Particle.news
Download on the App Store

Judge Partly Dismisses AirPods Pro Crackling Case as Omission Claims Proceed

The case now turns on whether Apple concealed known sound defects in first‑generation AirPods Pro.

Overview

  • U.S. District Judge Noël Wise in San Jose threw out nationwide consumer protection and warranty counts and a California unjust enrichment claim, and denied injunctive relief because the original model is no longer sold.
  • The court allowed fraud‑by‑omission allegations to move forward, letting plaintiffs pursue claims that Apple withheld material facts about sound quality problems.
  • Plaintiffs have 21 days to amend certain dismissed state, nationwide, and warranty claims, keeping the possibility alive that some counts could be revived.
  • For the surviving theory, plaintiffs must show Apple knew of the defect and concealed it after launch, with the judge calling Apple’s safety‑only disclosure argument premature to resolve.
  • Customer complaints in 2020 prompted a software update and an October 2020 replacement program for units made before October 2022, and the court noted the product’s discontinuation when rejecting injunctive relief.