Every year the FTC brings hundreds of cases against individuals and companies for violating consumer protection and competition laws that the agency enforces. These cases can involve fraud, scams, identity theft, false advertising, privacy violations, anti-competitive behavior and more. The Legal Library has detailed information about cases we have brought in federal court or through our internal administrative process, called an adjudicative proceeding.
Statement of FTC Chairman Jon Leibowitz Regarding the Announcement that Arthur D. Levinson Has Resigned from Google's Board
Harrison, Lee (a/k/a Rudolph Joseph Strobel), individually and d/b/a Lee Harrison Credit Restoration et al., and Leanna Ruth Harrison, individually and d/b/a Lee Harrison Credit Restoration et al.
Concurring Statement of Commissioner Harbour, In the Matter of Aspen Technology, Inc
National Prize Information Group Corp. et al.
Concurring Statement of Commissioner J. Thomas Rosch Crude Oil Price Manipulation Rule Making, Project No. P082900
Dissenting Statement of Commissioner William E. Kovacic Crude Oil Price Manipulation Rule Making, Project No. P082900
Statement of Chairman Leibowitz Crude Oil Price Manipulation Rule Making, Project No. P082900
Alta Bates Medical Group, Inc.
Alta Bates Medical Group, Inc., a 600-physician independent practice association serving the Berkeley and Oakland, California, area, settleed Commission charges that it violated federal antitrust law by fixing prices charged to health care insurers. The consent order prohibits Alta Bates from collectively negotiating fee-for-service reimbursements and engaging in related anticompetitive conduct. In addition to price-fixing of fee-for-service reimbursements, the FTC’s complaint alleges an unlawful concerted refusal to deal.
Concurring Statement of Commissioner Pamela Jones Harbour, In the Matter of Aspen Technology, Inc
CSL Limited, a corporation, and Cerberus-Plasma Holdings, LLC, In the Matter of
The FTC authorized a lawsuit to block CSL Limited’s proposed $3.1 billion acquisition of Talecris Biotherapeutics Holdings Corporation, charging that the deal would would substantially reduce competition in the U.S. markets for four plasma-derivative protein therapies – Immune globulin (Ig), Albumin, Rho-D, and Alpha-1. These therapies are used to treat patients suffering from illnesses such as primary immunodeficiency diseases, chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy, alpha-1 antitrypsin disease, and hemolytic disease of the newborn. In approving the administrative complaint seeking to block the deal, the Commission also authorized the staff to seek a preliminary injunction in federal district court in Washington, D.C., to stop the transaction pending completion of the administrative trial. Following the FTC's lawsuit to block the transaction, CSL Limited announced that it would not proceed with its proposed acquisition.
Universal Processing Inc. and Rey Pasinli
Online Behavioral Advertising: Letter to House of Representatives Subcommittees
Endocare, Inc. and Galil Medical, Ltd.
Hexion LLC, et al., In the Matter of
The FTC challenged Hexion LLC's proposed acquisition of Huntsman Corp., and settled its charges with a proposed consent order which requiredthe divestiture of Hexion's specialty epoxy business, and prevented the sharing of sensitive and non-public information which could lead to coordination of prices. Huntsman and Hexion are both producers of high-performance and specialty chemicals used in the aerospace and alternative energy industries. Subsequently, Hexion LLC and Huntsman Corporation petitioned the Commission to reopen and set aside two orders related to their proposed merger because they terminated their planned merger; the Commission granted, in part, the petition but left in place provisions of the order requiring Hexion for three years to seek the Commission’s approval prior to any acquisition of Huntsman, or any merger or other combination with Huntsman.
Reed Elsevier NV, et al., In the Matter of
In September, 2008, the Commission challenged Reed Elsevier’s $4.1 billion proposed acquisition of ChoicePoint, which would have combined the two leading providers of electronic public record services provided to U.S. law enforcement customers. Public records services compile public and non-public records about individuals and businesses, including credit data, criminal, motor vehicle, property, and employment records, all used by law enforcement as an investigative tool in solving a wide variety of crimes. The transaction, as proposed, would have removed the intense rivalry that had lead to lower prices, product innovations, and improved services and support for law enforcement customers by eliminating the competition between Reed Elsevier’s LexisNexis product and ChoicePoint’s AutoTrackXP and CLEAR products. The Commission required divestiture of ChoicePoint’s product lines to Thomson Reuters Legal Inc. The Commission worked with the Attorneys General of eighteen states on this investigation.