The Phnom Penh Post

AT&T demand for White House log downed

- Brian Fung

A FEDERAL judge has ruled against AT&T in its effort to force the Justice Department to reveal whether President Donald Trump inappropri­ately interfered with a regulatory review of the telecom giant’s $85 billion Time Warner merger.

The ruling on Tuesday from Judge Richard Leon rejects AT&T’s argument that the government has singled out the company for special scrutiny. The move blocks an attempt by AT&T to draw Trump into the legal battle by raising questions as to what, if any, pressure he may have placed on antitrust regulators to stop the acquisitio­n.

AT&T had requested that Leon compel the Justice Department to provide a log of any communicat­ions that may have transpired between the White House and Attorney General Jeff Sessions, as well as communicat­ions that could have taken place between Sessions and the department’s antitrust team. If Trump did pressure the Justice Department, that could be a potentiall­y illegal exercise of executive authority. Agency lawyers argued in court on Friday the Justice Department had already provided more than enough evidence to disprove Trump’s involvemen­t, beginning with a log of direct communicat­ions between the White House and the department’s antitrust division.

Additional disclosure­s are not warranted, said Leon, because AT&T had failed to provide enough evidence of “selective enforcemen­t”.

“While it may, indeed, be a rare breed of horse,” Leon wrote of the deal, “it is not exactly a unicorn!” Leon added that many similar mergers have come under scrutiny before, even if they did not necessaril­y result in the government blocking them.

AT&T is seeking to build an advertisin­g empire by joining its distributi­on facilities with TimeWarner, an entertainm­ent giant that controls CNN, HBO, Warner Bros and other highly valued content. The Justice Department’s antitrust chief, Trump appointee Makan Delrahim, has charged in the suit that the AT&T deal could hurt competitio­n and slow innovation in the online video industry.

“We respect the judge’s decision and look forward to the upcoming trial,” said Dan Petrocelli, lead trial attorney for both Time Warner and AT&T.

“We are pleased with and respect today’s decision,” said DOJ spokeswoma­n Kerri Kupec, “which will permit the parties and court to focus on the case at hand. This case has always been about protecting consumers from competitiv­e harms, and we look forward to presenting our case at trial on March 19.”

 ?? BRANDON THIBODEAUX/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? The AT&T corporate headquarte­rs building in downtown Dallas, on November 21.
BRANDON THIBODEAUX/THE NEW YORK TIMES The AT&T corporate headquarte­rs building in downtown Dallas, on November 21.

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