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Second Circuit Authorizes Magazine Wholesaler To Rewrite Antitrust Claims

Posted  04/12/12
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit has revived a magazine wholesaler’s claims of an antitrust conspiracy in the magazine industry and granted permission to that plaintiff to file an amended complaint in Anderson News, L.L.C. v. American Media, Inc. The Second Circuit reversed the decision of Judge Paul A. Crotty of the Southern District of New York that applied heightened pleading standards in...

French Competition Regulators Bring Pet Food Manufacturers To Heel

Posted  04/9/12
The Autorite de la Concurrence, the French competition authority, has slapped fines on three leading French pet food manufacturers that restricted competition in premium dry dog and cat food sold in specialty outlets such as pet shops and veterinary offices. The manufacturers are Nestle Purina Petcare France SAS, Royal Canin SAS (owned by Mars, Inc.), and Hill's Pet Nutrition (owned by Colgate Palmolive Co.). ...

Prognosis Negative For Congressional Repeal Of Antitrust Exemption For Health Insurers

Posted  04/5/12
Although the fate of Obamacare in the Supreme Court is still an open question, the prognosis is decidedly negative for the congressional effort to repeal the McCarran-Ferguson antitrust exemption for health insurers. Although the Republican-controlled U.S. House of Representatives has passed a bill that would repeal the antitrust exemption for health insurers, the bill is not likely to pass the...

High Cost Of Antitrust Experts Saves Amex Plaintiffs And Leads To Calls For Potential Reform

Posted  04/3/12
The enormous costs of expert fees in antitrust cases is proving to be both a silver lining for plaintiffs bound by class action waivers and a focal point for calls to reform the fee shifting provisions of U.S. antitrust law. As discussed in a recent article by Constantine Cannon attorneys, the high cost of antitrust experts has led the United Sates Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit to hold a class action...

Sixth Circuit Saves Air Conditioner Manufacturer’s Claims From The Deep Freeze

Posted  03/30/12
The United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit has revived the antitrust claims of Carrier Corporation, the world’s largest manufacturer of air conditioners, which is suing producers of copper tubing for allegedly participating in an international customer and market allocation scheme. The Sixth Circuit reversed the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Tennessee, which had dismissed the...

British Propose Lowering Bar For Prison In Cartel Cases

Posted  03/28/12
The United Kingdom’s Department for Business, Innovation and Skills (BIS), has announced that the Government plans to introduce legislation that would lower the threshold for criminal prosecution in cartel cases. Under the proposed law, the prosecution would no longer have to prove an individual’s dishonesty in entering into a cartel agreement. The cartel offense was introduced by the Enterprise Act of 2002....

Third Circuit Slashes Tire Company’s Recovery Of E-Discovery Costs

Posted  03/26/12
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit has  vacated a district court award in excess of $367,000 for e-discovery costs to the winning defendants in Race Tires America Inc. v. Hoosier Racing Tire Corp. As we reported in an earlier edition of Antitrust Today, Judge Terrence F. McVerry of the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania ordered the plaintiff, Race Tires America Inc., to pay...

Sour Decision For Plaintiffs In Extra-Sweet Pineapple Litigation

Posted  03/16/12
A California state appellate court has upheld the denial of class certification in a case brought by consumers alleging that Fresh Del Monte Produce Inc. monopolized the extra-sweet pineapple market in violation of California Unfair Competition Law. Del Monte was accused in Conroy v. Fresh Del Monte Produce Inc. of attempting to obtain a patent for extra-sweet pineapple – despite knowing that pineapple variety...

European Songwriters Sing Out Against Producers’ Alleged Blacklisting

Posted  03/14/12
An alliance of European composers and songwriters is alleging that major broadcasters and production companies are threatening them with blacklisting if the artists don’t give up all the rights to their work in exchange for commissions. Taking aim at the practice known as “coercive commissioning,” the European Composer and Songwriter Alliance (ECSA) has filed a complaint asking the European Union’s...

Europeans Checking MathWorks’ Competition Calculations In Software Market

Posted  03/7/12
The European Commission (the “EC”) has announced an investigation into whether The MathWorks, a U.S. software company, abused its dominant position by preventing competitor interoperability with its products. The EC is investigating whether MathWorks – a leading developer of mathematical computing software for engineers and scientists – violated Article 102 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European...
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