Current or former Aetna members in the U.S. who received a prerecorded voicemail from AbleTo on their cell phone between September 29, 2019 and February 3, 2026.
You may be eligible for the AbleTo settlement if you:
Eligible States
To get paid from the AbleTo settlement:
No proof of receipt required. Class members who timely file a valid Claim Form will receive $23.00 by check.
AbleTo settlement payments are $23.00 per person for each class member who submits a valid, timely claim form. Payments will be made by check or digital payment. Funds will not be distributed from the net settlement fund until after the court grants final approval of the settlement and any appeals are resolved. The final approval hearing is scheduled for July 28, 2026.
Plaintiff Michael Sessa filed a lawsuit in the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Florida alleging that AbleTo, Inc. sent prerecorded voicemails to consumers’ cell phones without obtaining prior express written consent, in violation of the Telephone Consumer Protection Act (TCPA) and the Florida Telephone Solicitations Act (FTSA). The voicemails were sent on behalf of Aetna to its current and former members.
The TCPA is a federal law that prohibits sending prerecorded messages to cell phones without the recipient’s consent. The lawsuit sought actual and statutory damages on behalf of Sessa and a class of similarly affected individuals across the United States.
AbleTo denies all allegations of wrongdoing and disputes that the claims would be appropriate for class treatment at trial. The court has not ruled on the merits. Both sides agreed to settle to avoid the costs and uncertainty of continued litigation. For more information, visit the official settlement website. The case is Michael Sessa v. AbleTo, Inc., No. 8:23-cv-02219-TPB-CPT.
There are no similar listings
No news articles related to this settlement yet
Disclaimer
The information on this website is free to access and provided for general educational and informational purposes only. It is not legal advice. We summarise settlement information from official notices, court documents, settlement websites, administrators, and other primary sources where available.
Settlement details and deadlines may change. Always refer to the official settlement website or consult a licensed attorney for advice specific to your situation.
Every listing is reviewed by our research team. Found an error? Let us know. Learn more about how we verify our information.