The U.S. Justice Department released the below
information:
The U.S. Department of Justice Antitrust
Division and the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) today issued a joint statement detailing an expedited
antitrust procedure and providing guidance for collaborations of businesses
working to protect the health and safety of Americans during the COVID-19
pandemic.
The expedited procedure notes,
for example, that health care facilities may need to work together in providing
resources and services to assist patients, consumers, and communities affected
by the pandemic and its aftermath. Other businesses may need to temporarily
combine production, distribution, or service networks to facilitate production
and distribution of COVID-19-related supplies.
Under the expedited procedure for
COVID-19 public health projects, the agencies will respond to all
COVID-19-related requests, and resolve those addressing public health and
safety, within seven calendar days of receiving all information necessary to
vet these proposals. The statement sets out the instructions for businesses
wishing to take advantage of this procedure.
The expedited COVID-19 procedure
offers quicker review than existing FTC and Justice Department programs that
are designed to provide guidance to businesses concerned about the legality of
proposed conduct under the antitrust laws. The FTC’s “Staff Advisory Opinion” procedure and DOJ’s “Business Review Letter” procedure allow any firm,
individual, or group of firms or individuals to submit a proposal to the
agencies and to receive a statement advising whether the agencies would
challenge the proposed activity under the antitrust laws.
“The Antitrust Division
recognizes the importance of providing expeditious clarity on any antitrust
obligations in this challenging time,” said Assistant Attorney General Makan
Delrahim of the Department of Justice’s Antitrust Division. “Our expedited
Business Review Letter procedure will help facilitate businesses that want to
work quickly to address the urgent public health and economic needs associated
with COVID 19.”
“Under these extraordinary
circumstances, we understand that businesses collaborating on public health
initiatives may need an expedited response from U.S. antitrust authorities,”
said FTC Chairman Joe Simons. “We are committed to doing everything we can to
help with these efforts, while continuing to aggressively enforce the antitrust
laws.”
The antitrust laws accommodate
procompetitive collaborations among competitors. In their joint statement, the
FTC and the Department of Justice listed several types of collaborative
activities designed to improve the health and safety response to the pandemic
that would likely be consistent with the antitrust laws.
At the same time, the agencies
also stressed that they will not hesitate to hold accountable those who try to
use the pandemic to engage in antitrust violations. In addition, the Department
of Justice will criminally prosecute conduct such as price-fixing, bid-rigging,
or market allocation.
The expedited procedure requires
that an applicant provide the FTC or Justice Department a written description
of the proposal, including the parties that would be involved in the effort or
activity, and the name and contact information of a person from whom the
agencies could obtain additional information. This expedited procedure is for
use solely for coronavirus-related public health efforts and may be invoked at
the option of the requestor, in lieu of the agencies’ standard procedures for
handling requests for advice.
The agencies also committed to
expedite requests under the National Cooperative Research and Production Act for
flexible treatment of certain standard development organizations and joint
ventures.
The statement also notes that the
FTC and the Justice Department are addressing actions by individuals and
businesses to take advantage of COVID-19 through other fraudulent and illegal
schemes. Anyone with information or concerns about this sort of conduct, or
other COVID-19-related complaints, should contact the FTC’s Consumer Response
Center at 1-877-382-4357 or the National Center for Disaster Fraud Hotline
(1-866-720-5721) or e-mail (disaster@leo.gov).
More information on the FTC’s guidance on potential fraud, deceptive practices,
and scams is available here, and to report a complaint go to www.ftc.gov/complaint.
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