporting confirm that claims administrator Angeion agreed to stop accepting vendor rebates in a Kansas City data breach settlement. This follows broader scrutiny over undisclosed kickbacks in class action payouts.","sourceUrl":"https://www.forbes.com/sites/jeffkauflin/2026/05/29/class-action-claims-administrator-agrees-to-stop-taking-vendor-rebates-after-kickback-scrutiny"}}