The legal library gives you easy access to the FTC’s case information and other official legal, policy, and guidance documents.
20110194: Tilman J. Fertitta; The Hillman Company
20110193: Marubeni Corporation; BP p.l.c
20110191: Wells Fargo & Company; The A. Eugene Brockman Charitable Trust, St. John's Trust
20110190: Calera Capital Partners IV, LP; William Greenblatt
Pilot Corporation, Propeller Corp., and Flying J Inc., In the Matter of
The FTC required Pilot Corporation, owner of the largest travel center network in the United States, to sell 26 locations as part of a settlement that will replace the competition lost because of Pilot’s proposed $1.8 billion acquisition of Flying J Inc.’s travel center network. Pilot has agreed to sell the travel centers, which provide diesel, food, parking, and other amenities for truckers, to Love’s Travel Stops and Country Stores, the smallest national travel center operator, currently concentrated in the South. According to the FTC’s complaint, the deal would have reduced competition for certain long-haul trucking fleets for which Pilot and Flying J were the first and second best choices for diesel.
20110187: TOYOTA TSUSHO CORPORATION; General Electric Company
20110184: Oracle Corporation; Art Technology Group, Inc.
20110171: Carlisle Companies Incorporated; Hawk Corporation
20110148: Harbinger Capital Partners Special Situations Offshore Fund,; Harbinger Group Inc.
20110176: Welsh, Carson, Anderson & Stowe XI, L.P.; FS Equity Partners V, L.P.
20110172: Berkshire Fund VII, L.P.; Carter's, Inc.
20110170: Liberty Dialysis Holdings, Inc.; Welsh, Carson, Anderson & Stowe X, L.P.
20110169: IESI-BFC Ltd.; Fred Weber, Inc.
20110093: Fidelity National Information Services, Inc.; Dr. Romesh Wadhwani
20100479: R.R. Donnelley & Sons Company; Bowne & Co., Inc.
Rite Aid Corporation, In the Matter of
Rite Aid is prohibited from using facial recognition technology for security or surveillance purposes for five years to settle Federal Trade Commission charges that the retailer failed to implement reasonable procedures and prevent harm to consumers in its use of facial recognition technology in hundreds of stores.
The order requires Rite Aid to implement comprehensive safeguards to prevent these types of harm to consumers when deploying automated systems that use biometric information to track them or flag them as security risks. It also requires Rite Aid to discontinue using any such technology if it cannot control potential risks to consumers. To settle charges it violated a 2010 Commission data security order by failing to adequately oversee its service providers, Rite Aid is also required to implement a robust information security program, which must be overseen by the company’s top executives.