Offer to settle milli vanilli suit rejected by judge

Offer to settle milli vanilli suit rejected by judge

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A Chicago judge scuttled a proposed multimillion-dollar settlement to a class-action lawsuit against the lip-synching pop group Milli Vanilli on Monday, saying Arista Records and its parent


corporation will have to do more than just offer consumers a refund on future purchases of compact discs, albums and cassettes. Bertelsmann Music Group, Arista’s German-based parent


corporation, had offered the duo’s 10 million fans between $1 and $3 in refunds on any purchase of Arista recordings as part of the settlement. The amount of the refund was to have depended


on whether the customer had originally purchased a Milli Vanilli CD, tape, record or single. Though some attorneys for Milli Vanilli’s fans in the Chicago case had agreed to the settlement


last week, the circuit judge presiding over the case decided it wasn’t fair to consumers. “The judge believed it was not right to have people who had been victims of a scam once have to go


out and buy another recording,” said Jonathan Nachsin, an attorney for some of the duo’s critics. Milli Vanilli became the subject of more than 20 lawsuits across the country after it was


discovered last year that its two performers--Rob Pilatus and Fabrice Morvan--hadn’t actually sung any of the recordings on the best-selling album “Girl You Know It’s True.” The


duo--featured on the album’s jacket--had simply mouthed the words on music videos and in concerts. They returned their 1990 Best New Artist Grammy after what some have called “Vanilligate”


became public. “There is substantial opposition to the settlement from people across the country,” said Nachsin. Nevertheless, Judge Thomas O’Brien’s rejection Monday of the Arista


settlement took some entertainment law experts by surprise. “In most cases, judges do approve settlements,” said Lionel Sobel, a Loyola Law School professor and editor of Entertainment Law


Reporter. “It’s up to the lawyer for the plaintiff to get the best deal that can be gotten. It’s very unusual for judges to decide that a better deal was available--let alone should have


been gotten.” Bertelsmann had estimated it would spend millions of dollars on refunds and had agreed to donate $225,000 to court-approved charities if the settlement was accepted. Monday’s


action was significant because some legal experts said a settlement in the Chicago case could resolve the more than 20 consumer fraud lawsuits filed against Milli Vanilli and its associates,


including two in Los Angeles. Some entertainment lawyers, including Sobel, think all of the litigation spawned by Milli Vanilli is silly. “I didn’t think much of the (Chicago) case to begin


with,” said Sobel. “People knew what they were buying. They (bought) the product they intended to buy because the product they intended to buy was a record with a certain sound on it. That


is the sound they got.” Pilatus and Morvan claimed at the time the scandal erupted that officials at New York-based Arista, BMG and Gallin Morey Associates talent agency purposely


misrepresented them to the public. Arista and BMG executives could not be reached for comment late Monday. Attorneys representing the two companies said previously that the firms did not


mislead Milli Vanilli’s fans. The companies said they never created the impression the two men had actually sung on the album. The Chicago judge has scheduled a Sept. 11 hearing in order to


give both sides time to try and reach a new agreement. Times correspondent Chuck Philips contributed to this article. MORE TO READ