San Francisco Chronicle

Search is focus of feds’ Google case

- By Cecilia Kang, Katie Benner, Steve Lohr and Daisuke Wakabayash­i Cecilia Kang, Katie Benner, Steve Lohr and Daisuke Wakabayash­i are New York Times writers.

The Department of Justice’s impending lawsuit against Google has narrowed to focus on the company’s power over internet search, a decision that could set off a cascade of separate lawsuits from states in ensuing weeks over the Silicon Valley giant’s dominance in other business segments.

In presentati­ons to state attorneys general starting on Wednesday, the department is expected to outline its legal case centered on how Google uses its dominant search engine to harm rivals and consumers, said four people with knowledge of the plan, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the details were confidenti­al. Meeting with the state attorneys general is one of the final steps before the Justice Department files its suit against the company, they said.

The action against Google is set to be narrower than what had been envisioned by some states and several career lawyers in the department. The Justice Department also investigat­ed the Mountain View company’s reach in ad technology and how the company prices and places ads across the internet. But in an effort to file a case by the end of September, the department decided to pick the piece that was furthest along in legal theory and that the agency felt could best withstand a potential challenge in court.

The department has not written the final draft of its complaint against Google, and the document is expected to change over the next few days to reflect internal deliberati­ons and input from constituen­ts like the state attorneys general.

The Justice Department and 48 states agreed to open their investigat­ions into Google’s dominance a year ago as a bipartisan effort, but the lastminute jostling about what is included in the cases and how they should play out has exposed political fault lines. The department is seeking support of the search case and is set to file a lawsuit even without bipartisan support from state attorneys general, said two people with knowledge of the plan.

On Wednesday, Republican state attorneys general will also attend a meeting with President Donald Trump and Attorney General William Barr over concerns of censorship by social media companies, according to two people with knowledge of the plan.

Filing a case against Google would fulfill a push by Barr to take action against a tech giant around the end of September, an effort that has taken on greater urgency ahead of the Nov. 3 election. If Barr brings the case by the end of this month, he would override lawyers who worked on the investigat­ion and who said they needed more time to bring what they considered to be a strong lawsuit.

Trump has supported efforts to restrain the power of Amazon, Apple, Facebook and Google. Last summer, the Justice Department and Federal Trade Commission opened antitrust investigat­ions into the four tech companies, which combined are valued at more than $5 trillion. The investigat­ions were buttressed by state investigat­ions and a separate House inquiry into alleged monopoly abuses by the four giants.

The Justice Department and Google declined to comment.

The complaint could come as early as next week and is expected to start a multiprong battle against Google, the search giant owned by Alphabet. While details are still being finalized, the Justice Department’s case on search is expected to focus on Google’s agreements with other companies like Apple, which set its search engine as the default option for users on iPhones and other devices. Those agreements give Google’s search engine an advantage over rivals.

The complaint is expected to be followed by other antitrust actions against Google by the end of the year, according to people with knowledge of the plans by the Justice Department and states.

Separately, an investigat­ion by state attorneys general of Google’s behavior in digital advertisin­g — the source of virtually all of Alphabet’s $34 billion in annual profit — is nearly complete. That investigat­ion, led by Ken Paxton, the Republican attorney general of Texas, is expected to result in a suit accusing Google of using tactics that have undermined competitio­n in the market for online advertisin­g, said a person briefed on the inquiry.

That suit, the person said, should be ready to be filed soon, with the Justice Department potentiall­y joining as a plaintiff but with Texas taking the lead. A spokeswoma­n for Paxton did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

There is also the potential for an additional, broader suit by the states, led by Phil Weiser, the Democratic attorney general of Colorado. It would include more widerangin­g allegation­s of Google using its dominance of the search market to favor its shopping and other services, the person said.

That investigat­ion is still in progress and a case, if filed, would come later than the other two, the person said. Weiser’s office did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Google controls about 90% of web searches globally, and rivals have complained that the company extended that power by making its search and browsing tools the defaults on many smartphone­s. Google also captures about onethird of every dollar spent on online advertisin­g, and its ad tools are used to supply and auction ads that appear across the internet.

The contracts Google reaches with other tech companies to serve as a default search engine have already attracted attention internatio­nally, in inquiries that may provide a preview into the argument by the Justice Department.

Britain’s Competitio­n and Markets Authority said in a report this summer that the scale of Google’s payments to mobile phone makers like Apple for its search engine to be the default on those devices was “striking and demonstrat­es the value that Google places on these default positions.” The regulator also found that those agreements were “a barrier to expansion for other search engines.”

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