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To sue in federal court, a plaintiff must allege an injury that the court can actually remedy, rather than just issuing an advisory opinion, and a connection between the defendant’s conduct and the actual injury. See First-Year Law School 101. This principle, known as standing, essentially means that a plaintiff has to have an actual and imminent, not theoretical, injury.
Does the fact that a data breach exposed someone’s personal identifiable information (“PII”), without proof that the exposed PII was
misused confer standing to sue? It depends. Yes, lawyers love to say this, but in standing cases, it is true. Whether a plaintiff has standing to sue for exposure of his or her PII depends just as much on the jurisdiction in which the plaintiff files as on whether plaintiff alleges his or her data was misused.
SHAREHOLDER ALERT: Monteverde & Associates PC Announces an Investigation of Communications Systems, Inc
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SHAREHOLDER ALERT: Monteverde & Associates PC Announces an Investigation of The Michaels Companies, Inc
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