Connolly Cartel Capers: Seven Japanese Executives Indicted In Auto Parts Cartel Investigation

By: Robert Connolly

The Antitrust Division, through a federal grand jury, indicted seven Japanese executives for conspiring to fix prices in the long running auto parts investigation. There were two separate indictments. One charged executives from Mitsubishi Electric Corp. with conspiring to fix the prices of starter motors, alternators and ignition coils from at least 2000 through 2010. In the second indictment, four executives from Hitachi Automotive Systems were charged with conspiring to fix prices of multiple auto parts including starter motors, fuel injection systems, and ignition coils.

Atsushi Ueda, Minoru Kurisaki, and Hideyuki Saito of Mitsubishi Electric Corp. were charged with conspiring to fix the prices of certain automotive products sold to Ford Motor Company, General Motors LLC, Chrysler Group LLC, Fuji Heavy Industries Ltd., Nissan Motor Company Ltd., and Honda Motor Company Ltd. in the United States and elsewhere. This indictment also charged Kurisaki and Saito with knowingly conspiring to obstruct justice by destroying documents and corruptly persuading, and attempting to persuade others, to destroy documents. Saito was charged in an additional count with knowingly and corruptly persuading, and attempting to persuade, executives to destroy documents and delete electronic data that may contain evidence of antitrust crimes.

*****For the Rest of the Story, please click here*****

Volume Of Commerce Problems In Antitrust Sentencing

Problems With Volume Of Commerce In Antitrust Sentencing

 By Robert E. Connolly and Joan E. MarshallRobert Connolly %>

Law360, New York (September 15, 2014, 10:28 AM ET)

The recent sentencing of Mathew Martoma for insider trading focused the debate over the severity of white collar crime sentences driven by mechanical calculations in the federal sentencing guidelines. The probation department had recommended 20 years in jail based on the fraud guidelines profit calculations. Martoma was sentenced on Sept. 8 to nine years in prison.[1] Last month the U.S. Sentencing Commission, which sets the federal guidelines, announced it was considering changes to its policies on white collar sentences, specifically addressing the issue of profit and considering whether “there are ways the economic crime guidelines could work better.”[2] While profit is certainly a factor in sentencing, the steep and severe sentences based on profit calculations are under question.
____________________________________________________________________
Subscribe to Connolly’s Cartel Capers Blog Here 
____________________________________________________________________
Even more questionable, however, is the antitrust sentencing guideline U.S.S.G §2R1.1, where individual jail sentences are swiftly driven upward to the Sherman Act 10-year maximum, not by any defendant’s personal profit, but by the volume of commerce.[3] The volume of commerce is the most significant upward adjustment and can more than double the base offense level of 12. The relationship between volume of commerce and culpability is at best tenuous. The weight placed on the volume of commerce in calculating prison sentences has led to great uncertainty, departures by judges in contested sentences, and routine departures by the Antitrust Division in plea agreements.

In this article, we look at the defects in using volume of commerce as a significant component of determining prison sentences for individual antitrust defendants. We also recommend reforms that would insert more meaningful measures of culpability into the sentencing process.

The Guidelines Volume of Commerce Is Not a Reasonable Measure of Individual Culpability

Due to the weight given volume of commerce, a defendant with no prior criminal history in an international antitrust cartel can find himself close to 10-year Sherman Act maximum regardless of his role in the offense. The volume of commerce can add up to 16 levels to the base offense level of 12. An offense level of 28 results in a guidelines calculation of 78-97 months in prison before any other adjustments. While Congress did raise the Sherman Act maximum to 10 years, maximums are only appropriate when there are aggravating circumstances — not for a typical, but large cartel. While unintentional, in practice the guidelines harshly punish foreign executives since the most severe penalties are reserved for international cartels with large volumes of commerce.

There is little correlation between the volume of commerce in a cartel and individual culpability. For example, an owner of a concrete company that rigs bids on $5 million worth of contracts on public projects and personally pockets the conspiratorial overcharge is more culpable than a lower level employee in a $1 billion international cartel that is ordered to attend cartel meetings. Yet, the concrete company owner would get a two-level upward adjustment resulting in a guidelines range of 18 to 24 months while the lower level employee in the international cartel would get a 14-level adjustment and be facing close to the Sherman Act maximum of 10 years. These are not extreme hypotheticals — they are essentially the guidelines results in United States v. VandeBrake[4] and United States v.AU Optronics.[5]

In VandeBrake the court departed upward from the guidelines and imposed a four-year sentence on the concrete company owner. In AU Optronics several lower level executives were acquitted, but even the president and vice president received downward departures to sentences of three years. When rejecting the government’s 10-year guideline prison recommendation in AU Optronics, the court said, “The defendants thought they were doing the right thing vis-a-vis their industry and their companies. They weren’t, but that’s what they thought at the time.”[6]

On the other hand, the judge in VandeBrake found the defendant was motivated by greed. The commentary to the antitrust guidelines states: “The offense levels are not based directly on damage caused or profit made by the defendant because damages are difficult and time consuming to establish.”[7] While a blunt proxy like volume of commerce may be suitable for assessing a corporate fine, when individual liberty is at stake, more relevant culpability factors are needed.

There is another major flaw in the application of the volume-of-commerce adjustment to individual sentences. Under U.S.S.G. §2R1.1 (b)(2), “the volume of commerce attributable to an individual participant in a conspiracy is the volume of commerce done by him or his principal in goods and services that were affected by the violation.” This means that if the CEO of Company A decides to form or join a cartel and at the same time directs his sales manager to coordinate price and volume data with competitors, both are tagged with the same volume of commerce. This isn’t right.

There used to be a principle of big fish/little fish by which prosecutors and courts differentiated between the role a person played in the offense, including seniority, motivation for, and benefit received from the crime. Cartel members themselves make this distinction, often referring to cartel meetings as “top guy” or “working group guy” meetings. But, the volume-of-commerce adjustment contains no such distinction. The guidelines do provide for a mitigating role in the offense adjustment, but in an antitrust case, this makes only a slight difference in the recommended guidelines range.[8]

There are two other drawbacks with using the volume of commerce to determine an individual’s jail sentence. First, the volume of commerce is usually determined through very lengthy and complex negotiations between the Antitrust Division and the corporate defendant. The negotiations cover variables such as the duration of the conspiracy, the geographic scope of the conspiracy, the products involved and the customers affected.[9] An individual defendant is often later sentenced using a volume of commerce he had no input in calculating and insufficient resources to challenge. Finally, courts have taken an expansive view of what commerce should be included in the guidelines calculation. Courts have uniformly held that all sales made by a defendant corporation during the price fixing conspiracy should be presumed affected by the conspiracy.[10]

Some Suggestions for Reform

1. Reserve the Sherman Act Maximum for Egregious Cases

The maximum prison sentence of 10 years under the Sherman Act should be reserved for the most egregious cases.[11] These cases would include aggravating factors such as recidivism, economic coercion of competitors or subordinates to join the cartel, or extraordinary steps to prevent detection or reporting of the cartel.

2. Increase the Base Offense Level

Rather than adjust the offense level dramatically based on volume of commerce, we suggest that the base offense level be raised to a level 17 with a resulting sentencing range of 24-30 months. This captures the philosophy that short but certain jail sentences are crucial to deterring antitrust crimes — with “short” being redefined in light of the increase in the Sherman Act maximum to 10 years in jail. The recommended guidelines prison sentences should begin within this range, but allow for more culpable senior executives to face longer jail sentences based on enhancements.

3. Eliminate Volume of Commerce Except for the Most Senior Member of the Conspiracy

If the volume of commerce has a relationship to culpability, it should be limited to the senior executive responsible for engaging the company in a cartel. Even here, however, we would limit the extreme sentences for large international cartels by lowering the upward adjustment for individuals.

chart
4. Eliminate the Aggravating Role Adjustment for the Number of Participants

While not related to volume of commerce, we propose eliminating the aggravating-role adjustment for the number of participants in the offense. U.S.S.G. §3B1.1 provides for an up to four level enhancement if the conspiracy involved five or more participants. There should be no enhancement based on the number of participants in the cartel. It is simply double counting. By their very nature, price fixing cartels involve numerous participants. Participants in smaller antitrust cartels are not more or less culpable than individuals in larger industries.

5. New Enhancements Should Be Added to the Guidelines Based on Individual Characteristics

To compensate for eliminating or reducing the role of the volume of commerce adjustment, the base offense level could be increased by a rage of one to four levels if the court finds that the defendant was motived by personal gain in the form of increased salary, bonuses or stock options. There is no difference in liability if an agreement was reached to try to prevent layoffs in a distressed industry, as opposed to increasing prices to boost stock options or pay, but there is a difference in culpability.

Courts will consider these factors whether they are mentioned in the guidelines or not, so to maintain some consistency, some sentencing discretion should be added based on these factors. Other personal characteristics, such as whether the defendant helped initiate the cartel or ordered subordinates to participate, are also relevant to culpability and should be taken into account by the guidelines.

6. Add an Enhancement for Failure to Have an Effective Antitrust and Ethics Compliance Program

While not related to the volume of commerce, we suggest a revision to encourage strong and effective ethics and compliance programs. The Sentencing Commission should consider enhanced punishment for any individual defendant who was in a leadership position and failed to implement a compliance program as set forth in the Sentencing Guidelines. U.S.S.G. §8B2.1(b) lists the seven factors that must exist for a compliance and ethics program to be considered “effective.” A senior executive who had the authority to implement, or at least advocate for an antitrust compliance program (typically c-suite executives) and failed to do so is more culpable than an executive who violated a compliance program. These executives fail to give their subordinates the training they need to identify and resist involvement in the criminal activity and fail to inform them of the “whistleblower” mechanisms available to stop the activity.

This proposal is based on our collective experience in sitting across the table from lower level foreign executives who have only a vague notion about the U.S. antitrust laws and do not have an appreciation for the consequences of what they are being told to do by their superiors. Antitrust and ethics training can reduce the incidence of these scenarios.

These Suggested Reforms Will Benefit Antitrust Enforcement

These reforms are not suggested to go “soft” on criminal antitrust offenders. As former career Antitrust Division prosecutors, we have urged courts to imprison convicted antitrust defendants. We don’t presume to have all the answers on antitrust guidelines reform, but we think we have identified the most pressing issue. As the Sentencing Commission reviews the antitrust guidelines, we urge that consideration be given to reforming the way volume of commerce escalates an individual’s recommended prison guidelines range.[12] When an individual’s liberty is at stake, it is important to get it right.

—By Robert E. Connolly and Joan E. Marshall, GeyerGorey LLP

Robert Connolly is a partner in the Washington, D.C., office of GeyerGorey and former chief of the Middle Atlantic Field Office of the U.S. Department of Justice Antitrust Division. His blog, Cartel Capers, covers price-fixing, bid-rigging and market-allocation issues. Joan Marshall is a partner in the firm’s Dallas office and a former trial attorney for the Antitrust Division.

The opinions expressed are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the firm, its clients, or Portfolio Media Inc., or any of its or their respective affiliates. This article is for general information purposes and is not intended to be and should not be taken as legal advice.

[1] See http://www.law360.com/articles/558959/ex-sac-trader-martoma-gets-9-years-for-275m-scheme.

[2] See Christopher Matthews, September 7, 2014, at http://online.wsj.com/articles/insider-martomas-sentencing-highlights-while-collar-crime-debate-1410120826.

[3] “For purposes of this guideline, the volume of commerce attributable to an individual participant in a conspiracy is the volume of commerce done by him or his principal in goods or services that were affected by the violation.” U.S.S.G §2R1.1 (b) (2).

[4] United States. v. VandeBrake, 771 F. Supp. 2d 961 (N.D. Iowa 2011).

[5] United States v. AU Optronics Corp. et al., CR-09-0110 (SI)(filed June 10, 2010).
[6] United States v. AU Optronics Corporation, CR-09-0110 (N.D. Cal. Sept 20, 2012)(sentencing hearing).

[7] U.S.S.G. §2R1.1 application note 3.

[8] See Mark Rosman and Jeff VanHooreweghe, Antitrust Source, August 2012 “What Goes Up Doesn’t Come Down: The Absence of The Mitigating Role Adjustment In Antitrust Sentencing, available at: http://www.wsgr.com/publications/PDFSearch/rosman-august-12.pdf.

[9] The many variables subject to negotiation are outlined in the Antitrust Division’s Model Plea Agreement. See Antitrust Division Model Annotated Corporate Plea Agreement, available at: http://www.justice.gov/atr/public/criminal/302601.pdf.

[10] See e.g., United States v. Andreas, 216 F.3d 645, 678 (7th Cir. 2000); United States v. Hayter Oil. Co, 51 F.3d 1265, 1273 (6th Cir. 1995).
[11] Although Congress raised the Sherman Act maximum prison sentence to ten years to indicate the seriousness of antitrust offenses, it is still true that some offenses are more egregious than others and the maximum penalty should be reserved for such cases.

[12] For a more detailed look at suggested reforms to the antitrust guidelines for sentencing individuals, see Letter of Robert E. Connolly to the Sentencing Commission, July 29, 2014 available at http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2474608.

Connolly Cartel Capers Goes International!

Cartel Capers Goes International!

Antitrust enforcement, or competition law as it is known elsewhere, is international in scope. Cartels (“the supreme evil of antitrust”) are the top priority of all the major enforcement agencies worldwide. While I occasionally comment on enforcement actions in other countries, I’ve always wondered what the leading practioneers in those countries thought. So, I asked them! And, the idea grew to post occasional comments on Cartel Capers from experienced cartel defense attorneys from around the globe. As you can see below, it is my good fortune to know some pretty accomplished international colleagues. Today, I am posting short bios, and soon (as soon as I can figure out the software) I will have a drop down tab as a home for their bios and their insights.

Disclaimer: We have all worked on and continue to work on major international cartel matters.   Ethics and good judgment limit us from commenting on cases we are working on and prevent us from disclosing non-pubic/sensitive information. The information posted is not intended to be legal advice. We are not offering legal opinions, just our personal insights on major cartel developments. But, let me introduce my friends. I am sure you will be anxious to read their take on important cartel practice and procedure developments in the jurisdictions where they practice.  Guest posts will begin appearing in the near future.

Brazil: Mauro Grinberg

Mauro Grinberg is a partner at Grinberg Cordovil. He is one of the leading competition lawyers in Brazil with an incredible range of experience. Mr. Grinberg is a former Commissioner of CADE, the Brazilian antitrust agency; Former Attorney of the National Treasury of Brazil; Founder, Former Head and presently member of the Board of IBRAC (the main Brazilian antitrust think tank); Member of IBA (Antitrust Committee) and of ABA (Section of Antitrust Law); and author of many articles and frequent speaker on antitrust issues.

Canada: James Musgrove

James Musgrove is the Co-Chair, Competition and Antitrust Practice of the Canadian law firm, McMillan. Mr. Musgrove is recognized as a leading competition lawyer by various organizations, including Chamber Global, GCR, Lexpert, Best Lawyers and Who’s Who Legal, amongst others. He is active in national and international antitrust organizations, is Past Chair of the Canadian Bar Association National Competition Law Section, and currently serves on Council of the American Bar Association Section on Antitrust Law.   In 2014 he won the GCR award for Behavioural Matter of the Year – Americas for his successful defence of MasterCard, and was recently named Advertising and Marketing Lawyer of the Year—Toronto—by Best Lawyers’.

China:  Jingwen Zhu

Jingwen Zhu leads DLA Piper’s Asia competition practice. She is experienced in advising Chinese and international clients on multi-jurisdictional merger notifications, antitrust investigations, private antitrust litigations, antitrust counseling and compliance. She also has experience in state owned monopolies, privatisation of infrastructure and subsequent sector regulation, especially in cases concerning essential facilities.

Ms. Zhu is qualified as a lawyer in the People’s Republic of China. Ms. Zhu speaks Chinese (Cantonese), Chinese (Mandarin), English and German.

European Union: Dr. Markus Röhrig

Markus Röhrig is a partner at the European law firm Hengeler Mueller. Hengeler Mueller is a partnership of lawyers with offices in Berlin, Düsseldorf, Frankfurt, Munich, Brussels and London.   Mr. Röhrig joined Hengeler Mueller in 2004 and has been a partner since 2009. He is based in the Brussels office.

Mr. Röhrig has received his legal education at the University of Cologne and Georgetown University. He is admitted to the German and the New York bars. Mr. Röhrig specialises in German and European competition law. Mr. Röhrig frequently advises clients with respect to European and German cartel investigations, behavioral issues (abuse of dominance) and merger control cases.   Recently, he has been involved in major international cartel cases that are being pursued by the European Commission, the US Department of Justice and the Japanese JFTC in the automotive and other sectors.

India:    Avinash B. Amarnath

Avinash Amarnath is an associate at ‘Vinod Dhall and TT&A’ in New Delhi, India. Prior to his current position, Mr. Amarnath was an associate at the competition team in Amarchand & Mangaldas & Suresh A Shroff & Co. He has advised clients across various sectors such as automobiles, financial services, pharmaceuticals, steel, private equity, petrochemicals and electronic lab equipment on Indian competition law. Mr. Amarnath has written numerous articles on the Competition Commission of India and competition law in India. Mr. Amarnath is a graduate of Kings College London with an LLM in Competition Law.

Connolly Cartel Capers: Compliance is in the Air

Yesterday I had the good fortune to attend the 8th Annual Georgetown University Law Center Global Antitrust Enforcement Symposium. I was invited to attend by Bates White, a leading economic consulting firm. Bates White is a sponsor of the program. The agenda covered all areas of antitrust enforcement including merger enforcement, abuse of dominance and IP and high-tech issues. But in keeping with the theme of this blog, I’d like to comment on the star of the program—Cartel Enforcement—”the supreme evil of antitrust.”

Bill Baer, Assistant Attorney General for the Antitrust Division was the keynote speaker. Baer focused his remarks completely on cartel enforcement. A copy of his speech is availablehere.

Compliance was in the air. Both Baer, and another Antitrust Division leader, Brent Snyder, Deputy Assistant Attorney General for Criminal Enforcement, emphasized the need for corporations to have strong and effective compliance programs. Baer pointed out that the average jail term for an individual convicted of price fixing or bid rigging is now at 25 months.   And, courts have fined corporations as much as $1.4 billion in a single year. Baer emphasized, “effective compliance programs minimize the chance that companies will conspire to fix prices. And they maximize the chance for a company guilty of price fixing to find out about the conspiracy early enough to qualify for corporate leniency or otherwise cooperate with our investigation.”  

What Baer did not say, that may disappoint many corporate counsel, is that the Antitrust Division would change its policy of not giving credit to corporate defendants for having an antitrust compliance program. In the view of the Antitrust Division, the cases they prosecute involve senior executives of a company—executives in the plural. In these situations, the company has a failed compliance program according to the guidelines set out in the United States Sentencing Guidelines. The Division considers its leniency policy the benefit for those companies whose compliance efforts fall short in preventing a violation, but are able to detect the violation as a result of an effective compliance program. Leniency provides a complete pass for the first company to self-report and cooperating executives can also gain immunity through cooperation.

There may have been a slight shift, however, in the Antitrust Division’s policy regarding compliance programs. The Division has been criticized for never giving credit to a convicted company for a compliance program because, by definition, the program has failed. In his remarks yesterday, Baer said “It is unlikely that a corporate defendant’s pre-existing compliance and ethics program will be considered effective enough to warrant a slap on the wrist when it failed to prevent the company from violating the antitrust laws.” “It is unlikely” is a step (a very small one) from never.

Brent Snyder was on a panel “Cartel Enforcement and Policy” and echoed the remarks regarding the importance of ethics and compliance programs. A day earlier, Snyder had given a talk to the International Chamber of Commerce and US Council of International Business (here). He empathized that international companies have to worry not only about prosecution by the USDOJ, but enforcement agencies world-wide, many of which have adopted US–styled leniency programs. Snyder remarked: “The existence of a compliance program almost never allows the company to avoid criminal antitrust charges. Why? Because a truly effective compliance program would have prevented the crime in the first place or resulted in its early detection. This has been the Division’s position for at least the last twenty years, and it isn’t likely to change.” (my emphasis).

In another interesting comment is his speech, Snyder said “In addition, we are actively considering ways in which we can credit companies that proactively adopt or strengthen compliance programs after coming under investigation. Although we have not finalized our thinking in this area, any crediting of compliance will require a company to demonstrate that its program or improvements are more than just a facade.” The speeches Division officials give are carefully thought out and vetted so this is a serious remark. One thing Snyder could be alluding to is that a defendant company in this position will not face the burden of being put on probation and having an external court appointed compliance monitor imposed. The Division has sought external motors only in rare cases but it may be considering seeking that remedy more often. Companies with a strong compliance program would be spared this additional penalty.

****CLICK HERE FOR THE REST OF THE STORY****

Robert Connolly Presenting at SCCE Compliance and Ethics Conference today

I’m pleased to announce my role as an Antitrust Ambassador for Emtrain — a leading provider of modern ethics & compliance training. I will be partnering with my friend Jared Bona, The Antitrust Attorney, to create an engaging antitrust compliance program for Emtrain.

Jarod and I are joining a distinguished team of experienced practitioners, including Mike Koehler (FCPA), Sally March (Corporate Compliance & Ethics), Chris MacDonald (Business Ethics), and Timothy Crudo (Governance and Insider Trading).

Here’s a recent thought leadership clip I created with the Emtrain team in San Francisco. Click here to watch the video and please let me know what you think.

Speaking to a camera was much different than speaking to a jury, and in some ways more difficult.  Fortunately, with the benefit of multiple takes, I was able to avoid reversible error.

Also, by happy coincidence, I am a speaking at the SCCE Compliance Conference in Chicago on September 15, 2015 on a panel titled “Global Antitrust Compliance and Risk—Creating an Effective Program.”

Emtrain has an information booth at the conference and I’ll be there hoping to talk some competition law (or football) to any willing partners. If you are at the conference, please stop by and say hello at booth #96.  I’m looking forward to meeting you.

The 2014 Compliance & Ethics Institute conference is at the Hyatt Regency Chicago, September 14-17, 2014.

Connolly Cartel Capers: China Fines Auto Parts Makers over $200 Million; Batman and Robin to Open Separate Probe

by 

Last week, China’s National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) imposed its first fines in the worldwide auto parts investigation. Eight Japanese auto parts companies and four Japanese bearing makers were fined a cumulative total of just over $200 million. In a related development, Batman and Robin announced that they have directed Alfred to determine whether the Batmobile contains any of the price-rigged parts.

OK, maybe that is a little far-fetched, but the point is that cartel enforcement has clearly become a worldwide event. With China pulling up a seat at the table, the risks have never been higher for would be cartelists. “This sends a warning to companies engaging in global price-fixing that they should beware of China,” said Chen Danzhou, a lecturer specializing in anti-monopoly law at the University of International Business and Economics in Beijing. “The government is getting more aggressive as it tries to make a structural adjustment to the market.” (Bloomberg)   China had also recently fined 6 companies from South Korea and Taiwan $56 million for participation in the LCD panel cartel.

The Antitrust Division coordinated the auto parts investigation with the Japanese Fair Trade Commission, the European Commission, Canadian Competition Bureau, Korean Fair Trade Commission, Mexican Federal Economic Competition Commission and Australian Competition and Consumer Commission. What this usually means, at a minimum, is that the agencies coordinate timing of search warrants, dawn raids, inspections or wherever term is used to pay an unscheduled visit on businesses (and in some cases executives’ homes) to seize paper and electronic documents. The coordination minimizes the ability of subjects to clean house before the guests arrive. China did not participate it the auto parts coordination kickoff, but followed on as other nations brought cases.   But, China is thought to have cooperated with the DOJ, European Union Japanese, Korean and Taiwan Fair Trade Commission, (JFTC, KFTC, TFTC, respectively) in launching the recent investigation of the global capacitors industry.

Click here, for the rest of the story

Connolly’s Cartel Capers: The Unusual Hi-Tech Hiring Collusion Case

The Unusual Hi-Tech Hiring Collusion Case: Judge Rejects Proposed Settlement; DOJ Brought Civil “Per Se” Cases

Last Friday Judge Lucy H. Koh issued an unusual ruling in a somewhat unusual case.  The ruling was unusual in that the court rejected a proposed settlement in the hi-tech wage collusion class action case.  Judge Koh denied a request to preliminarily approve a $324.5 million deal to end the antitrust class action against Google Inc., Apple Inc., Intel Corp. and Adobe Systems Inc.  The suit alleged the companies agreed to not compete for each others’ high-tech employees such as software engineers and computer scientists. The court found the proposed settlement too low and indicated it should be at least $55 million more.  The civil case followed a similar suit by the Antitrust Division charging a per se violation for agreeing not to compete, but the Division’s case was brought as a civil action.

*     *     *     *     *

Click here for the rest of the story.

GeyerGorey Alumnus and “Friend of the Firm” Allen Grunes, now founding partner of innovative KonkurrenzGroup.Com, handicaps Sprint T-Mobile Bid at Politico.

GeyerGorey Alumni and “Friend of the Firm” Allen Grunes, now founding partner of innovative KonkurrenzGroup.Com, handicaps Sprint T-Mobile Bid at Politico:

Politico
TOP TALKER: SPRINT’S T-MOBILE BID — OVER AND OUT — ….

‘If true, it shows that reality has finally sunk in,’ said Allen Grunes, a former Justice Department antitrust attorney and founder of the Konkurrenz Group. ‘All the signs suggested a Sprint/T-Mobile deal would run into major opposition, and I can’t imagine parties making a deal when they know that a lawsuit is all but inevitable.'” 

Contact KonkurrenzGroup here.

Connolly’s Cartel Capers: A Look at Other Significant Submissions to the Sentencing Commission on Possible Reforms to the Antitrust Guidelines (2R1.1)

A Look at Other Significant Submissions to the Sentencing Commission on Possible Reforms to the Antitrust Guidelines (2R1.1)

I’ve posted recently on my concerns with the Antitrust Sentencing Guidelines (2R1.1) as they relate to individual defendants (here).  Other submissions have been made to the Commission by people/institutions with great insight and influence in the cartel arena.  I’ve summarized a few of these below.

Click Here For the “Rest of the Story” (hat tip to Paul Harvey)

CCC’s: Current Status of the Antitrust Division’s Real Estate Foreclosure Auction Bid Rigging Cases and Some Suggestions Moving Forward

Current Status of the Antitrust Division’s Real Estate Foreclosure Auction Bid Rigging Cases and Some Suggestions Moving Forward

Earlier this year, the Division had its first trial in its ongoing real estate foreclosure auction bid rigging investigation. Three defendants, two real estate investors and an auctioneer, were indicted for bid rigging and mail fraud. The trial lasted four weeks. The auctioneer was acquitted. The other two defendants were acquitted of the fraud charges, but convicted of the Sherman Act violation. The jury also convicted one defendant, Andrew Katakis, of obstruction of justice.   Katakis was charged with destroying electronic records (emails) related to the conspiracy. The trial judge, however, overturned the obstruction conviction for lack of evidence.

On June 6, 2014, the government filed a notice of appeal from the court’s acquittal order regarding the obstruction count. In view of that appeal, the court ordered, “all proceedings in this action are hereby stayed pending receipt of an order of remand from the Court of Appeals.” The government asked the trial court to lift the stay explaining: “If all proceedings in this Court remain stayed pending resolution of the government’s appeal, Katakis and Parker face a long wait for a ruling on their new trial motions and, depending on those rulings, for a new trial or sentencing Lifting the stay also avoids unnecessary delays in the sentencings of the other defendants in this case, none of whom were charged with obstruction. Some of them pleaded guilty long before trial and have cooperated with the government for years.”  Individuals who have pleaded guilty so far, beginning in 2011, are cooperating in the ongoing investigation and the Division has requested successfully that their sentencing be delayed until after their cooperation has been substantially complete. Accordingly, there have been no sentencings yet, and with this recent development, it appears sentencing could be delayed into at least 2015.

The Division to date has charged approximately 60 individuals in its California real estate foreclosure auction cases. (A similar far-reaching real estate auction collusion investigation is taking place in the Atlanta region) …*   *   *   *

For the Rest of the Story, Please Click Here