The legal library gives you easy access to the FTC’s case information and other official legal, policy, and guidance documents.
20170092: Kirin Holdings Company, Ltd.; The Brooklyn Brewery Corporation
20170094: Packaging Corporation of America; Robert W. Haddad, Sr. and Helen L. Haddad
20170099: QUIKRETE Holdings, Inc.; Contech Holdings, Inc.
20170100: LAL Family Partners L.P.; Luxory Brand Partners (BVI) Limited
20170106: CGI Group, Inc.; William C. Robichaud, Sr.
16 CFR Part 305: Energy Labeling Rule; Final Rule; Correction
In the Supreme Court of the United States: Visa Inc., et al., Petitioners v. Sam Osborn, et al., and Visa Inc., et al., Petitioners v. Mary Stoumbos, et al., On Writ of Certiorari To the United States Court of Appeals For the District of Columbia Circuit
20170012: Bertram Growth Capital II, L.P.; Trademark Games Holdings, LLC
20170040: Carlyle Partners VI, L.P.; ProKarma, Inc.
20170057: Kendall Automotive Group, Inc.; Cal Worthington Trust
20170070: Integral 2 Limited Partnership; Aderans Company Limited
20170072: Aralez Pharmaceuticals Inc.; AstraZeneca PLC
20170087: AMETEK, Inc.; Main Street Hi-Rel, LLC
Caledonia Investments plc
Investment trust Caledonia Investments plc agreed to pay $480,000 in civil penalties to resolve charges that it violated federal premerger reporting laws by failing to report its purchase in 2014 of voting shares in the helicopter services company Bristow Group, Inc. According to the complaint, in June 2008, Caledonia first acquired voting shares in Bristow and reported its purchase to U.S. antitrust authorities, as required under the Hart-Scott-Rodino Act. Subsequently, Caledonia made additional purchases that were exempt from reporting under HSR rules. During that same timeframe, however, two Caledonia employees were designated to serve on Bristow’s board. Bristow awards restricted-stock voting securities to its board members, and by agreement, it set aside the securities for the two Caledonia board members for purchase by Caledonia. In February 2014, these voting shares vested, and Caledonia acquired them, according to the complaint. The Commission charged that Caledonia was required under the HSR Act to report this purchase but failed to do so. The HSR Act allows a company that has reported an initial purchase of voting shares to purchase additional voting shares from the same issuer – as long as those purchases do not cause the company’s total holdings to cross a higher reporting threshold over a five-year period following the initial purchase. The complaint charges that Caledonia’s 2014 purchase of voting shares in Bristow fell outside the five-year period following its initial purchase.