The Sun (San Bernardino)

Amazon wants FTC head kept off its antitrust cases

- By David McLaughlin Bloomberg

Amazon.com wants Federal Trade Commission Chair Lina Khan recused from matters involving the company because of her history criticizin­g the online retailer as a threat to competitio­n.

Amazon filed a request with the agency on Wednesday, arguing Khan should be barred from handling antitrust enforcemen­t decisions affecting the company, according to documents obtained by Bloomberg.

Khan “has on numerous occasions argued that Amazon is guilty of antitrust violations and should be broken up,” Amazon said in its petition. “These statements convey to any reasonable observer the clear impression that she has already made up her mind about many material facts relevant to Amazon’s antitrust culpabilit­y as well as about the ultimate issue of culpabilit­y itself.”

The move comes as the FTC is reviewing Amazon’s proposed $8.45 billion acquisitio­n of movie studio Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. The deal has been criticized by those worried about the growth of tech companies, but antitrust experts have said it will be difficult for regulators to stop.

An FTC spokeswoma­n declined to comment.

Democratic Sen. Elizabeth Warren on Wednesday asked Khan to conduct a “broad and meticulous review” of the MGM deal, saying the deal could have anticompet­itive effects on video streaming and broader impacts on workers and small businesses.

“The FTC should disfavor approving deals involving parties with a known pattern of inhibiting competitio­n and harming consumers and workers,” Warren said. “Allowing such firms to continue buying up competitor­s would only exacerbate these abuses of market power.”

The FTC is also investigat­ing Amazon’s online marketplac­e alongside attorneys general in New York and California, and is reviewing the company’s data practices.

Khan rose to prominence in the antitrust world with a 2017 paper she wrote as a law student

about Amazon’s dominance. Titled “Amazon’s Antitrust Paradox,” it traced how the online retailer came to control key infrastruc­ture of the digital economy and how traditiona­l antitrust analysis fails to consider the danger to competitio­n posed by the company.

In its petition to the FTC, Amazon said companies subject to investigat­ions are entitled to fair considerat­ion by impartial commission­ers who have not appeared to have prejudged the matters before them. Federal ethics principles require recusal, Amazon argued, when a new commission­er previously has expressed views about specific factual and legal issues relating to a particular company.

Amazon cited Khan’s law school paper, and her work with anti-monopoly organizati­on Open Markets Institute, where she wrote articles stating Amazon has engaged in antitrust violations. The company also pointed to her role as a staff lawyer on the House Judiciary Committee’s antitrust panel, which put out a report last year accusing Amazon and other tech platforms of abusing their market power.

“Given her long track record of detailed pronouncem­ents about Amazon, and her repeated proclamati­ons that Amazon has violated the antitrust laws, a reasonable observer would conclude that she no longer can consider the company’s antitrust defenses with an open mind,” Amazon said. “Indeed, doing so would require her to repudiate the years of writings and statements that are at the foundation of her profession­al career.”

During her Senate confirmati­on hearing in April, Republican Sen. Mike Lee of Utah asked Khan whether she should recuse herself from investigat­ions related to Amazon, Alphabet Inc.’s Google, Apple and Facebook given her work on the House antitrust panel. Lee cited a federal appeals court decision that said a former FTC commission­er had to recuse himself due to prior work on a Senate investigat­ion.

Khan said she had none of the financial conflicts that are the basis for recusal under federal ethics laws.

“If it were to arise I would seek the guidance of the relevant ethics officials at the agency and proceed accordingl­y,” she said.

 ?? SAUL LOEB — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Amazon is asking that Lina Khan, the new head of the Federal Trade Commission, be recused from antitrust probes involving it.
SAUL LOEB — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Amazon is asking that Lina Khan, the new head of the Federal Trade Commission, be recused from antitrust probes involving it.

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