“T-Mobile made good on its promise as an innovator. That’s why Allen Grunes, an antitrust lawyer for Geyer Gorey in Washington, D.C., said the odds are stacked against a merger this time as well.
‘That tells the DOJ they were right,’ Grunes said. ‘The decision to block was the correct decision, so why would you let another telecom take them over?'”
Category Archives: Competition
French Citizen Pleads Guilty to Obstructing Criminal Investigation into Alleged Bribes Paid to Win Mining Rights in the Republic of Guinea
Mythili Raman, Acting Assistant Attorney General for the Justice Department’s Criminal Division; Preet Bharara, the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York; and George Venizelos, the Assistant Director in Charge of the FBI’s New York Field Office, made the announcement.
Cilins pleaded guilty to a one-count superseding information filed today, which alleges that Cilins agreed to pay money to induce a witness to destroy, or provide to him for destruction, documents sought by the FBI. According to the superseding information, those documents related to allegations concerning the payment of bribes to obtain mining concessions in the Simandou region of the Republic of Guinea.
According to publicly filed documents, Cilins allegedly attempted to obstruct an ongoing federal grand jury investigation concerning potential violations of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act and laws proscribing money laundering. Court documents state the federal grand jury was investigating whether a particular mining company and its affiliates – on whose behalf Cilins had been working – transferred into the United States funds in furtherance of a scheme to obtain and retain valuable mining concessions in the Republic of Guinea’s Simandou region. During monitored and recorded phone calls and face-to-face meetings, Cilins allegedly agreed to pay substantial sums of money to induce a witness to the bribery scheme to turn over documents to Cilins for destruction, which Cilins knew had been requested by the FBI and needed to be produced before a federal grand jury. Court documents also allege that Cilins sought to induce the witness to sign an affidavit containing numerous false statements regarding matters under investigation by the grand jury.
Court documents allege that the documents Cilins sought to destroy included original copies of contracts between the mining company and its affiliates and the former wife of a now-deceased Guinean government official, who at the relevant time held an office in Guinea that allowed him to influence the award of mining concessions. The contracts allegedly related to a scheme by which the mining company and its affiliates offered the wife of the Guinean official millions of dollars, which were to be distributed to the official’s wife as well as ministers or senior officials of Guinea’s government whose authority might be needed to secure the mining rights.
According to court documents, the official’s wife incorporated a company in 2008 that agreed to take all necessary steps to secure the valuable mining rights for the mining company’s subsidiary. That same contract stipulated that $2 million was to be transferred to the official’s wife’s company and an additional sum was to be “distributed among persons of good will who may have contributed to facilitating the granting of” the valuable mining rights. According to the complaint, in 2008, the mining company and its affiliates also agreed to give 5 percent of its ownership of particular mining areas in Guinea to the official’s wife.
The case is being investigated by the FBI. The case is being prosecuted by Trial Attorney Tarek Helou of the Criminal Division’s Fraud Section and Assistant United States Attorney Elisha J. Kobre of the Southern District of New York. The Justice Department’s Office of International Affairs and Office of Enforcement Operations also assisted in the investigation.
Additional information about the Justice Department’s FCPA enforcement efforts can be found at www.justice.gov/criminal/fraud/fcpa .
Two Ocean Shipping Companies to Pay $3.4 Million to Settle Claims of Price Fixing Government Cargo Transportation Contracts
“Today’s civil settlements demonstrate our continuing vigilance to ensure that those doing business with the government do not engage in anticompetitive conduct,” said Assistant Attorney General for the Justice Department’s Civil Division Stuart F. Delery. “Government contractors who seek to profit at the expense of taxpayers will face serious consequences.”
The government alleged that former executives of the defendant ocean shippers used personal email accounts to communicate confidential bidding information, thereby enabling each of the shippers to know the transportation rates that its competitor intended to submit to federal agencies for specific routes. This information allowed the shippers to allocate specific routes between themselves at predetermined rates. Among the contracts affected were U.S. Postal Service contracts to transport mail and Department of Agriculture contracts to ship food. Both Sea Star Line and Horizon Lines previously pleaded guilty, in related criminal proceedings, to anticompetitive conduct in violation of the Sherman Act.
“Postal Service contractors must understand and know that actions that undermine the contracting process, such as conspiring to suppress and eliminate competition, will not be tolerated and will be aggressively investigated,” said Tom Frost, Special Agent in Charge of the Major Fraud Investigations Division (MFID) with the Postal Service Office of Inspector General. “MFID will continue to work with DOJ, both criminally and civilly, to bring those individuals and companies to justice.”
The civil settlements resolve allegations in a lawsuit filed in federal court in Jacksonville, Fla., by former Sea Star Line executive William B. Stallings. The lawsuit was filed under the qui tam, or whistleblower, provisions of the False Claims Act, which permit private individuals to sue on behalf of the government for false claims and to share in any recovery. The Act also allows the government to intervene and take over the action, as it did in this case. Stallings will receive $512,719 of the recovered funds.
The settlements were the result of a coordinated effort by the Civil Division of the Department of Justice and the U.S. Postal Service Office of Inspector General.
The case is captioned United States ex rel. Stallings v. Sea Star Line LLC, et al., Case No. 3:13-cv-152-J-12JBT (M.D. Fla.). The claims resolved by the settlements are allegations only, except to the extent the conduct was admitted as part of the defendants’ prior guilty pleas, and there has been no determination of liability.
SOUTH AMERICAN COMPANY AGREES TO PLEAD GUILTY TO PRICE FIXING ON OCEAN SHIPPING SERVICES FOR CARS AND TRUCKS
WASHINGTON — Compañía Sud Americana de Vapores S.A. (CSAV), a Chilean corporation, has agreed to plead guilty and to pay an $8.9 million criminal fine for its involvement in a conspiracy to fix prices, allocate customers and rig bids of international ocean shipping services for roll-on, roll-off cargo, such as cars and trucks, to and from the United States and elsewhere, the Department of Justice announced today.
According to a one-count felony charge filed today in U.S. District Court for the District of Maryland in Baltimore, CSAV engaged in a conspiracy to suppress and eliminate competition by allocating customers and routes, rigging bids and fixing prices for the sale of international ocean shipping services of roll-on, roll-off cargo to and from the United States and elsewhere, including the Port of Baltimore. CSAV participated in the conspiracy from at least January 2000 to September 2012. CSAV has also agreed to cooperate with the department’s ongoing antitrust investigation. The plea agreement is subject to court approval.
Roll-on, roll-off cargo is non-containerized cargo that can be both rolled onto and rolled off of an ocean-going vessel. Examples of this cargo include new and used cars and trucks, as well as construction, mining and agricultural equipment.
“Today’s charges are the first to be filed in the Antitrust Division’s investigation into bid rigging and price fixing of ocean shipping services,” said Bill Baer, Assistant Attorney General in charge of the Department of Justice’s Antitrust Division. “Because of the growth in the automobile ocean shipping industry over the past 40 years, the conspiracy substantially affected interstate and foreign commerce. Prosecuting international price-fixing conspiracies remains a top priority for the division.”
According to the charge, CSAV and its co-conspirators carried out the conspiracy by, among other things, agreeing – during meetings and communications – on prices, allocating customers, agreeing to refrain from bidding against one another and exchanging customer pricing information. The department said the companies then charged fees in accordance with those agreements for international ocean shipping services for certain roll-on, roll-off cargo to and from the United States and elsewhere at collusive and non-competitive prices.
CSAV is charged with price fixing in violation of the Sherman Act, which carries a maximum penalty of a $100 million criminal fine for corporations. 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.
Today’s charge is the result of an ongoing federal antitrust investigation into price fixing, bid rigging, and other anticompetitive conduct in the international ocean shipping industry, which is being conducted by the Antitrust Division’s National Criminal Enforcement Section and the FBI’s Baltimore Field Office, along with assistance from the U.S. Customs and Border Protection, Office of Internal Affairs, Washington Field Office/Special Investigations Unit. Anyone with information in connection with this investigation is urged to call the Antitrust Division’s National Criminal Enforcement Section at 202-307-6694, visit www.justice.gov/atr/contact/newcase.html, or call the FBI’s Baltimore Field Office at 410-265-8080.
Former Employee of Florida Airline Fuel Supply Company Pleads Guilty to Obstructing Federal Investigation
Craig Perez, a former employee of Aviation Fuel International Inc. (AFI), pleaded guilty to a felony charge filed today in U.S. District Court for the Western District of Missouri in Kansas City. The charge against Perez stems from the U.S. Department of Defense’s Office of the Inspector General’s Defense Criminal Investigative Service (DCIS)’s investigation into kickback payments made by AFI and its employees to Wayne Kepple, the former vice president of ground operations for Ryan International Airlines.
Ryan provided air passenger and cargo services for corporations, private individuals and the U.S. government, including the U.S. Department of Defense, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and the U.S. Marshals Service.
According to court documents, Perez worked for AFI from June 2007 until March 2008 and was vice president of services. During that time, Kepple received kickback payments from AFI on aviation fuel, services and equipment sold by AFI to Ryan. In November 2011, a federal agent with DCIS contacted Perez to interview him in relation to its investigation of AFI. After speaking with the federal agent, and with full knowledge of the purpose of the interview, Perez knowingly destroyed relevant files from his laptop computer relating to his employment at AFI with the intent to impede, obstruct and influence the investigation of AFI and his involvement in that conduct.
“The Antitrust Division will hold accountable those who attempt to conceal their illegal actions and obstruct a government investigation ,” said Bill Baer, Assistant Attorney General in charge of the Department of Justice’s Antitrust Division. “Destroying evidence in an attempt to undermine a federal investigation is a crime the division takes very seriously.”
Perez is charged with obstruction of justice, which carries a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison and a $250,000 criminal fine for individuals. He has agreed to cooperate in the ongoing investigation.
Today’s plea is the fifth to arise out of the Antitrust Division’s ongoing investigation into fraud and anticompetitive conduct in the airline charter services industry. The other four individuals have been ordered to serve sentences ranging from 16 to 87 months in prison and to pay more than $580,000 in restitution. A sixth individual, Sean Wagner, the owner and operator of AFI, and AFI itself were indicted on Aug. 13, 2013.
The investigation is being conducted by the Antitrust Division’s National Criminal Enforcement Section and the U.S. Department of Defense’s Office of Inspector General’s Defense Criminal Investigative Service, headed by Special Agent in Charge John F. Khin. Anyone with information concerning anticompetitive conduct in the airline charter services industry is urged to call the Antitrust Division’s National Criminal Enforcement Section at 202-307-6694 or visit www.justice.gov/atr/contact/newcase.htm.
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.'”
Former Bank of America Executive Pleads Guilty for Role in Conspiracy and Fraud Involving Investment Contracts for Municipal Bonds Proceeds
Phillip D. Murphy, the former managing director of Bank of America’s municipal derivatives products desk from 1998 to 2002, pleaded guilty today before U.S. District Judge Max O. Cogburn Jr. in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of North Carolina to participating in a fraud conspiracy and wire fraud scheme with employees of Rubin/Chambers, Dunhill Insurance Services Inc., also known as CDR Financial Products, a broker of municipal finance contracts, and others. Murphy also pleaded guilty to conspiring with others to make false entries in the reports and statements originating from his desk, which were sent to bank management.
Murphy was indicted by a grand jury on July 19, 2012. According to the indictment, Murphy participated in a wire fraud scheme and separate fraud conspiracies that began as early as 1998 and continued until 2006.
“By manipulating what was intended to be a competitive bidding process, the conspirators defrauded municipalities, public entities and taxpayers across the country,” said Brent Snyder, Deputy Assistant Attorney General of the Antitrust Division’s Criminal Enforcement Program. “Today’s guilty plea reaffirms the Antitrust Division’s continued efforts to hold accountable those who corrupt and subvert the competitive process in our financial markets.”
Public entities seek to invest money from a variety of sources, primarily the proceeds of municipal bonds that they issue, to raise money for, among other things, public projects. Public entities typically hire a broker to conduct a competitive bidding process for the award of the investment agreements and often for other municipal finance contracts.
According to the charges, Murphy conspired with CDR and others to increase the number and profitability of investment agreements and other municipal finance contracts awarded to Bank of America. Murphy won investment agreements through CDR’s manipulation of the bidding process in obtaining losing bids from other providers, which is explicitly prohibited by U.S. Treasury regulations. As a result of the information, various providers won investment agreements and other municipal finance contracts at artificially determined prices. In exchange for this information, Murphy submitted intentionally losing bids for certain investment agreements and other contracts when requested, and, on occasion, agreed to pay or arranged for kickbacks to be paid to CDR and other co-conspirator brokers.
Murphy and his co-conspirators misrepresented to municipal issuers that the bidding process was competitive and in compliance with U.S. Treasury regulations. This caused the municipal issuers to award investment agreements and other municipal finance contracts to providers that otherwise would not have been awarded the contracts if the issuers had true and accurate information regarding the bidding process. Such conduct placed the tax-exempt status of the underlying bonds in jeopardy.
“Mr. Murphy’s actions undermined the public’s trust when he conspired to manipulate a competitive bidding process,” said Richard Weber, Chief, IRS Criminal Investigation (IRS-CI). “IRS-CI has experienced great success in unraveling significant and complex financial frauds as we work in close collaboration with our law enforcement partners.”
“Mr. Murphy ripped off hard working American taxpayers and cash-strapped municipalities all in pursuit of his own lucre,” said George Venizelos, Assistant Director in Charge of the FBI’s New York Field Office. “Let this serve as a reminder to others who are entrusted to act in the public’s best interest; your lack of candor won’t go without notice.”
Murphy pleaded guilty to two counts of conspiracy and one count of wire fraud. The fraud conspiracy carries a maximum penalty of five years in prison and a $250,000 fine. The wire fraud charge carries a maximum penalty of 30 years in prison and a $1 million fine. The false bank records conspiracy carries a maximum penalty of five years in prison and a $250,000 fine. The maximum fines for each of these offenses 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.
Including Murphy, a total of 17 individuals have been convicted or pleaded guilty. Additionally, one company has pleaded guilty.
The prosecution is being handled by Steven Tugander, Richard Powers, Eric Hoffmann, Patricia Jannaco and Stephanie Raney of the Antitrust Division. Assistant U.S. Attorneys Kurt Meyers, Michael Savage and Mark Odulio of the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Western District of North Carolina have also provided valuable assistance in this matter. The guilty plea announced today resulted from a wide-ranging investigation conducted by the Antitrust Division’s New York office, the FBI and the IRS-CI. The division coordinated its investigation with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.
Today’s guilty plea is part of efforts underway by President Obama’s Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force (FFETF) which was created in November 2009 to wage an aggressive, coordinated and proactive effort to investigate and prosecute financial crimes. With more than 20 federal agencies, 94 U.S. attorney’s offices and state and local partners, it’s 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 more than 10,000 financial fraud cases against nearly 15,000 defendants including more than 2,700 mortgage fraud defendants. For more information on the task force, visit www.stopfraud.gov .
AISAN INDUSTRY CO. LTD. AGREES TO PLEAD GUILTY TO PRICE FIXING ON AUTOMOBILE PARTS INSTALLED IN U.S. CARS
WASHINGTON — Aisan Industry Co. Ltd., an Obu, Japan-based company, has agreed to plead guilty and to pay a criminal fine of $6.86 million for its role in a price-fixing conspiracy involving electronic throttle bodies sold in the United States and elsewhere, the Department of Justice announced today.
According to a one-count felony charge filed today in U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan in Detroit, Aisan engaged in a conspiracy to rig bids for, and to fix, stabilize and maintain the prices of electronic throttle bodies sold to Nissan Motor Co. Ltd. and certain of its subsidiaries in the United States and elsewhere. In addition to the criminal fine, Aisan has also agreed to cooperate with the department’s ongoing auto parts investigations. The plea agreement is subject to court approval.
“The Antitrust Division will continue to hold companies accountable for anticompetitive conduct that impacts the automobile industry in the United States,” said Brent Snyder, Deputy Assistant Attorney General of the Antitrust Division’s criminal enforcement program. “To date, 25 companies have been charged as part of the Antitrust Division’s ongoing auto parts investigation.”
According to the charges, Aisan and its co-conspirators carried out the price-fixing conspiracy through meetings and conversations in which they discussed and agreed upon bids and price quotations for electronic throttle bodies. Aisan’s involvement in the conspiracy to fix prices of electronic throttle bodies lasted from at least as early as October 2003 until at least February 2010.
Aisan manufactures and sells automotive electronic throttle bodies, which are part of the air intake system in an engine that controls the amount of air flowing into an engine’s combustion chamber. By controlling air flow within an engine, the electronic throttle body controls engine speed.
Including Aisan, 25 corporations have pleaded guilty or agreed to plead guilty in the department’s investigation into price fixing and bid rigging in the auto parts industry. The companies have agreed to pay a total of more than $1.8 billion in fines. Additionally, 28 individuals have been charged.
Aisan is charged with price fixing in violation of the Sherman Act, which carries a maximum penalty of a $100 million criminal fine for corporations. 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.
Today’s prosecution arose from an ongoing federal antitrust investigation into price fixing, bid rigging and other anticompetitive conduct in the automotive parts industry, which is being conducted by each of the Antitrust Division’s criminal enforcement sections and the FBI. Today’s charges were brought by the San Francisco Office of the Antitrust Division with assistance provided by the National Criminal Enforcement Section of the Antitrust Division, the Detroit Field Office of the FBI, and the FBI headquarters’ National Criminal Enforcement Section. Anyone with information concerning this investigation should contact the Antitrust Division’s Citizen Complaint Center at 1-888-647-3258, visit www.justice.gov/atr/contact/newcase.html or call the Detroit Field Office of the FBI at 313-965-2323.
Allen Grunes Quoted in Washington Internet Daily: Increased FTC Net Neutrality Role Seen Unlikely, Following D.C. Circuit Decision
The FTC is unlikely to play a greater role in overseeing net neutrality after last month’s U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit decision against the FCC’s rules (WID Jan 15 p1), said lawyers, a former FCC official, a former Department of Justice official and consumer advocates in interviews last week. Nor should they, most agreed. Three FTC commissioners have said it would be able to handle net neutrality issues under both the commission’s antitrust and consumer protection jurisdictions. Open Internet advocate Electronic Frontier Foundation and Richard Bennett, a visiting fellow at the American Enterprise Institute’s Center for Internet, Communications and Technology Policy, said the FTC’s narrow, issues-based focus and general jurisdiction might even be better suited to overseeing net neutrality. Several people expressed sympathy for that argument, but said it’s improbable — or even impossible after the D.C. Circuit reaffirmed some FCC authority in the area — that the FTC will play a larger net neutrality role in the near future.
“It’s basically the end of that, I would hope,” said former DOJ attorney Allen Grunes, an antitrust lawyer at GeyerGorey. Former FCC Wireless Bureau Chief Fred Campbell, now executive director of free-market advocate Center for Boundless Innovation in Technology, agreed. “I don’t think it’s highly likely,” he said.
Only Congress could change things for the FTC and net neutrality, Bennett said. And he said he hopes lawmakers do that, restructuring the FCC and FTC in the process: “Congress needs to clarify the role of the FCC vis-a-vis consumer protection and competition, and the way to clarify that is to make it clear the FTC is responsible for that.” Lawmakers have said they plan to hold hearings and issue white papers in 2014 to reassess the 1996 Telecom Act, aiming for new legislation in 2015 (WID Dec 4 p3), and comments from AEI and others were received by the House Commerce Committee Friday. (See separate report below in this issue). Many interviewed predict — while some hope — the rewrite will reaffirm and clarify the FCC’s jurisdiction over net neutrality and ISPs. “I’m skeptical that the Congress is going to ultimately take away the FCC’s authority over broadband providers and hand it to the FTC,” said Free State Foundation President Randolph May.
The FTC and FCC “have concurrent jurisdiction over net neutrality issues,” FTC Commissioner Julie Brill told us. Because it’s a law enforcement agency, the FTC works in conjunction with the FCC’s regulatory authority in the area, said the Democrat. The FTC’s two Republican commissioners, Maureen Ohlhausen and Joshua Wright, have said net neutrality touches on both consumer protection and antitrust issues, making the FTC capable of overseeing it (WID July 19 p9). Wright has said the FTC’s antitrust and consumer harm expertise could make it more capable than the FCC of handling net neutrality (WID Aug 20 p1). Ohlhausen has said the FTC would be ready to assert this authority if the FCC net neutrality rules were struck down.
So when the D.C. Circuit struck down FCC authority to impose net neutrality rules on broadband ISPs, it ostensibly opened a door for the FTC. But the decision left intact the FCC’s “general authority to regulate in this area,” just not to regulate broadband providers since the FCC hadn’t classified them as common carriers and so they were protected from certain regulations under the Communications Act. “Basically, what they said was, ‘Listen, you guys have all sorts of authority to regulate broadband,’” said Consumer Watchdog Privacy Project Director John Simpson. “The court said the FCC has jurisdiction,” Campbell said. The court affirmed this jurisdiction by upholding the FCC’s interpretation that Telecom Act Section 706 gives the FCC authority over the Internet space. “The court’s opinion regarding section 706 seemingly grants the FCC what might be construed as pretty broad authority,” said May. By reclassifying broadband Internet as a telecom service under Title II, the FCC could claim statutory authority over ISPs and institute net neutrality rules, citing Section 706. Verizon, which brought the case against the FCC, “picks this fight and they win the battle but in the process seem like they’ve lost the war,” said Grunes.
To some, the decision renders irrelevant the question of whether the FTC will increase its net neutrality role. “In the absence of clear jurisdiction, I think it would be odd for [the FTC] to try to insert jurisdiction at this point,” Campbell said. There was nothing in the decision that would make the FCC “have a sudden revelation” and decide “well, since we can’t impose common carrier-like obligations on the ISPs, we’re going to throw up our hands and just leave all of this to the FTC,” May said. “It puts it back pretty squarely in the FCC’s camp,” Grunes said.
‘Appeal’ of FTC Overseeing Net Neutrality
The court’s decision to uphold the FCC’s transparency requirement — which requires ISPs to disclose their network management practices — potentially “opens the door” for the FTC to file more complaints under Section 5 of the FTC Act against companies the FTC believes are deceptive with their disclosures, Simpson said. “That seems to me to be not as effective as simply having the regulatory agency [FCC] coming out with a clear set of rules about what you can and can’t do,” he said. “I’d much rather have the FCC take the action and just reclassify broadband as a telecom service.”
Free Press has organized a coalition of almost 100 organizations pushing the FCC to do that. “Right now there is no one protecting Internet users from ISPs that block or discriminate against online content,” the coalition wrote in an open letter sent Thursday to the FCC and signed by organizations including the Center for Democracy & Technology and Public Knowledge (PK). “Reclassification as a Title II is the best choice for consumers,” said a PK spokesman by email. “It’s great that the FCC will maintain authority in creating regulation for the Internet, however there has to be a balance of power. We think Title II creates that balance.”
May and others understand the “appeal,” as he put it, behind the desire to put net neutrality under the FTC’s watch. It would eliminate the longstanding special exemptions granted the communications industry, he said. May said there is an argument to be made — and “I’m not unsympathetic to it — that all of the FCC’s current regulatory authority over broadband should be transferred over to the FTC in this day and age, so that broadband regulation could be treated just generally as any other industry’s segment or marketplace are under the FTC’s general jurisdiction.” If ISPs are reclassified as common carriers, “that would indicate [the FTC has] some jurisdiction there potentially,” Campbell said. But if the FCC reclassifies and then create rules for ISPs, it “arguably means the FTC doesn’t have jurisdiction, or as a matter of comity shouldn’t exercise it,” he said.
There’s a “basic problem” in the current separation, AEI’s Bennett said. “The premise in the Communications Act is each one of these communications industries is a monopoly and because it’s a monopoly it needs to be regulated in a different way,” he said. “That was the case in 1934, but it’s no longer the case today.”
The broadband industry is best served by “the lightest touch possible” and the FCC’s touch outweighs that of the FTC, said EFF Intellectual Property Director Corynne McSherry. “No one should be in the position to issue broad regulations,” she said. “Our experience with the FTC is it’s a little less likely to take that approach.” Regulating the Internet is complex, she said, and “any government action needs to be specifically focused on a specific problem.” The FTC is “dedicated to alleviating specific consumer problems … as opposed to the FCC approach, which was to claim it has broad authority to regulate the Internet,” she said. McSherry cautioned it “really makes us nervous” to allow any government agency “to be the boss of the Internet.”
FTC Lacks Net Neutrality Expertise
The FTC has neither the size nor expertise to take on net neutrality, several experts agreed. “They’re fighting the good fight, but they’re understaffed and underfinanced,” Simpson said, which makes him “very skeptical” it should oversee net neutrality issues. The FCC and DOJ have longstanding expertise in broadband antitrust issues, said Grunes. “Learning on the job in doing antitrust investigations does not bode well,” he said. “These are difficult issues and they require, in my mind, an institutional capability and depth of industry knowledge that DOJ has, that the FCC has — the FTC not really nearly as much.” Splitting jurisdictions rarely benefits industry or government, Campbell said. “It’s generally not a good idea for multiple agencies to have concurrent jurisdiction.”
Congress could solve these problems, Bennett said. A Communications Act rewrite could definitively give net neutrality jurisdiction to the FTC, while reorganizing the two agencies to bring the FCC’s expertise to the FTC, he said. “Some of the people who work for the FCC today would go to work for the FTC.” Bennett sees this as a three- to five-year process. “It’s necessary,” he said. “If the status quo continues, we’ve essentially saddled the communications industry with uncertainty.” Each time a broadband company offers a new service, or is looking to merge with another company, it has “to get independent permission” from two agencies — either DOJ or FTC, and the FCC, he said. “There’s too much uncertainty and the costs of obtaining all those permissions are really too high.”
Campbell agreed: “It’s most appropriate for the FCC and the FTC to defer to Congress on these issues.” But he doesn’t envision the FCC losing its net neutrality authority, although it may wait until Congress acts to make its next move, he said. “It makes the most sense for them to look to Congress before enacting another round of prophylactic rules,” Campbell said. The agency’s Section 706 authority is still relatively vague, and “it would be odd for an agency to write us a whole set of rules based on relatively vague statutory authority,” he said.
“The reality is that after the decision, the FCC is going to continue to play an important role in overseeing the practices of Internet broadband providers,” May said. “But that doesn’t mean that there’s not also a role that the FTC should play,” he said, referring to the agencies’ overlapping jurisdictions. While Campbell may see the FTC increasing that role only in a “worst-case scenario” where no other agency has any net neutrality authority, and Simpson sees the FTC as a “last resort” on net neutrality, Brill maintains the commission is ready should it be needed. “Of course, the D.C. Circuit’s opinion is complex, and the FCC is understandably considering its options,” Brill said. “The FTC should stand ready to play our appropriate role on law enforcement and policy issues relating to net neutrality.” — Cory Bennett ([email protected])
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