The legal library gives you easy access to the FTC’s case information and other official legal, policy, and guidance documents.
20160968: Ally Financial Inc.; TradeKing Group, Inc.
1604007 Informal Interpretation
Telemarketing Sales Rule Information Collection Activities; Proposed Collection; Comment Request
Agency Information Collection Activities; Submission for OMB Review; Comment Request (Alternative Fuels Rule)
1604005 Informal Interpretation
1604003 Informal Interpretation
1604004 Informal Interpretation
1604006 Informal Interpretation
Agency Information Collection Activities: Submission for OMB Review; Comment Request (Mail, Internet, or Telephone Order Merchandise Rule)
Joint Statement of the Department of Justice and the Federal Trade Commission On Preserving Competition in the Defense Industry
20160951: Wilco Acquisition, LP; ATI Physical Therapy Holdings, LLC
20160931: Reyes Holdings, L.L.C.; The Coca-Cola Company
20160943: Ningbo Huaxiang Electronic Co., Ltd.; Xiaofeng Zhou
20160907: TBC Offshore Ltd.; Cypress Semiconductor Corporation
Endo Pharmaceuticals / Impax Labs
The FTC filed a complaint in federal district court alleging that Endo Pharmaceuticals Inc. and several other drug companies violated antitrust laws by using pay-for-delay settlements to block consumers’ access to lower-cost generic versions of Opana ER and Lidoderm with an agreement not to market an authorized generic – often called a “no-AG commitment” – as a form of reverse payment. The complaint, filed in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, alleges that Endo paid the first generic companies that filed for FDA approval – Impax Laboratories, Inc. and Watson Laboratories, Inc. – to eliminate the risk of competition for Opana ER and Lidoderm, in violation of the Federal Trade Commission Act. Opana ER is an extendedrelease opioid used to relieve moderate to severe pain. Lidoderm is a topical patch used to relieve pain associated with post-herpetic neuralgia, a complication of shingles. The FTC is seeking a court judgment declaring that the defendants’ conduct violates the antitrust laws, ordering the companies to disgorge their ill-gotten gains, and permanently barring them from engaging in similar anticompetitive behavior in the future. Teikoko Pharma USA and Teikoku Seiyaku Co., Ltd. agreed to a stipulated order resolving FTC charges.
In November 2016, the FTC voluntarily dismissed the complaint in this action. On January 23, 2017, the FTC refiled charges related to the Lidoderm agreements in federal court in California (Federal Trade Commission vs. Allergan plc; Watson Laboratories, Inc., et al) and refiled charges related to the Opana ER agreement in a Part 3 administrative proceeding. (In re Impax Laboratories, Inc.)
1604002 Informal Interpretation
Letter From Stephanie Rosenthal, Chief of Staff, Division of Financial Practices, Bureau of Consumer Protection, To Jeff Appel, Deputy Under Secretary, U.S. Department of Education
Pfizer Inc., a corporation, and Wyeth, a corporation, In the Matter of
The Commission challenged Pfizer Inc.’s proposed $68 billion acquisition of Wyeth and required significant divestitures to preserve competition in multiple U.S. markets for animal pharmaceuticals and vaccines. The proposed consent order remedies the anticompetitive effects the Commission believes are likely to result from the transaction in numerous markets for animal vaccines and animal pharmaceutical products. After a thorough investigation, the Commission concluded that the transaction does not raise anticompetitive concerns in any human health product markets.