The legal library gives you easy access to the FTC’s case information and other official legal, policy, and guidance documents.
20251173: Bain Capital Fund XIV, L.P.; Blackstone Capital Partners VII L.P.
20251183: OMERS Administration Corporation; Secom Co., Ltd.
20251211: AE EventsCo Holdings, LLC; Wildcat Aggregator, L.P.
Synopsys, Inc. and ANSYS, Inc., In the Matter of
The Federal Trade Commission will require Synopsys, Inc. and Ansys, Inc., under a proposed consent order, to divest certain assets to resolve antitrust concerns surrounding their $35 billion merger. The proposed consent order settles FTC allegations (link to complaint) that Synopsys’s acquisition of Ansys is anticompetitive across three markets – optical software tools, photonic software tools for designing and simulating photonic devices, and RTL power consumption analysis tools.
Contact Lens Rule Warning Letter Template
BNPL - Klarna Complaints
20251059: Leidos Holdings, Inc.; Savanna Industries, Inc.
Complaints re Twitter/X, Boring Corp., xAI, and other companies owned by Elon Musk
Voyager Digital, LLC., et al., FTC v.
The Federal Trade Commission announced a settlement with bankrupt crypto company Voyager that will permanently ban it from handling consumers’ assets and is filing suit against its former CEO, Stephen Ehrlich, for falsely claiming that customers’ accounts were insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) and were “safe,” even as the company was approaching an eventual bankruptcy. The complaint also names Stephen Ehrlich’s wife, Francine Ehrlich, as a relief defendant.
In the federal court complaint, the FTC charges that from at least 2018 until it declared bankruptcy in July 2022, Voyager used promises that consumers’ deposits would be “safe” to entice them to hand over their funds. When the company failed, consumers lost access to significant assets they had saved, including ongoing salary deposits, college tuition funds, and down payments for homes, according to the complaint, which notes that consumers were locked out of their cash accounts for more than a month and lost more than $1 billion in crypto assets.