New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Karen Hoffman Lent and Kenneth Schwartz | December 9, 2019
In their Antitrust Trade and Practice column, Karen Hoffman Lent and Kenneth Schwartz discuss the legal implications stemming from the DOJ's decision to ask a federal district court to terminate the Paramount Consent Decrees, a set of rules governing major film studios for the last 70 years.
By Scott Graham | December 2, 2019
A three-judge panel sounded highly skeptical of U.S. District Judge Lucy Koh's decision to certify a nationwide consumer class based on California antitrust law. But they suggested that a California only class—or California plus a handful of other states—might pass muster.
By Brenda Sapino Jeffreys | November 6, 2019
Gibson Dunn's antitrust practice co-leader, M. Sean Royall, and two other partners are joining Kirkland & Ellis.
By Angela Morris | September 9, 2019
"We have seen evidence that Google's business practices may have undermined consumer choice, stifled innovation, violated users' privacy, and put Google in control of the flow and dissemination of online information," said Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By P.J. D'Annunzio | July 9, 2019
California law applies to state law antitrust claims against the remaining defendants in a national litigation over drywall price-fixing, U.S. District Judge Michael Baylson of the Eastern District of Pennsylvania ruled.
By Randy Gordon | May 15, 2019
Was Robert Bork right in decreeing that mergers almost always lead to lower prices? Or is this the wrong question to ask, as the New Brandeis School argues in positing that institutions can become so large that they distort not just markets, but the fabric of American life?
By Raychel Lean | March 11, 2019
A nationwide putative class action lawsuit accuses the country's largest trade association and four leading broker franchisors of developing practices that stifle competition and allow for hiked commission prices. But the companies call the allegations "baseless."
By C. Ryan Barber | February 26, 2019
A three-judge D.C. Circuit panel, led by Judge Judith Rogers, upheld Washington federal trial judge Richard Leon's ruling against the Justice Department's antitrust lawsuit.
By Scott Graham | February 22, 2019
The Federal Circuit sent the semiconductor companies' dispute to the Fifth Circuit. Now the Fifth Circuit says it's not even "plausible" that it has jurisdiction.
By Tom McParland | January 23, 2019
A Texas judge on Tuesday denied class certification in an antitrust lawsuit alleging that the three largest hospital operators in San Antonio had conspired…
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