Today Maurice Stucke will be presenting “In Search of Effective Ethics & Compliance Programs” before the Harvard European Law Association and its Program on Informal Enforcement of Competition Law

Preliminary Program

Harvard European Law Association

Informal Enforcement of Competition Law: Perspectives from the U.S. And Europe

March 24, Center for European Studies, Harvard University

Welcome: Pieter-Augustijn Van Malleghem (HELA) (9-9.10)

Opening SpeechAn Enforcer’s View: Prof. Jacques Steenbergen (Belgian CA), The Informal Competition Policy of the Belgian Competition Authority  (9.10-9.30)

 

  1. Informal Enforcement and Cartels (9.30-10.50AM)

Chair: Prof. Jacques Steenbergen

Anna-Louise Hinds (NUI Galway), Cartel Settlement in EU Competition Law – A Potential Compliance Impact?

Niels Baeten (Linklaters), Combined Lenience/Settlement Cases as the new normal in EU Cartel Enforcement: challenges & opportunities

Georges Georgiev (UCLA), The EU’s 2013 Proposal for a Directive on Antitrust Damages Actions: A Comparative Assessment

 

Coffee Break: 10.50 – 11.05AM

 

Keynote 1: Prof. Damien Geradin (11.05-11.25AM)

 

  1. Informal Enforcement and Unilateral Conduct (11.25-12.45PM)

Chair: Prof. Damien Geradin

Giovanna Massarotto (Criterion Economics), Antitrust Enforcement – The Crucial Role of Consent Decrees

Urska Petrovcic (EUI), Antitrust Settlements in Innovative Industries – The Case of Standard Essential Patents

Yane Svetiev (UBocconi/EUI), Settling or Learning: Commitment Decisions as a New Competition Enforcement Paradigm in the EU

 

Lunch: 12.45-1.45PM

 

Keynote 2: Prof. Einer Elhauge (1.45-2.05PM)

 

  1. Alternative Approaches to Informal Enforcement (2.05-3.25PM)

Chair: prof. E. Elhauge

Maurice Stucke (UTK), In Search of Effective Ethics & Compliance Programs

Matthew Jennejohn (BYU), Innovating Merger Review Outcomes

Mislav Mataija, (Uzagreb/EUI), Regulating the Regulators through Competition Law: Voluntary Private Regulation as an Alternative to Direct Enforcement?

 

Coffee Break: 3.25-3.40PM

 

  1. Informal Enforcement: A Legitimate Tool? (3.40-5PM)

Chair: Prof. D. Geradin

Damien Gerard, (UCLouvain/CGSH), Negotiated Remedies in the modernization era: the limits of effectiveness

Florian Wagner von Papp (UCL), Out-Lawing Antitrust

Georges Vallindas (ECJ), Is a Triple Cheeseburger easy to eat? EU’s Architecture facing non-litigation competition enforcement

Closing Remarks: Prof. Damien Geradin

Crossing the Rubicon: Why the Comcast/Time Warner merger should be blocked. Global Competition Review, 25 February 2014

http://globalcompetitionreview.com/news/article/35322/crossing-rubicon-why-comcasttime-warner-merger-blocked/

Comcast and Time Warner Cable say their proposed $45 billion merger would not raise prices – and would lead instead to real benefits – for cable customers across the country. But the deal raises serious concerns of a creeping monopolist and the ability of a powerful media buyer to harm rivals, write University of Tennessee professor and GeyerGorey of counsel Maurice E Stucke and GeyerGorey partner Allen P Grunes.

 

It seems fair to ask: Is this merger a done deal?

 

Quite a few financial analysts and some antitrust lawyers think so. They have publicly suggested that the Department of Justice and the Federal Communications Commission likely will approve Comcast’s acquisition of Time Warner Cable (TWC), subject to a few conditions, such as the extension of the Comcast/NBC Universal modified final judgment.

 

In a press call, both Comcast and TWC CEOs voiced confidence that the transaction would receive the necessary approvals, pointing to the absence of any break-up fee (or reverse break-up fee) as evidence of their confidence. Comcast has also argued that the combination would not reduce competition because the two cable providers do not compete in local markets. So is the only unanswered question what, if any, modifications will there be to Comcast’s obligations under the existing NBC Universal Final Judgment?

 

One thought experiment is to suppose that the predictions are correct. Suppose the merger, while not sailing through the regulatory process, is likely to remain relatively intact. If true, ask the following question: if Comcast can acquire TWC, what prevents Comcast from extending its footprint across America by acquiring all the remaining cable companies?

 

That was our initial query. And it seems difficult to discern a limiting principle, since the same justification for the Comcast/TWC transaction could easily be offered for a Comcast/TWC/Charter deal. Cable companies tend not to compete with one another for customers.

 

But upon closer examination, we wonder whether Comcast even would need to acquire other cable companies after acquiring TWC, which Comcast’s CEO described as the “premier pure play cable company in the US”. In acquiring TWC, according to one analysis, Comcast’s services would become available to 70 per cent of the US population (up from its current potential reach of 42 per cent of the US population). After TWC, Comcast’s remaining conquests are Nevada and even-less-populated regions, like North Dakota. With due respect to those states’ citizens, why bother? But suppose Comcast later seeks to acquire a local cable company. After letting this merger through, can the DoJ seriously argue that Comcast’s expansion into Iowa may somehow “substantially lessen competition or tend to create a monopoly?” Hardly. Thus this deal with TWC is critical. Comcast is crossing the regulatory Rubicon.

As noted, Comcast principally argues that it does not compete with TWC in the same geographic markets. Without any competitive overlap, according to Comcast, the acquisition does not really change anything. But this is wrong for several reasons.

 

First, a merger can violate section 7 of the Clayton Act without the parties competing in the same geographic market. Suppose each state had its own cable monopoly. Comcast, under its logic, could legally acquire every cable company in the US. Even if New York consumers were unaffected when Comcast acquires other Midwest cable monopolies, Comcast’s acquisition of local monopolies affects the overall competitive landscape. Moreover, if Comcast’s rivals compete throughout the US, and if Comcast can disadvantage its rivals by raising their costs, then consumers can be adversely affected far beyond Comcast’s local cable monopolies.

 

The intent under section 7, as in other parts of the Clayton Act, is as courts recognised to cope with monopolistic tendencies in their incipiency – well before they have attained such effects as would justify a Sherman Act proceeding. Congress sought to prevent situations where “several large enterprises [were] extending their power by successive small acquisitions”.  Here Comcast is extending its power through a significant acquisition – one that expands its reach to most of the US population.

 

As the DoJ found, Comcast and TWC already have market power for both video and broadband services in numerous local geographic markets. Comcast is the nation’s largest provider of video services (22 million residential customers at the end of 2012), internet services (19.4 million customers), and voice services (10 million customers). At the end of 2012, 41 per cent of the homes and businesses in the geographic areas Comcast served subscribed to Comcast’s video services; 36 per cent of the homes and businesses subscribed to Comcast’s internet services. As the largest video content distributor in many areas of the country, Comcast controls the pipes. But it also creates content through its national cable networks (including CNBC, MSNBC, and USA Network), regional sports networks, broadcast television (including NBC and Telemundo broadcast networks) and movie studio Universal Pictures, which produces, acquires, markets and distributes filmed entertainment worldwide.

 

In acquiring TWC, the second-largest cable provider of video, high-speed data and voice services in the US, Comcast extends its market power in five geographic areas: New York State (including New York City), the Carolinas, the Midwest (including Ohio, Kentucky and Wisconsin), Southern California (including Los Angeles), and Texas. This aggregation of important local markets, we submit, has antitrust significance.

 

Second, the Congressional command for section 7 is to “preserve competition among many small businesses by arresting a trend toward concentration in its incipiency before the trend developed to the point that a market was left in the grip of a few big companies”, as the Supreme Court said in Von’s Grocery. It was fashionable before the economic crisis for antitrust technocrats to scoff at Von’s, and at considering any trend toward concentration and the incipiency standard in merger review.

 

But after the havoc caused by financial institutions too big to fail (or to criminally prosecute), the incipiency standard has reappeared in the DoJ and FTC’s horizontal merger guidelines. One potential consequence of this merger is to accelerate the trend toward concentration among content providers and cable companies. Indeed, the chairman of DISH Network reportedly commented that this deal, if approved, “certainly doesn’t hurt the case for consolidation” of satellite TV providers, notwithstanding the fact that the US blocked a deal between Dish and DirecTV in 2002.

 

Third, one reason Congress sought to thwart a market dominated by a few firms is to prevent coordination or collusion. With fewer competitors, coordination, either express or tacit, becomes easier. We are already beyond that point. The DoJ and New York recently charged Comcast, TWC, Cox, and Bright House Networks of agreeing to restrain competition with Verizon.

 

Basically the cable companies sought to extend their “triple play” of voice, video, and broadband services into a “quad play” that included Verizon’s wireless services. Verizon, however, offered its competing “triple play” of voice, video, and broadband FiOS services. Under their agreement, in regions where Verizon’s FiOS competed with the defendant cable companies, Verizon would have sold two “quad play” products – its own and its competitors.  Verizon further agreed not to offer consumers a better price for its own quad play product. Not surprisingly the competitors’ agreement, the DoJ alleged, would have diminished Verizon’s incentives and ability to compete against Comcast, TWC, and the other cable providers. Why did Verizon hamstring itself? The cable companies agreed not to partner with a competing wireless company. And Verizon received a commission from selling its competitors’ products. This recent enforcement action shows how highly concentrated markets are susceptible to coordination.

 

Fourth, Comcast’s “no-competitive-overlap” argument considers only cable and internet subscribers. It ignores how the competition laws were also enacted to protect sellers from powerful buyers. One concern that arose in the recent joint hearings between the DoJ and Department of Agriculture is anti-competitive buyer power, namely monopsony. The complaint was that tepid antitrust enforcement over the past 30 years has left farmers and ranchers at the whim of powerful buyers. The emerging academic scholarship suggests that monopsony power can occur at lower market shares than monopoly power. Thus another concern is how the acquisition increases Comcast’s power to disadvantage sellers of television content (and raise the costs of Comcast’s rivals).

 

Fifth, in investigating Comcast’s deal with General Electric that ultimately enabled Comcast to control NBC Universal, the DoJ discussed various ways Comcast could disadvantage its traditional competitors (direct broadcast satellite and telephone companies) plus the emerging online video programming distributors (OVDs). Netflix and other OVDs rely on internet service providers like Comcast and TWC to deliver their television shows and movies to subscribers. Thus the growth of OVDs, as the DoJ found, “depends, in part, on how quickly [internet service providers] expand and upgrade their broadband facilities and the preservation of their incentives to innovate and invest”. In acquiring TWC, Comcast will have even more power to thwart Netflix or other emerging OVD rivals by impairing or delaying the delivery of their content. (Although Netflix recently sought to contractually resolve this issue with Comcast, other OVDs may lack the clout.)

 

Comcast might respond that whatever these concerns’ validity, its current Final Judgments with the DoJ ameliorate them. Comcast will likely extend net neutrality to TWC subscribers, promise to increase its broadband speed, and expand in rural and low-income areas. Comcast has also expressed a willingness to divest certain systems serving approximately three million managed cable subscribers, to be below 30 per cent of nationwide multichannel video subscribers. Why is that not good enough?

 

The FCC’s 30 per cent limit on nationwide multichannel video subscribers that any single cable provider can serve was vacated in 2009 by the US Court of Appeals for the DC Circuit; in its recent 10-K, TWC “is unable to predict when the FCC will take action to set new limits, if any”. So that is hardly a barrier. At what point does the DoJ become concerned and wonder whether its NBCU Final Judgment will protect suppliers and consumers? The judgment, for example, requires Comcast to maintain its internet access speed above a certain level. But the DoJ cannot know what a competitive market could bring.

 

That is a fatal flaw of behavioural remedies. Comcast continues to deliver expensive and (according to some critics) inferior broadband. In the US, it lags Google Fibre and other internet service providers. And there is less incentive for Comcast, after acquiring TWC, to innovate and compete.

 

AT&T, like Comcast, described its proposed acquisition of T-Mobile as somehow pro-consumer, pro-innovation, and pro-investment. AT&T apocryphally predicted that if its merger in a highly concentrated industry were blocked, consumers would suffer from lower output, worse quality, and higher prices. But AT&T and T-Mobile abandoned their merger after the DoJ’s challenge, and consumers now benefit from the competition by T-Mobile. Generally, antitrust views competition, not its reduction, as the remedy for allocating scarce resources. This deal is by no means done.

 

Copyright 2014 Global Competition Review

 

Hays Gorey quoted in Policy and Regulatory Report’s “Ford can sue Fujikura for auto parts conspiracy, judge rules”

“‘But Ford still carries a heavy burden of proof, said Hays Gorey, an attorney with GeyerGorey who spent many years with the DoJ’s Antitrust Division. “Ford will still have the burden at trial of showing that US commerce was affected by the conspiracy,” he said. “At some point, the connection between the unlawful conduct and the injury becomes too remote or too problematic to establish injury even if there was a conspiracy.’”

Policy and Regulatory Report

Son’s Challenge to Cable Won’t End T-Mobile Deal Scrutiny

Son’s Challenge to Cable Won’t End T-Mobile Deal Scrutiny

“After buying control of third-largest U.S. wireless provider Sprint Corp. (S) last year, Son wants to acquire T-Mobile, the fourth-largest. Even if the merger sparks competition with cable, the elimination of one of four major wireless carriers won’t be overlooked by antitrust regulators, said Maurice Stucke, a law professor at the University of Tennessee.

“He has to overcome the presumption that this merger is anticompetitive,” said Stucke, a former Justice Department lawyer. ‘You can’t argue we should allow this market to be more concentrated in order to better compete in a separate market.’”

Two Northern California Real Estate Investors Charged with Bid Rigging at Public Foreclosure Auctions Investigation Has Yielded 46 Plea Agreements to Date

Department of Justice
Office of Public Affairs
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Tuesday, March 11, 2014
Two Northern California Real Estate Investors Charged with Bid Rigging at Public Foreclosure Auctions Investigation Has Yielded 46 Plea Agreements to Date

Two Northern California real estate investors pleaded guilty for their roles in conspiracies to rig bids and commit mail fraud at public real estate foreclosure auctions in Northern California, the Department of Justice announced.

Felony charges were filed on June 30, 2011, in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California in Oakland, against Grant Alvernaz, of Pleasant Hill, Calif., and Douglas Moore, of Walnut Creek, Calif.  Alvernaz pleaded guilty to the charges on Sept. 7, 2011.  Moore pleaded guilty to the charges on Aug. 24, 2011.  The charges and the guilty pleas were unsealed yesterday.  Including Alvernaz and Moore, a total of 46 individuals have pleaded guilty or agreed to plead guilty as a result of the department’s ongoing antitrust investigation into bid rigging and fraud at public real estate foreclosure auctions in Northern California.

According to court documents, Alvernaz and Moore conspired with others not to bid against one another, and instead to designate a winning bidder to obtain selected properties at public real estate foreclosure auctions in Contra Costa and Alameda counties, Calif.  Alvernaz and Moore were also charged with conspiring to commit mail fraud by fraudulently acquiring title to selected Contra Costa and Alameda County properties sold at public auctions and making and receiving payoffs and diverting money to co-conspirators that would have gone to mortgage holders and others by holding second, private auctions open only to members of the conspiracy.  The department said that the selected properties were then awarded to the conspirators who submitted the highest bids in the second, private auctions.  The private auctions often took place at or near the courthouse steps where the public auctions were held.   Alvernaz and Moore pleaded guilty to participating in the conspiracies in Contra Costa County beginning as early as February 2009 and continuing until in or about December 2010 and in Alameda County from as early as March 2009 and continuing until about November 2010.

“The integrity of real estate foreclosure markets depends on open and honest competition, which the perpetrators of these collusive schemes undermined,” said Assistant Attorney General Bill Baer in charge of the Department of Justice’s Antitrust Division.  “The division will continue to pursue those who illegally enrich themselves at the expense of lenders and financially distressed homeowners.”

The department stated that the primary purpose of the conspiracies was to suppress and restrain competition in order to obtain selected real estate offered at Contra Costa and Alameda County public foreclosure auctions at non-competitive prices.  When real estate properties are sold at these auctions, the proceeds are used to pay off the mortgage and other debt attached to the property, with remaining proceeds, if any, paid to the homeowner.  According to court documents, these conspirators paid and received money that otherwise would have gone to pay off the mortgage and other holders of debt secured by the properties and, in some cases, the defaulting homeowner.

“The unsealed court documents narrate the criminal actions taken as part of this real estate bid-rigging conspiracy in northern California,” said David J. Johnson, FBI Special Agent in Charge of the San Francisco Field Office.  “The public should consider this an example of how a competitive marketplace can be taken advantage of by those who are shortsighted by greed.”

A violation of the Sherman Act carries a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison and a $1 million fine for individuals.  The maximum fine for the Sherman Act charges may be increased to twice the gain derived from the crime or twice the loss suffered by the victims if either amount is greater than $1 million.  A count of conspiracy to commit mail fraud carries a maximum sentence of 30 years in prison and a $1 million fine.  The government can also seek to forfeit the proceeds earned from participating in the conspiracy to commit mail fraud.

The charges are the latest filed by the department in its ongoing investigation into bid rigging and fraud at public real estate foreclosure auctions in San Francisco, San Mateo, Contra Costa and Alameda counties, Calif.  These investigations are being conducted by the Antitrust Division’s San Francisco Office and the FBI’s San Francisco Office.  Anyone with information concerning bid rigging or fraud related to public real estate foreclosure auctions should contact the Antitrust Division’s San Francisco Office at 415-436-6660, or call the FBI tip line at 415-553-7400.

Today’s cases were brought in connection with the President’s Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force.  The task force was established to wage an aggressive, coordinated and proactive effort to investigate and prosecute financial crimes.  With more than 20 federal agencies, 94 U.S. Attorneys’ offices and state and local partners, it is the broadest coalition of law enforcement, investigatory and regulatory agencies ever assembled to combat fraud.  Since its formation, the task force has made great strides in facilitating increased investigation and prosecution of financial crimes; enhancing coordination and cooperation among federal, state and local authorities; addressing discrimination in the lending and financial markets and conducting outreach to the public, victims, financial institutions and other organizations.  Over the past three fiscal years, the Justice Department has filed nearly 10,000 financial fraud cases against nearly 15,000 defendants, including more than 2,900 mortgage fraud defendants.

Maurice Stucke comments on Comcast deal to CNNMoney

Comcast deal to face antitrust hurdles

“”The FCC is going to be the wild card,” said Maurice Stucke, antitrust law professor at the University of Tennessee and an attorney at law firm GeyerGorey. “This is the opportunity for the new chief to take a stance and become a vocal regulator.””

Allen Grunes comments on Comcast merger in Gigaom and Wall Street Journal’


Everything you need to know about the proposed $45B Comcast-Time Warner merger

“Allen Grunes, an antitrust lawyer with GeyerGorey LLP, told the Wall Street Journal: ‘There’s very little political will right now in the U.S. to keep pipes and content separate, or to limit the national reach of a cable company like Comcast. My guess is that if Comcast is able to make some serious and enforceable commitments to the FCC, the deal will go through.'” 

Compliance Week Examines Maurice E. Stucke’s Recent Research on Compliance Programs

Compliance Week’s review of the latest working paper by GeyerGorey’s Maurice Stucke affirms the nagging doubts commonly shared by compliance officers and inside counsel alike about the effectiveness of their compliance programs.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

PRLog (Press Release) – Jan. 22, 2014 – WASHINGTON, D.C. — “An eye-opening academic paper.” That was the response to Maurice E. Stucke’s latest working paper, In Search of Effective Ethics & Compliance Programs, which Compliance Week reviewed recently.

As Professor Stucke explains, the U.S. Sentencing Commission’s Organizational Guidelines for over twenty years have offered firms a significant financial incentive to develop an ethical organizational culture. Nonetheless, corporate crime persists. Too many ethics programs remain ineffective. As his article argues, the Guidelines’ current approach is not working. The evidence, which includes sentencing data over the past twenty years, reveals that few firms have effective ethics and compliance programs. Nor is there much hope that the Guidelines’ incentives will induce companies, after the economic crisis, to become more ethical.

The problem is not compliance per se. The empirical research, while still developing, suggests that compliance efforts can be effective, and that effective compliance is attainable for many companies. The problem, Professor Stucke identifies, is attributable to an extrinsic, incentive-based approach to compliance, which does not cure, and likely contributes to, the problem of ineffective compliance.

In his article, What You Believe About Effective Compliance, And What Works, Matt Kelly summarizes Prof. Stucke’s piece,

Good news for chief compliance officers frustrated with the effectiveness of your compliance program, or the lack thereof: you are correct to feel that way.

That’s the conclusion of an eye-opening academic paper, “In Search of Effective Ethics & Compliance Programs,” published last month by University of Tennessee law professor Maurice Stucke. If you ever wanted to confirm that nagging feeling you have that maybe our approach to building compliance programs and deeming them effective isn’t quite right, read this 88-page paper immediately.

Professor Stucke is part of GeyerGorey’s compliance team, which blends its experience in enforcement, in-house counseling, criminal and civil defense, and qui tam litigation, to help companies efficiently identify, address, and mitigate litigation risks from the onset and develop an organizational culture that encourages ethical conduct and a commitment to comply with the law.

Plaintiffs Win a Round in Sixth Circuit Milk Case: No Need to Show Relevant Geographic Market or Antitrust Injury to Avoid Pre-Trial Dismissal

In reversing the decision of the district court, the Sixth Circuit held that the court should have considered the possibility that the fact nature of the restraint was sufficiently clear that a “quick look” analysis would have shown that the conduct had obvious, adverse anticompetitive consequences and that a detailed market analysis was not necessary. Even though the alleged conduct was not illegal per se, the allegations in the complaint were sufficient to shift the burden to the defendant to produce evidence of some of the procompetitive benefits of the alleged conduct.
Second, the circuit court found that the trial court’s exclusion of an expert economist’s testimony in dismissing the monopolization counts in respect to his opinion on geographic market was error.  In reaching his conclusion, the expert relied on the “hypothetical monopolist” construct to assess whether the territory alleged constituted a relevant geographic market.  While the district court ruled this approach was not  that this construct required speculation about a buyer’s likely reaction to a price increase, and was not, therefore, based upon actual evidence — and, hence, was unreliable.  The Sixth Circuit, however, viewed the approach as consistent with Supreme Court authority as well as with the DOJ and FTC merger guidelines for determining a relevant market. While defendants contended that the market was much smaller, the circuit court held that that issue should be left to the jury to decide:In re Southeastern Milk Antitrust Litigation

Eastern California Real Estate Investor Pleads Guilty to Bid Rigging and Fraud at Public Real Estate Foreclosure Auctions

Eastern California Real Estate Investor Pleads Guilty to Bid Rigging and Fraud at Public Real Estate Foreclosure Auctions

Investigation Has Resulted in 11 Guilty Pleas to Date

WASHINGTON — An Eastern California real estate  investor pleaded guilty today to conspiring to rig bids and commit mail fraud  at public real estate foreclosure auctions in Eastern California, the  Department of Justice announced.

Anthony B. Joachim of Stockton,  Calif., entered his guilty plea in U.S. District Court for the Eastern District  of California in Sacramento.  Joachim was originally indicted by a federal  grand jury in Sacramento on Dec. 7, 2011, along with three other investors –  Andrew B. Katakis, Donald M. Parker and Wiley C. Chandler – and one auctioneer  – W. Theodore Longley. All five individuals were charged with conspiring with  other unnamed co-conspirators to rig bids and commit mail fraud when purchasing  selected properties at public real estate foreclosure auctions in San Joaquin  County, Calif.  The indictment was superseded on May 8, 2013, to include  an obstruction of justice charge against Katakis.  Chandler pleaded guilty  on Feb. 24, 2012, and trial is scheduled to begin against the remaining  individuals on Jan. 28, 2014.

According  to court documents, Joachim conspired with others not to bid against one  another and to instead designate a winning bidder to obtain selected properties  at public real estate foreclosure auctions in San Joaquin County.  Joachim  was also charged with conspiring to use the mail to carry out a scheme to  fraudulently acquire title to selected San Joaquin County properties sold at  public auctions, to make and receive payoffs and to divert money to  co-conspirators that would have otherwise gone to mortgage holders and others  by holding second, private auctions open only to members of the  conspiracy.  The department said that the selected properties were then  awarded to the conspirators who submitted the highest bids in the second,  private auctions.  The private auctions often took place at or near the  courthouse steps where the public auctions were held.  According to  Joachim’s plea agreement, he participated in the conspiracies between about  April 2009 until about October 2009.

“Today’s  plea is the 11th in the Antitrust Division’s ongoing investigation  of bid rigging and fraud involving real estate foreclosure auctions in the  Eastern District of California,” said Bill Baer, Assistant Attorney General in  charge of the Department of Justice’s Antitrust Division.  “The division  has uncovered similar schemes across the country and continues to prosecute  those who profit by undermining competition at real estate foreclosure  auctions.”

The  department said that the primary purpose of the conspiracies was to suppress  and restrain competition and to conceal payoffs in order to obtain selected  real estate offered at San Joaquin County public foreclosure auctions at  non-competitive prices.  When real estate properties are sold at these  auctions, the proceeds are used to pay off the mortgage and other debt attached  to the property, with remaining proceeds, if any, paid to the homeowner.   According to court documents, these conspirators paid and received money that  otherwise would have gone to pay off the mortgage and other holders of debt  secured by the properties, and in some cases, the defaulting homeowner.

“My office will continue to fight  real estate fraud in all its forms, including bringing to justice those who  would subvert public foreclosure auctions for their own personal gain,” said United States Attorney Benjamin B.  Wagner of the Eastern District of California.

Joachim pleaded guilty to bid  rigging, a violation of the Sherman Act, which carries a maximum penalty of 10  years in prison and a $1 million fine.  The maximum fine may be increased  to twice the gain derived from the crime or twice the loss suffered by the  victims of the crime if either of those amounts is greater than the statutory  maximum fine.  Joachim also pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit mail  fraud, which carries a maximum sentence of 30 years in prison and a $1 million  fine.                 The guilty plea entered today is  the latest in the department’s ongoing federal antitrust investigation of fraud  and bidding irregularities in certain real estate auctions in San Joaquin  County.  The investigation is being conducted by the Antitrust Division’s  San Francisco office, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of  California, the FBI’s Sacramento Division and the San Joaquin County District  Attorney’s Office.  Anyone with information concerning bid rigging or  fraud related to real estate foreclosure auctions should contact the Antitrust  Division’s San Francisco office at 415-436-6660, visit www.justice.gov/atr/contact/newcase.htm,  contact the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of California at  916-554-2700 or contact the FBI’s Sacramento Division at 916-481-9110.

Today’s  action was brought in connection with the President’s Financial Fraud  Enforcement Task Force.  The task force was established to wage an  aggressive, coordinated and proactive effort to investigate and prosecute  financial crimes.  With more than 20 federal agencies, 94 U.S. Attorneys’  offices and state and local partners, it is the broadest coalition of law  enforcement, investigatory and regulatory agencies ever assembled to combat  fraud.  Since its formation, the task force has made great strides in  facilitating increased investigation and prosecution of financial crimes;  enhancing coordination and cooperation among federal, state and local  authorities; addressing discrimination in the lending and financial markets and  conducting outreach to the public, victims, financial institutions and other  organizations.  Over the past three fiscal years, the Justice Department  has filed nearly 10,000 financial fraud cases against nearly 15,000 defendants,  including more than 2,900 mortgage fraud defendants.