Two weeks after Trump blocked the full release of a classified Democratic memo, the House intelligence committee published a redacted version of the document that aims to counter a narrative that Republicans on the committee have promoted for months — that the FBI and Justice
Department conspired against Trump as they investigated his ties to Russia.
Not exact matches
In its 2012 suit
against Apple, the U.S.
Department of Justice maintained that, by striking a coordinated deal to establish agency pricing for e-books, the publishers and Apple exhibited anticompetitive conduct by
conspiring to fix prices.
The U.S. Justice
Department filed a lawsuit
against Apple and five major U.S. publishers in April 2012, accusing them of
conspiring to fix prices for e-books.
On April 11, 2012, the
department filed a civil antitrust lawsuit in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York
against Apple, Hachette, HarperCollins, Macmillan, Penguin and Simon & Schuster, for
conspiring to end e-book retailers» freedom to compete on price by taking control of pricing from e-book retailers and substantially increasing the prices that consumers paid for e-books.
Click here for the 36 - page complaint filed today by the
Department of Justice
against Apple and five major publishers charged with
conspiring to fix e-book prices.
Under the
department's proposed remedy, Apple will be prohibited from again serving as a conduit of information among the
conspiring publishers or from retaliating
against publishers for refusing to sell e-books on agency terms.
The US
Department of Justice has urged an appeals court to uphold the verdict
against Apple that found the fruity firm had violated antitrust laws and
conspired with book publishers to fix the price of ebooks.
The case will proceed
against Apple, Macmillan and Penguin «for
conspiring to end e-book retailers» freedom to compete on price», the Justice
Department said.