CRT monitorCredit unions that purchased cathode ray tube monitors from an electronics or office supply retailer between March 1995 and February 2007 may be eligible for payment under the terms of a multi-million dollar class action settlement.

"We anticipate a distribution of at least $25 per CRT item," plaintiff attorney Sherman Kassof told CU Times. "These include computer monitors and TVs, of course, but also any device with a CRT screen such as teller station devices and ATMs," he added.

Kassof filed the suit, which alleged retailers engaged in price fixing, in the U.S. District Court in Northern California in 2013.

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Should credit unions apply for payments under the settlement?
Yes. Why leave any money on the table?
Maybe. Depends if the amount would be worth the effort.
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Credit unions do not need receipts to prove eligibility, Kassof said, and can apply using a streamlined online form.

Credit unions that made purchases in Arizona, California, Florida, Iowa, Kansas, Maine, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, South Dakota, Tennessee, Vermont, West Virginia, Wisconsin or the District of Columbia are eligible.

So are credit unions that made CRT purchases in Hawaii, Nebraska and Nevada, but during a different time frame, according to a website about the settlement.

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