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Google endorses California GOP Rep. Issa’s bill to reveal funders backing lawsuits

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By Emily Birnbaum | Bloomberg

Google is endorsing a bill that would require people filing lawsuits to disclose who will be paying for – and profiting from – the litigation.

The bill, introduced last week by California Republican Representative Darrell Issa, would require plaintiffs to reveal any investors who could make money based on the outcome of a case. It would also require parties to disclose the financing agreement between investors and those involved.

“Excessive litigation driven by third-party investors is going to inherently raise costs for American companies as well as consumers,” said Google’s general counsel, Halimah DeLaine Prado, in an interview.

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Google’s support adds more heft to corporate America’s ongoing efforts to force more disclosure around “litigation financing,” a $15.2 billion industry in which investors pay for lawsuits in order to profit from any financial settlement or award.

Large companies like Alphabet Inc.’s Google are often the target of lawsuits funded by private investors, particularly about issues such as patents and copyright.

“Investor-backed entities, including those that are backed by sovereign wealth funds, can actually use the courts to go after key technologies developed by American companies,” DeLaine Prado said.

The US Chamber of Commerce, which is backed by the country’s largest companies, also endorsed the legislation, saying in a statement last week that it will “protect the integrity of our judicial system.”

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Supporters of litigation financing say the practice helps improve access to the justice system for those who couldn’t afford to go to court otherwise.

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