The legal library gives you easy access to the FTC’s case information and other official legal, policy, and guidance documents.
20171464: Donuts Inc.; Rightside Group Ltd.
20171470: Caerus Operating, LLC; Encana Corporation
20171480: Enerflex Ltd.; Mesa Compression, LLC
20171409: Quest Diagnostics Incorporated; Med Fusion, LLC
20171459: Synnex Corporation; Datatec Limited
20171460: Datatec Limited; Synnex Corporation
20171483: Warburg Pincus Private Equity XII, L.P.; Odyssey Investment Partners Fund IV, L.P.
Federal Trade Commission Comment to the Federal Communications Commission Supporting the FCC’s Proposed Expansion of Provider-Based Call-Blocking Authority in Order to Eliminate Unlawful Robocalls
Alimentation Couche-Tard Inc. and CST Brands, Inc.; Analysis to Aid Public Comment; Proposed Consent Agreement
Humana, Inc.
Emerson Electric and Pentair, In the Matter of
Emerson Electric Co. agreed to sell the switchbox business of Pentair plc to Stamford, Conn.-based Crane Co. in order to settle charges that Emerson’s proposed $3.15 billion acquisition of Pentair would violate federal antitrust law. Emerson and Pentair are manufacturers of industrial valves and control products, including switchboxes, which are widely used in the oil and gas, chemical, petrochemical, power, and other industries. Switchboxes perform a critical safety function, so brand reputation and product reliability are very important to customers. Emerson’s TopWorx and Pentair’s Westlock switchboxes are the most widely-used brands nationwide and, for many customers, the only acceptable brands of switchboxes. Under the FTC order, Emerson must divest Westlock Controls Corporation, the Pentair subsidiary that designs, manufactures, and sells switchboxes, to Crane Co. The order requires Emerson to provide Crane all of Westlock’s production facilities, intellectual property, confidential business information, and the opportunity to hire Westlock employees.