New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Todd S. Fishman | January 11, 2022
As the answers begin to emerge in the new year, two active criminal prosecutions by the Antitrust Division are likely to frame any renewed priority on criminal enforcement.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Karen Hoffman Lent and Kenneth Schwartz | January 10, 2022
Antitrust enforcement is more popular than ever, but where it will go from here is anything but certain.
By Tom McParland | December 30, 2021
At issue in the suit is a reorganization plan that eliminated the major league affiliations of 40 Minor League Baseball teams earlier this year.
By Tom McParland | December 20, 2021
The lawsuit possibly set the stage for the U.S. Supreme Court to reconsider a 1922 decision holding that baseball leagues were not subject to the Sherman Act.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Karen Hoffman Lent and Kenneth Schwartz | December 14, 2021
On Dec. 6 and 7, 2021, the FTC and DOJ hosted a virtual workshop—titled "Making Competition Work: Promoting Competition in Labor Markets"—to discuss potential future efforts to promote competitive labor markets and worker mobility. In this edition of their Antitrust Trade and Practice column, Karen Hoffman Lent and Kenneth Schwartz outline the key discussions that took place during the workshop.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Karen Hoffman Lent and Kenneth Schwartz | November 8, 2021
In this edition of their Antitrust Trade and Practice column, Karen Hoffman Lent and Kenneth Schwartz discuss what can be expected from Alvaro Bedoya if he is confirmed as a Commissioner to the Federal Trade Commission.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Phil Goldberg and Tom Stebbins | October 14, 2021
Simply put, categorically eliminating state antitrust actions from ever being consolidated in MDLs does not facilitate justice; it facilitates excessive and burdensome litigation at the expense of justice.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Karen Hoffman Lent and Kenneth Schwartz | October 12, 2021
On Sept. 30 and Oct. 1, 2021, the 48th Annual Conference took place in New York, and focused on major themes including international and inter-agency cooperation and accounting for public interests in antitrust enforcement.
By Amanda Bronstad | September 24, 2021
U.S. District Judge P. Kevin Castel on Friday ordered Kellogg Hansen to explain how the firm plans to represent British newspaper Daily Mail in the multidistrict litigation over Google's digital advertising while representing Facebook in a separate antitrust case brought by the Federal Trade Commission. "I'm not accusing anybody of bad faith here," Castel said at the hearing, "but it's an odd lineup."
By Patrick Smith | September 23, 2021
"It's paramount that you not get stuck in the milieu into which you were born and you become sensitive to how the world is changing, and what the attitudes of younger generations might be now," Ira Millstein says.
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