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Columbia to pay $9 million to settle lawsuit over US News college ranking

Columbia to pay $9 million to settle lawsuit over US News college ranking

CNN17 hours ago
Columbia University agreed to pay $9 million to settle a proposed class action by students who claimed it submitted false data to boost its position in U.S. News & World Report's influential college rankings.
A preliminary settlement, which requires a judge's approval, was filed on Monday in Manhattan federal court.
Students said Columbia artificially inflated its U.S. News ranking for undergraduate schools, reaching No. 2 in 2022, by consistently reporting false data, including that 83% of its classes had fewer than 20 students.
They said the misrepresentations enticed them to enroll and allowed Columbia to overcharge them on tuition.
The settlement covers about 22,000 undergraduate students at Columbia College, Columbia Engineering and Columbia's School of General Studies from the fall of 2016 to the spring of 2022.
Lawyers for the students called the accord fair, reasonable and adequate. Columbia denied wrongdoing in agreeing to settle.
The university said in a statement that it 'deeply regrets deficiencies in prior reporting,' and now provides prospective students with data reviewed by an independent advisory firm to ensure they receive accurate information about their education.
The litigation began in July 2022, after Columbia math professor Michael Thaddeus published a report alleging that data underlying the school's No. 2 ranking were inaccurate or misleading. Columbia's ranking dropped to No. 18 that September.
In June 2023, Columbia said its undergraduate schools would stop participating in U.S. News' rankings.
It said the rankings appeared to have 'outsized influence' with prospective students, and 'much is lost' in distilling education quality from a series of data points.
Some other universities, including Harvard and Yale, also stopped submitting data to U.S. News for various schools. U.S. News also ranks graduate schools.
Lawyers for the Columbia students plan to seek up to one-third of the settlement for legal fees, leaving about $6 million for the students.
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Watch Live: Bryan Kohberger, charged in murders of 4 University of Idaho students in 2022, pleads guilty
Watch Live: Bryan Kohberger, charged in murders of 4 University of Idaho students in 2022, pleads guilty

CBS News

time9 minutes ago

  • CBS News

Watch Live: Bryan Kohberger, charged in murders of 4 University of Idaho students in 2022, pleads guilty

Bryan Kohberger, the former criminal justice doctoral student charged in the murders of four University of Idaho students in 2022, admitted to the crimes in court Wednesday before formally entering a guilty plea in a deal that spares him from the death penalty. As part of the plea deal, Kohberger pleaded guilty to four counts of first-degree murder and one count of burglary, Judge Steven Hippler said. Kohberger is charged with four counts of murder in the stabbings of Ethan Chapin, Xana Kernodle, Madison Mogen and Kaylee Goncalves, who were killed at a home in Moscow, Idaho, during the early morning hours of Nov. 13, 2022. Kohberger was arrested at his parents' home in Pennsylvania six weeks later. The hearing began just before 11:15 a.m. local time. Hippler asked that those in the courtroom avoid "outbursts or demonstrations" during the hearing. Hippler apologized for the short notice for the hearing, and said he did not know about a plea agreement before Monday. Kohberger faces up to four consecutive life sentences without the possibility of parole, one for each murder charge, and a 10-year sentence for the burglary charge. Hippler said that the court is not bound by the plea agreement as far as sentencing, and could impose a different sentence, but Kohberger is unable to ask the court to do so. He would also waive his right to appeal, Hippler said. The plea deal would spare him the death penalty, which prosecutors had sought. Kohberger told Hippler he agreed with the plea agreement and understood the nature of the charges against him. He said he had not been coerced into taking the plea agreement. "Are you pleading guilty because you are guilty?" Hippler asked. "Yes," Kohberger said. Hippler then asked Kohberger if he had murdered Mogen, Goncalves, Kernodle and Chapin. Kohberger said "Yes" to each question. Family members of the victims could be seen crying in the courtroom as Hippler read the charges against Kohberger. The plea deal was first revealed in a letter sent to the victims' families by the Latah County Prosecutor's Office. Mogen's father, Ben Mogen, shared portions of the letter with "CBS Mornings," in which the prosecutor's office said that attorneys for Kohberger, 30, requested the deal and Kohberger accepted it. Prosecutors then outlined the evidence they would have brought against Kohberger if the case had gone to trial. Their evidence would have included DNA evidence that linked him to a knife sheath found at the crime scene. Kohberger had bought the same type of a knife with the same type of sheath on Amazon, prosecutors said. The DNA came from a single male source, prosecutors said, and was later matched to Kohberger. The weapon itself has not been recovered, prosecutors said. They also planned to present surveillance video of Kohberger's car and cellphone data that they said showed him in the vicinity of the killings. Finally, Hippler asked Kohberger how he pled to each charge. To each count, Kohberger pleaded guilty. Brian Kohberger, charged in the murders of four University of Idaho students, appears at the Ada County Courthouse, Wednesday, July 2, 2025, in Boise, Idaho. Kyle Green / AP The letter says that if Kohberger "enters guilty pleas as expected," prosecutors expect him to be sentenced in late July. If he does not enter the expected guilty plea, prosecutors will proceed to trial. Kohberger's trial was expected to begin in August, following several delays. In Idaho, a judge has the authority to reject plea deals, but it's considered rare. Kohberger's defense team had a motion to remove the death penalty as a possible sentence if he was convicted denied in November 2024. The case was meant to be tried in Latah County, but was moved to Boise out of concerns that media coverage and statements from local officials would make it impossible for Kohberger to receive a fair trial. Most recently, Ada County Judge Steven Hippler denied a motion by Kohberger's lawyers, who were seeking to argue that four "alternate perpetrators" could have committed the slayings. The judge called the argument "rank speculation" and said nothing linked the parties to the murders. Martin Souto Diaz, an attorney for the Kohberger family, said in a statement provided to CBS News Tuesday evening on behalf of the family that, "In light of recent developments, the Kohbergers are asking members of the media for privacy, respect, and responsible judgment during this time. We will continue to allow the legal process to unfold with respect to all parties, and will not release any comments or take any questions." Legal experts weigh in on Kohberger plea deal Gretchen Engel, the executive director of the Center for Death Penalty Litigation who has spent 33 years representing death row prisoners, said that in her experience it's "pretty common for a plea deal to come together at the last minute." However, she said she is "a bit mystified" prosecutors in this case agreed to a deal just a month before trial. One reason could be that there's a weakness in the case, she said. CBS News legal contributor Caroline Polisi said the state of Idaho will benefit from the plea deal, especially since Kohberger will not be able to appeal. That may also offer relief to the families, she said. "They're getting a conviction right away, they're getting the absolute guarantee of life behind bars without the possibility of parole," Polisi said on "CBS Mornings" Tuesday. "It costs way more money to have a capital case to impose the death penalty than it does to have somebody serve life behind bars, and so, part of the rationale that the state of Idaho or prosecutors said was we're saving these families decades potentially of the anguish of going through this appeals process. This would not be a quick process." The plea deal also allows the state to save "judicial resources," Polisi said, and avoids the uncertainty of a trial and sentencing. "This is a slam-dunk case by all accounts … the DNA evidence on the knife sheath in particular, I mean, there's so much evidence here," she said. "But trials, there's always a wildcard, right? There's always a chance that there wouldn't be a conviction, and then the death penalty isn't necessarily a sure thing either." However, the lack of a trial means that some questions may remain unanswered, Polisi said. "We may never know the motive or the exact way that this crime took place, which I think is frustrating for the families as well," she said. Families of victims react The families of the victims have been split on the plea deal. The Goncalves family said in a statement shared on Facebook that they are "beyond furious at the State of Idaho," and said officials had "failed" them. "This was very unexpected," the family wrote. In another statement, they asked that the plea deal "require a full confession, full accountability, location of the murder weapon, confirmation the defendant acted alone, & the true facts of what happened that night." Ben Mogen said he was relieved to get the letter, and said the plea deal will spare him and his family from more time in court. "We can actually put this behind us and not have these future dates and future things that we don't want to have to be at, that we shouldn't have to be at, that have to do with this terrible person," he told "CBS Mornings." "We get to just think about the rest of our lives and have to try and figure out how to do it without Maddie and without the rest of the kids." contributed to this report.

You've Got the Sales — Now Let's Build the Site
You've Got the Sales — Now Let's Build the Site

Geek Girl Authority

time9 minutes ago

  • Geek Girl Authority

You've Got the Sales — Now Let's Build the Site

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If someone lands on your site and has to squint to read your product descriptions or can't find the checkout button in under 10 seconds, you've already lost them. Your design doesn't need to be flashy — just clear, beautiful, and built with your customer in mind. This is your home turf now, so build it with intention, speak in your brand's real voice, and make it something people want to come back to. Here's where things shift: on social, the platform takes care of things like security, performance, and even payments. But once you've got your own site, that responsibility moves to you — and it's not as scary as it sounds. You need to know what hosting is (basically, where your site 'lives'), how to get that little padlock in your browser (it means your site's secure), and what a backup is (like a save button for everything). These aren't extras, just the essentials. You're managing a digital environment where people enter their personal info and payment details. 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Terra CO2 cements $124M Series B to slash concrete's carbon footprint
Terra CO2 cements $124M Series B to slash concrete's carbon footprint

TechCrunch

time13 minutes ago

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Terra CO2 cements $124M Series B to slash concrete's carbon footprint

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