99-824. United States v. AT&T Corp. and Tele-Communications, Inc.; Proposed Final Judgment and Competitive Impact Statement  

  • [Federal Register Volume 64, Number 9 (Thursday, January 14, 1999)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 2506-2514]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 99-824]
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
    
    Antitrust Division
    
    
    United States v. AT&T Corp. and Tele-Communications, Inc.; 
    Proposed Final Judgment and Competitive Impact Statement
    
        Notice is hereby given pursuant to the Antitrust Procedures and 
    Penalties Act, 15 U.S.C. 16 (b) through (h), that a proposed Final 
    Judgment, Stipulation, and Competitive Impact Statement have been filed 
    with the United States District Court for the District of Columbia in 
    United States v. AT&T Corporation and Tele-Communications, Inc., Civil 
    No. 1:98CV03170.
        On December 30, 1998, the United States filed a Complaint alleging 
    that the proposed acquisition by AT&T Corporation of Tele-
    Communications, Inc. would violate section 7 of the Clayton Act, 15 
    U.S.C. 18. The Complaint alleges that AT&T is the largest provider of 
    mobile wireless telephone services in the United States, and that Tele-
    Communications, Inc. owns a 23.5 percent equity interest in the mobile 
    wireless telephone business of Sprint Corporation. The Complaint 
    further alleges that if consummated, the acquisition may substantially 
    lessen competition in the provision of mobile wireless telephone 
    services in many geographic areas throughout the United States. The 
    proposed Final Judgment, filed at the same time as the Complaint, 
    requires AT&T Corporation to divest its interest in the mobile wireless 
    telephone business of Sprint Corporation.
        Public comment is invited within the statutory 60-day comment 
    period. Such comments, and responses thereto, will be published in the 
    Federal Register and filed with the Court. Comments should be directed 
    to Donald J. Russell, Chief, Telecommunications Task Force, Antitrust 
    Division, Department of Justice, 1401 H St., NW, Suite 8000, 
    Washington, DC 20530 (telephone: (202) 514-5621).
        Copies of the Complaint, Stipulation, proposed Final Judgment, and 
    Competitive Impact Statement are available for inspection in Room 215 
    of the United States Department of Justice, Antitrust Division, 325 7th 
    St., NW, Washington, DC 20530 (telephone (202) 514-2841) and at the 
    Office of the Clerk of the United States District Court for the 
    District of Columbia. Copies of these materials may be obtained upon 
    request and payment of a copying fee.
    Constance K. Robinson,
    Director of Operations and Merger Enforcement, Antitrust Division.
    
    Stipulation
    
        It is stipulated by and between the undersigned parties, by their 
    respective attorneys, that:
        A. The Court has jurisdiction over the subject matter of this 
    action and over each of the parties hereto, and venue of this action is 
    proper in the District for the District of Columbia.
        B. The parties to this Stipulation consent that a Final Judgment in 
    the form attached may be filed and entered by the Court, upon the 
    motion of any party or the Court's own motion, at any time after 
    compliance with the requirements of the Antitrust Procedures and 
    Penalties Act (15 U.S.C. 16), without further notice to any party or 
    other proceedings, provided that plaintiff has not withdrawn its 
    consent, which it may do at any time before entry of the proposed Final 
    Judgment by serving notice on the defendants and by filing that notice 
    with the Court.
        C. Defendants shall abide by and comply with the provisions of the 
    proposed Final Judgment pending entry of the Final Judgment, and shall, 
    from the date of the filing of this Stipulation, comply with all the 
    terms and provisions of the proposed Final Judgment as though the same 
    were in full force and effect as an order of the Court.
        D. In the event plaintiff withdraws its consent, as provided in 
    paragraph (B) above, or if the proposed Final Judgment is not entered 
    pursuant to this Stipulation, this Stipulation shall be of no effect 
    whatever, and the making of this Stipulation shall be without prejudice 
    to any party in this or any other proceeding.
    
        For the Plaintiff:
    A. Douglas Melamed,
    Acting Assistant Attorney General.
    Constance K. Robinson,
    Director of Operations and Merger Enforcement.
    Deborah A. Roy,
    Attorney, Telecommunications Task Force.
    Donald J. Russell,
    Chief, Telecommunications Task Force.
    Peter A. Gray,
    Attorney, Telecommunications Task Force.
    
    U.S. Department of Justice, Antitrust Division, 1401 H Street, NW., 
    Suite 8000, Washington, DC 20530, (202) 514-5636.
    
        Dated: December 30, 1998.
    
    
    [[Page 2507]]
    
    
        For the Defendants:
    Mark C. Rosenblum,
    Vice President-Law, AT&T Corp., 295 North Maple Avenue, Room 3244J1, 
    Basking Ridge, New Jersey 07920.
    
        Dated: December 28, 1998.
    Kathy Fenton,
    Counsel for Tele-Communications, Inc., Jones, Day, Reavis & Pogue, 
    Suite 700, 1450 G Street NW, Washington, DC 20005.
    
        Dated: December 28, 1998.
    
    Final Judgment
    
        WHEREAS, plaintiff, the United States of America, having filed its 
    Complaint herein on December 30, 1998, and plaintiff and defendants, by 
    their respective attorneys, having consented to the entry of this Final 
    Judgment without trial or adjudication of any issue of fact or law 
    herein, and without this Final Judgment constituting any evidence 
    against or an admission by any party with respect to any issue of law 
    or fact herein;
        And whereas, defendants have agreed to be bound by the provisions 
    of this Final Judgment pending its approval by the Court;
        And whereas, the essence of this Final Judgment is certain 
    divestiture of specific assets and the imposition of related injunctive 
    relief to ensure that competition is not substantially lessened;
        And whereas, plaintiff requires Liberty Media Corporation to make 
    certain divestitures for the purpose of preventing a lessening of 
    competition alleged in the Complaint;
        And whereas, defendants have represented to plaintiff that the 
    divestiture ordered herein can and will be made and that defendants 
    will later raise no claims of hardship or difficulty as grounds for 
    asking the Court to modify any of the divestiture provisions contained 
    herein;
        And, therefore, before the taking of any testimony, and without 
    trial or adjudication of any issue of fact or law herein, and upon 
    consent of the parties hereto, it is hereby ordered, adjudged, and 
    decreed as follows:
    
    I. Jurisdiction
    
        This Court has jurisdiction over each of the parties hereto and the 
    subject matter of this action. The Complaint states a claim upon which 
    relief may be granted against the defendants under section 7 of the 
    Clayton Act, as amended (15 U.S.C. 18).
    
    II. Definitions
    
        As used in this Final Judgment:
        A. ``TCI'' means defendant Tele-Communications, Inc., a Delaware 
    corporation with its headquarters in Englewood, Colorado and includes 
    its successors and assigns, its subsidiaries, and the directors, 
    officers, managers, agents and employees acting for or on behalf of 
    TCI, except for Liberty, its successors and assigns, its subsidiaries, 
    and the directors, officers, managers, agents and employees acting for 
    or on behalf of Liberty.
        B. ``Liberty'' means Liberty Media Corporation, a Delaware 
    corporation, as well as the assets, liabilities and businesses 
    attributed to the Liberty Media Group (as defined in the AT&T/TCI 
    Merger Agreement) and its successors and assigns, its subsidiaries and 
    the directors, officers, managers, agents and employees acting for or 
    on behalf of Liberty.
        C. ``Liberty Media Tracking Shares'' means the classes of common 
    stock to be issued by AT&T, referred to as ``Liberty Media Tracking 
    Shares'' in the AT&T/TCI Merger Agreement, and any shares of stock 
    issued in respect of any of the foregoing (including by way of 
    conversion, redemption, reclassification, distribution, merger, 
    combination, or other similar event).
        D. ``AT&T'' means defendant AT&T Corp., a New York corporation with 
    its headquarters in New York, New York and includes all of its 
    successors and assigns, its subsidiaries, and the directors, officers, 
    managers, agents and employees acting for or on behalf of AT&T, except 
    for Liberty, its successors and assigns, its subsidiaries, and the 
    directors, officers, managers, agents and employees acting for or on 
    behalf of Liberty.
        E. ``AT&T/TCI Merger Agreement'' means the Agreement and Plan of 
    Merger dated as of June 23, 1998, as produced to plaintiff on July 23, 
    1998, with respect to the AT&T/TCI Merger.
        F. ``AT&T/TCI Merger'' means the merger of TCI with a subsidiary of 
    AT&T, as contemplated by the AT&T/TCI Merger Agreement.
        G. ``AT&T Stock'' means all classes of common stock issued by AT&T, 
    except for Liberty Media Tracking Shares.
        H. ``Sprint PCS Tracking Stock'' means, collectively, (i) the PCS 
    Common Stock, Series 1, (ii) the PCS Common Stock, Series 2, (iii) the 
    PCS Common Stock, Series 3, (iv) the shares of Sprint PCS Tracking 
    Stock issuable in respect of Sprint's outstanding shares of Class A 
    Common Stock, (v) the shares of Sprint PCS Tracking Stock issuable in 
    respect of any ``inter-group interest'' of the ``Sprint FON Group'' in 
    the ``Sprint PCS Group,'' (vi) the shares of Sprint's Series 7 
    Preferred Stock and warrants to purchase shares of Sprint PCS Tracking 
    Stock issued to TCI, Comcast Corporation (``Comcast'') and Cox 
    Communications, Inc. (``Cox'') in connection with the Sprint PCS 
    Restructuring (and the shares of Sprint PCS Tracking Stock issuable 
    upon any exercise or conversion thereof), (vii) any other options, 
    warrants or convertible securities exercisable for or convertible into 
    any shares of Sprint PCS Tracking Stock, and (viii) any shares of 
    capital stock Sprint issued in respect of any of the foregoing 
    (including by way of conversion, redemption, reclassification, 
    distribution, merger, combination, or other similar event).
        I. ``Liberty's Sprint Holdings'' means the Sprint PCS Tracking 
    Stock acquired by TCI Ventures Group LLC and its subsidiaries in the 
    Sprint PCS Restructuring and in which Liberty will have a beneficial 
    interest after the closing of the AT&T/TCI Merger.
        J. ``Sprint PCS Restructuring'' means that series of transactions 
    that occurred simultaneously on November 23, 1998 in which Sprint 
    Corporation (``Sprint'') acquired through a number of mergers all of 
    the outstanding partnership interests in a number of partnerships 
    collectively holding all of the assets and businesses known as ``Sprint 
    PCS'' held by affiliates of TCI, Cox, and Comcast.
        K. ``Private sale'' means any sale except for sales made through 
    the public market.
    
    III. Applicability
    
        The provisions of this Final Judgment apply to each of the 
    defendants, its successors and assigns, its subsidiaries, directors, 
    officers, managers, agents, employees and all other persons in active 
    concert or participation with any of them who shall have received 
    actual notice of this Final Judgment by personal service or otherwise, 
    and with respect to Sections IV, V and VI of this Final Judgment, to 
    the trustee and his or her successors.
    
    IV. Creation of a Trust
    
        A. TCI is hereby ordered and directed, prior to closing of the 
    AT&T/TCI Merger, to assign and transfer Liberty's Sprint Holdings to a 
    trustee for the purpose of accomplishing a divestiture of such holdings 
    in accordance with the terms of this Final Judgment. The trust 
    agreement shall be in a form approved by the plaintiff, and its terms 
    shall be consistent with the terms of this Final Judgment. Defendants 
    shall submit a form of trust agreement to the plaintiff, who shall 
    communicate to defendants within ten (10) business days its approval or 
    disapproval of that form. The trustee shall agree to be bound by this 
    Final Judgment.
    
    [[Page 2508]]
    
        B. Prior to the closing of the AT&T/TCI Merger, TCI shall submit 
    the name of its nominee for trustee to the plaintiff, who within ten 
    (10) business days shall (i) approve the nominee as trustee, or (ii) 
    request additional names until a nominee for trustee proposed by 
    Liberty is approved by the plaintiff, with plaintiff reaching a 
    decision on each nominee within ten (10) business days. The trustee 
    shall not be a director, officer, manager, agent or employee of AT&T or 
    Liberty. Defendants shall not consummate the Merger until such time as 
    the trustee and the trust agreement have been approved by plaintiff, 
    and the Liberty Sprint Holdings have been transferred to the trust.
    
    V. Divestiture of Sprint PCS Interest
    
        A. The trustee is hereby ordered and directed, in accordance with 
    the terms of this Final Judgment, on or before May 23, 2002, to divest 
    that portion of Liberty's Sprint Holdings sufficient to cause Liberty 
    to own no more than 10% of the outstanding shares of Sprint PCS 
    Tracking Stock. On or before May 23, 2004, the trustee shall divest the 
    remainder of Liberty's Sprint Holdings. The number of outstanding 
    shares of Sprint PCS Tracking Stock for such purposes shall be 
    calculated on a share of Series 1 PCS Stock equivalent basis assuming 
    the issuance of all shares of Series 1 PCS Stock ultimately issuable in 
    respect of the applicable Sprint PCS Tracking Stock upon the exercise, 
    conversion or other issuance thereof in accordance with the terms of 
    such securities. Notwithstanding the provisions of this paragraph, if a 
    motion to terminate this Final Judgment in which plaintiff has joined 
    has been filed, and is pending before the Court, the trustee shall not 
    proceed with the divestitures provided by this paragraph until the 
    motion to terminate the Final Judgment has been decided by the Court.
        B. After Liberty's Sprint Holdings have been transferred to the 
    trustee, only the trustee shall have the right to sell Liberty's Sprint 
    Holdings. The trustee shall have the power and authority to accomplish 
    the divestiture only in a manner reasonably calculated to maximize the 
    value of Liberty's Sprint Holdings to the holders of the Liberty Media 
    Tracking Shares, without regard to any costs or benefits to AT&T 
    (including any costs or benefits of such divestiture to AT&T that may 
    be directly or indirectly transferred to the holders of the Liberty 
    Media Tracking Shares.) However, the trustee may in accomplishing the 
    divestiture, take into account income or gain tax costs or benefits for 
    AT&T that flow to the holders of the Liberty Media Tracking Shares. The 
    trustee shall have the powers provided by the trust agreement and such 
    other powers as the Court shall deem appropriate.
        C. All decisions regarding the divestiture, in whole or in part, of 
    Liberty's Sprint Holdings shall be made by the trustee without 
    discussion or consultation with AT&T, with any of the Class A Directors 
    of Liberty, or with any other officer, director or shareholder of 
    Liberty who individually owns more that 0.10% of the outstanding shares 
    of AT&T Stock. The trustee shall consult with the Board of Directors of 
    Liberty, but the Class A Directors of Liberty and any director, 
    officer, or shareholders of Liberty who owns more than 0.10% of the 
    outstanding shares of AT&T Stock shall not participate in such 
    consultation. The decision to divest part or all of the Liberty Sprint 
    Holdings shall be made by the trustee in his or her sole discretion, 
    except as provided for in Section V.D. of this Final Judgment. Liberty 
    shall not take any action to block a sale by the trustee, on any 
    grounds other than the trustee's malfeasance as defined in the trust 
    agreement. Where the trustee intends to effect a private sale of part 
    or all of Liberty's Sprint Holdings, the trustee shall notify Liberty 
    and plaintiff of that intention. Any objection by Liberty, based on the 
    trustee's malfeasance, must be made within ten (10) business days of 
    notice from the trustee of an intention to make a private sale. Subject 
    to Section V.G. of this Final Judgment, the trustee shall have the 
    power and authority to hire at the cost and expense of Liberty any 
    investment bankers, attorneys, or other agents reasonably necessary in 
    the judgment of the trustee to assist in the divestiture, and such 
    professionals or agents shall be solely accountable to the trustee.
        D. The trustee shall not divest part or all of Liberty's Sprint 
    Holdings in a private sale without a premerger notification form having 
    been filed pursuant to the Hart-Scott-Rodino Antitrust Improvement Act 
    of 1976 or, if the private sale is not reportable under the Hart-Scott-
    Rodina Act, without obtaining the prior written consent of the 
    plaintiff, which shall be granted or denied within thirty (30) calendar 
    days of the request for such consent.
        E. Defendants shall not provide financing in connection with the 
    divestiture to the purchaser of any of Liberty's Sprint Holdings 
    required to be divested by this Final Judgment.
        F. Except as provided for in Section V.C. of this Final Judgment, 
    defendants shall take no action to influence, interfere with or impede 
    the trustee's accomplishment of the divestiture of Liberty's Sprint 
    Holdings and Liberty shall, if requested by the trustee, use its best 
    efforts to assist the trustee in accomplishing the required 
    divestiture, provided that Liberty is not required to take any action 
    with respect to any of Liberty's non-Sprint PCS asset or businesses. 
    Subject to a customary confidentiality agreement, the trustee shall 
    have full and complete access to the defendants' personnel, books, 
    records, and facilities related to Liberty's Sprint Holdings. Subject 
    to a customary confidentiality agreement, the trustee shall permit 
    prospective purchasers of part or all of Liberty's Sprint Holdings in a 
    private sale to have access to any and all financial or operational 
    information to which the trustee has access, as may be relevant to the 
    divestiture required by this Final Judgment.
        G. The trustee shall serve at the cost and expense of Liberty and 
    shall account for all monies derived from the sale of the assets sold 
    by the trustee and all costs and expenses so incurred. The compensation 
    of the trustee and of any professionals and agents retained by the 
    trustee shall be reasonable in light of value of the Liberty Sprint 
    Holdings and based on a fee arrangement set forth in the trust 
    agreement.
    
    VI. Liberty Governance and Economic Interest
    
        Until the divestitures required by the Final Judgment have been 
    accomplished:
        A. Any economic interest arising in connection with Liberty's 
    Sprint Holdings, without limitation, and including but not limited to 
    any interest or dividends earned or net proceeds received upon the 
    disposition of Liberty's Sprint Holdings, shall be for the sole and 
    exclusive benefit of the holders of the Liberty Media Tracking Shares. 
    AT&T shall not engage in any transaction that transfers either directly 
    or indirectly the benefits of Liberty's Sprint Holdings to any other 
    class of AT&T shareholders or to AT&T. AT&T shall adhere to the Policy 
    Statement Regarding Liberty Tracking Stock Matters contained in Exhibit 
    D to the AT&T/TCI Merger Agreement.
        B. TCI shall, on or before the consummation of the merger, (i) 
    amend and restate the certificate of incorporation and bylaws of 
    Liberty to be in substantially the form set forth in Schedule 2.1(c)(i) 
    of the AT&T/TCI Merger Agreement and (ii) appoint all of the Class B 
    Directors and the Class C Directors (as such terms are defined in 
    Schedule 2.1(c)(i) to the AT&T/TCI
    
    [[Page 2509]]
    
    Merger Agreement) of Liberty Media Corporation.
        C. AT&T shall, on or before the consummation of the AT&T/TCI Merger 
    or promptly thereafter, form a Capital Stock Committee as described in 
    the Bylaw Amendment for the Capital Stock Committee set out in Exhibit 
    D of the AT&T/TCI Merger Agreement and agree to have the Capital Stock 
    Committee have the responsibilities described in Exhibit D of the AT&T/
    TCI Merger Agreement.
        D. The trustee shall be instructed not to vote Liberty's Sprint 
    Holdings for so long as they are held in the trust.
        E. Liberty shall not purchase additional shares of Sprint PCS 
    Tracking Stock (other than in connection with the exercise of warrants 
    to purchase such shares or the conversion of shares of Series 7 
    Preferred Stock acquired in the Sprint PCS Restructuring) without the 
    prior written consent of the plaintiff, which shall act on any request 
    for such consent within thirty (30) calendar days.
        F. Liberty shall not hold or acquire any interest, direct or 
    indirect, in AT&T's mobile wireless operations without a premerger 
    notification form having been filed pursuant to the Hart-Scott-Rodino 
    Antitrust Improvement Act of 1976, or if the acquisition is not 
    reported under the Hart-Scott-Rodino Act, without obtaining the prior 
    written consent of the plaintiff, which shall be granted or denied 
    within thirty (30) calendar days of the request for such consent. This 
    paragraph shall not apply to any cumulative holding or acquisition by 
    Liberty of 1.0% or less of the outstanding shares of AT&T Stock 
    indirectly through the acquisition of an interest in a third party, 
    with such percentage to be calculated by multiplying the percentage 
    interest owned by Liberty in such third party by the third party's 
    interest in AT&T Stock (and such third party's interest being 
    determined in the same manner, if also held indirectly).
    
    VII. Compliance Inspection
    
        For the purposes of determining or securing compliance with the 
    Final Judgment and subject to any legally recognized privilege, from 
    time to time:
        A. Duly authorized representatives of the plaintiff, upon written 
    request of the Attorney General or of the Assistant Attorney General in 
    charge of the Antitrust Division, and on reasonable notice to 
    defendants made to their principal offices, shall be permitted:
        (1) Access during office hours of defendants to inspect and copy 
    all books, ledgers, accounts, correspondence, memoranda, and other 
    records and documents in the possession or under the control of 
    defendants, who may have counsel present, relating to matters contained 
    in this Final Judgment; and
        (2) Subject to the reasonable convenience of defendants and without 
    restraint or interference from them, to interview, either informally or 
    on the record, officers, employers, and agents of defendants, who may 
    have counsel present, regarding any such matters.
        B. Upon the written request of the Attorney General or of the 
    Assistant Attorney General in charge of the Antitrust Division, made to 
    defendants' principal offices, defendants shall submit such written 
    reports, under oath if requested, with respect to any matter contained 
    in this Final Judgment.
        C. No information or documents obtained by the means provided in 
    this Section VII shall be divulged by a representative of the plaintiff 
    to any person other than a duly authorized representative of the 
    Executive Branch of the United States, except in the course of legal 
    proceedings to which the United States is a party (including grand jury 
    proceedings), or for the purpose of securing compliance with this Final 
    Judgment, or as otherwise required by law.
        D. If at the time information or documents are furnished by 
    defendants to plaintiff, defendants represent and identify in writing 
    the material in any such information or documents to which a claim of 
    protection may be asserted under Rule 26(c)(7) of the Federal Rules of 
    Civil Procedure, and defendants mark each pertinent page of such 
    material ``Subject to claim to protection under Rule 26(c)(7) of the 
    Federal Rules of Civil Procedure,'' then ten (10) calendar days notice 
    shall be given by plaintiff to defendants prior to divulging such 
    material in any legal proceeding (other than a grand jury proceeding).
    
    VIII. Reporting Requirement
    
        Until the divestitures have been accomplished as provided for in 
    Section V. of this Final Judgment, the trustee shall file a report 
    every six months with the plaintiff, commencing on November 1, 1999, 
    setting forth the efforts to accomplish the divestitures required by 
    this Final Judgment.
    
    IX. Retention of Jurisdiction
    
        Jurisdiction is retained by this Court for the purpose of enabling 
    any of the parties to this Final Judgment to apply to this Court at any 
    time for such further orders and directions as may be necessary or 
    appropriate for the construction or carrying out of this Final 
    Judgment, for the modification of any of the provisions hereof, for the 
    enforcement of compliance herewith, and for the punishment of any 
    violations hereof.
    
    X. Termination
    
        This Final Judgment will expire upon the tenth anniversary of its 
    entry.
    
    XI. Public Interest
    
        Entry of this Final Judgment is in the public interest.
    Dated:-----------------------------------------------------------------
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------
    United States District Judge
    
    Competitive Impact Statement
    
        The United States, pursuant to section 2(b) of the Antitrust 
    Procedures and Penalties Act, 15 U.S.C. 16(b)-(h) (``APPA''), files 
    this Competitive Impact Statement relating to the proposed Final 
    Judgment submitted for entry in this civil antitrust proceeding.
    
    I. Nature and Purpose of the Proceeding
    
        The United States filed a civil antitrust complaint on December 30, 
    1998, alleging that the proposed merger of Tele-Communications Inc. 
    (``TCI'') with a wholly owned subsidiary of AT&T Corporation (``AT&T'') 
    would violate section 7 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. 18. Among its 
    other telecommunications businesses, AT&T is the largest provider of 
    mobile wireless telephone services in the nation. TCI, through a wholly 
    owned subsidiary, holds a 23.5% equity interest in the mobile wireless 
    telephone business of Sprint Corporation (``Sprint'') another large 
    provider of mobile wireless telephone services through its personal 
    communications services (``PCS'') subsidiary, Sprint PCS.\1\ The 
    complaint alleges that AT&T's acquisition of this
    
    [[Page 2510]]
    
    interest in one of its principal competitors may substantially lessen 
    competition in the sale of mobile wireless telephone services. The 
    prayer for relief seeks a judgment that the proposed acquisition would 
    violate section 7 of the Clayton Act, a 15 U.S.C. 18, and a preliminary 
    and permanent injunction preventing AT&T and TCI from carrying out the 
    proposed merger.
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        \1\ When the proposed merger with AT&T was announced, TCI 
    (through a subsidiary) owned 23.5% of Sprint Spectrum Holdings, Co., 
    L.P. as a general partner. This partnership was restructured on 
    November 23, 1998, through transactions in which TCI and the other 
    cable partners (Cox Communications, Inc. and Comcast Corporation) 
    received Series 2 (Sprint) PCS tracking stock in exchange for their 
    partnership interests. In relinquishing their governance rights as 
    partners, the cable partners, including TCI, received the right to 
    liquidate their interests over the next few years. Their Sprint PCS 
    tracking stock has full voting power on issues relating to changing 
    the number or nature of the PCS stock, spinoffs or acquisition of 
    the PCS business. On all other issues TCI's shares (and those of the 
    other two cable partners) have only one-tenth (\1/10\) the voting 
    rights that shareholders of other classes of Sprint PCS stock enjoy. 
    The restructuring contemplates that the Sprint Corporation Board of 
    Directors will manage Sprint's PCS business, with TCI and the other 
    cable company owners of the Sprint PCS tracking stock playing a 
    passive or lesser role, due to their minimal voting powers on 
    matters relating to those issues. Sprint owns 53% of the voting 
    power and equity of Sprint PCS.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Shortly before this complaint was filed, the Department and the 
    defendants reached agreement on the terms of a proposed consent decree, 
    which requires the complete divestiture of the interest in Sprint PCS 
    now owned by TCI. The proposed consent decree also contains provisions, 
    explained below, designed to minimize any risk of competitive harm that 
    otherwise might arise pending completion of the divestiture. In light 
    of this agreement, the Department concluded that there was no 
    competition-based reason to seek to prohibit AT&T's merger with TCI. A 
    Stipulation and proposed Final Judgment embodying the settlement were 
    filed simultaneously with the complaint.
        The United States and the defendants have stipulated that the 
    proposed Final Judgment may be entered after compliance with the 
    Antitrust Procedures and Penalties Act, 15 U.S.C. 16 (``APPA''). Entry 
    of the proposed Final Judgment would terminate this action, except that 
    the Court would retain jurisdiction to construe, modify, or enforce the 
    provisions of the proposed Final Judgment and to punish violations 
    thereof.
    
    II. Description of the Events Giving Rise to the Alleged Violation
    
    A. The Defendants and the Proposed Transaction
        Defendant AT&T is a New York corporation with headquarters in New 
    York, New York. AT&T is a provider of a wide range of 
    telecommunications services internationally and in the United States. 
    Among other things, it is the largest provider of long distance 
    telecommunications services in the United States, as well as the 
    largest provider of mobile wireless telephone services. In 1998, AT&T's 
    mobile wireless operations reported total revenues of approximately $5 
    billion.
        TCI is a Delaware corporation with its headquarters in Englewood, 
    Colorado. TCI is the second largest cable system operator in the 
    nation. At the time of the proposed merger closing, TCI, through its 
    wholly owned subsidiary, Liberty Media Corporation, will own a partial 
    interest in Sprint PCS, one of the principal competitors to AT&T's 
    mobile wireless telephone business in a large number of markets 
    throughout the country. In 1998, Sprint`s PCS revenues totaled 
    approximately $975 million.
        On June 24, 1998, AT&T and TCI entered into an agreement pursuant 
    to which TCI will merge with a wholly owned subsidiary of AT&T in a $48 
    billion transaction. Through this transaction, AT&T will acquire TCI's 
    cable television operations, TCI's shares of the Internet Service 
    Provider @Home and of Teleport Communications Group, and assume $11 
    billion of TCI debt. A variety of other assets now owned by 
    subsidiaries of TCI, including the Sprint PCS holdings, will be 
    transferred to Liberty Media Corp. (``Liberty'').\2\ Liberty will be a 
    wholly-owned subsidiary of AT&T Corp. Although the shares of Liberty 
    will be entirely owned by AT&T, the Class B and Class C directors of 
    Liberty, who will hold two-thirds (\2/3\) of the seats on the board of 
    directors, will be appointed prior to the merger with AT&T by the 
    current (TCI) Liberty media shareholders. These directors may be 
    removed only for cause for a defined period of time.\3\ AT&T will issue 
    a separate class of stock, Liberty Media Tracking Stock, the 
    performance of which will reflect the assets held and businesses 
    conducted by Liberty.\4\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \2\ TCI, at the time of the merger announcement, was organized 
    into three groups, the TCI Cable Group, the TCI Ventures Group, and 
    the Liberty Media Group, each group having its own TCI tracking 
    stock reflecting the assets owned by different sets of TCI 
    subsidiaries. TCI is reorganizing so that before the merger closes, 
    all of the TCI Cable Group and some of the TCI Ventures assets will 
    be in the TCI Cable Group, to be managed post-merger by AT&T's Board 
    of Directors. The remainder of TCI Ventures, including TCI's 
    international cable plant holdings, a joint satellite venture with 
    news Corporation Limited, an educational and training company, 
    partial ownership of two technology companies, and the shares of 
    Sprint PCS stock now held by TCI Wireline, Inc., will be merged with 
    the cable programming assets of Liberty Media, into Liberty Media 
    Corporation, a Delaware Corporation and subsidiary of TCI. Upon 
    consummation of the merger, each share of the Liberty Media Group 
    tracking stock issued by TCI can be exchanged for one share of 
    Liberty Media Tracking stock to be issued by AT&T.
        \3\ See Schedule 2.1(c)(i) of the AT&T/TCI Merger Agreement, 
    dated June 23, 1998.
        \4\ See Exhibit D of the AT&T/TCI Merger Agreement, dated June 
    23, 1998.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    B. Mobile Wireless Telephone Services
        The complaint alleges that the proposed merger may substantially 
    lessen competition in the provision of mobile wireless telephone 
    services in a number of cities throughout the United States.
        Mobile wireless telephone services permit users to make and receive 
    telephone calls, using radio transmissions, while traveling by car or 
    by other means. The mobility afforded by these services is a valuable 
    feature to consumers. In order to provide this capability, wireless 
    carriers must deploy an extensive network of switches and radio 
    transmitters and receivers. Prior to 1995, mobile wireless telephone 
    services were provided primarily by two licensed cellular carriers in 
    each geographic area. AT&T owned cellular licenses in a large number of 
    areas throughout the country. In 1995, the Federal Communications 
    Commissions (``FCC'') allocated (and subsequently issued licenses for) 
    additional spectrum for PCS providers, which include mobile wireless 
    telephone services comparable to those offered by cellular carriers. In 
    addition, in 1996 Nextel Communications, Inc. (``Nextel'') began to 
    offer mobile wireless telephone services comparable to that offered by 
    cellular and PCS carriers, bundled with dispatch services, using 
    spectrum that had been allocated for the provision of specialized 
    mobile radio (``SMR'') services.
        In most major metropolitan markets today, there are two cellular 
    license holders, each of which is authorized to use 25 MHZ of spectrum, 
    up to three PCS licensees each authorized to use 30 MHZ of spectrum, up 
    to three PCS licensees each authorized to use 10 MHZ of spectrum, and 
    one carrier, Nextel, that uses SMR spectrum. There is substantial 
    variation among different geographic areas, however, in terms of the 
    number of independent firms that are currently offering mobile wireless 
    telephone services, the time frame in which additional firms are 
    expected to enter the market using the PCS licenses described above, 
    and the scope of geographic coverage that the various carriers can 
    offer, in light of the fact that their networks have not yet been fully 
    built. Most of the relevant geographic markets have between four and 
    six carriers providing mobile wireless telephone services for consumers 
    and business, including the two incumbent cellular providers and 
    Nextel. The emergence of PCS providers has generally resulted in lower 
    rates and/or higher quality services in those areas in which they have 
    constructed their networks. Measured by current subscribers and 
    revenues, however, the two cellular carriers still control a large 
    share of the market, with a collective share of 80% or more in many 
    markets.
        There is significant differentiation among the mobile wireless 
    telephone services offered by different carriers. Carriers use a 
    variety of different technologies, offer a variety of service and 
    pricing plans, and offer a variety of product bundles which combine
    
    [[Page 2511]]
    
    wireless telephone service with other services (such as paging and 
    messaging services) and/or with a variety of wireless telephone 
    handsets. For a significant segment of customers, the services offered 
    by AT&T and Sprint PCS appear to be particularly close substitutes. In 
    contrast to other mobile wireless telephone service providers that 
    offer services only on a local or regional basis on their own 
    facilities, both AT&T and Sprint PCS have licenses and facilities in 
    most large metropolitan areas and in many smaller metropolitan areas 
    throughout the country. In addition, AT&T and Sprint are two of the 
    largest providers of long distance telecommunications, as well as a 
    wide range of other telecommunications services, and therefore have a 
    high degree of brand recognition. For customers who travel frequently, 
    and therefore use their mobile phones frequently outside their home 
    metropolitan areas, the broad geographic coverage provided by AT&T and 
    Sprint is an important competitive advantage. Customers of other 
    wireless carriers which have local or regional networks may be able to 
    place and receive calls outside of their ``home'' areas, but when they 
    do so, they typically incur significant ``roaming'' charges assessed by 
    the carrier whose wireless network is being used. Both AT&T and Sprint 
    have attempted to exploit this advantage by, among other things, 
    offering a single-rate national plan.\5\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \5\ ``Single Rate'' refers to plans that involve a flat per 
    minute usage charge, regardless of the location at which the call 
    originates or terminates. These plans usually require the purchase 
    of a minimum number of minutes per month.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    C. Anticompetitive Consequences of the Proposed Merger
        The complaint alleges that AT&T's proposed merger with TCI, which 
    would result in AT&T's acquisition of TCI's interest in Sprint PCS, may 
    substantially lessen competition in the provision of mobile wireless 
    telephone services in the metropolitan areas of New York City; Los 
    Angeles; Dallas-Fort Worth; San Francisco-Oakland-San Jose; Miami-Ft. 
    Lauderdale; Minneapolis-St. Paul; Seattle; Pittsburgh; Denver; 
    Portland, OR; Sacramento; Salt Lake City; Las Vegas; and at least 18 
    other metropolitan markets. In each of these markets, AT&T is one of 
    two licensed cellular service providers, and Sprint PCS provides mobile 
    wireless telephone services pursuant to a PCS license. AT&T is the 
    largest or second largest provider of mobile wireless telephone 
    services in these markets, which are highly concentrated.\6\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \6\ The Department of Justice utilizes the Herfindahl-Hirschman 
    Index (``HHI'') as a measure of market concentration. The HHI is 
    calculated by summing the squares of the market shares of every firm 
    in the relevant market. A market with an HHI level greater than 
    1,800 is considered highly concentrated. Department of Justice 
    Federal Trade Commission Horizontal Merger Guidelines Sec. 1.5 
    (April 2, 1992, revised April 8, 1997). Here, most if not all of the 
    relevant markets have pre-merger HHIs well over 2500.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The proposed merger may affect the incentives that govern AT&T's 
    competitive behavior (relating to either pricing or service quality) in 
    these markets. When a firm makes pricing decisions (or decisions on 
    potential investments to improve service quality) it weighs two effects 
    that its decision may produce. A higher price (or reduced investment in 
    service quality) will generate greater revenues from those customers 
    who continue to purchase services from the firm. But a higher price (or 
    reduced service quality) also is likely to cause some portion of 
    current or potential new customers to purchase services from a 
    competitor, thereby reducing the firm's revenues. Weighing these two 
    countervailing factors, firms attempt to choose the price (or service 
    quality) level that will maximize their profits.
        A firm that acquires a full or partial equity interest in a 
    competitor--as AT&T proposes to do here--will face a different 
    calculation of its profit-maximizing price (or service quality) after 
    such an acquisition. After the acquisition, some portion of the 
    customers who would turn to a competitor in response to a price 
    increase (or decline in service quality) would likely purchase services 
    from the firm being acquired; thus, the revenue generated by those 
    customers' purchases will continue to be earned indirectly (through the 
    competitor that has been acquired) by the firm raising its price (or 
    lowering its service quality). Thus an acquisition can cause an 
    individual firm, acting unilaterally, to raise its price more than it 
    would have otherwise (or invest less in service quality than it would 
    have otherwise) because its profit-maximizing price will be higher (or 
    service quality lower) as a result of the acquisition. These adverse 
    effects are greater to the extent that the service offered by the 
    acquired firm is a particularly close substitute for the service 
    offered by the acquiring firm. Under those conditions, a larger share 
    of the customers who switch service providers as a result of a price 
    increase (or reduction in quality) will switch to the acquired firm.\7\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \7\ Another factor that affects the magnitude of the potential 
    price effects is the size of the equity interest that has been 
    acquired. If a 100% equity interest has been acquired, the acquiring 
    firm will recapture 100% of the revenue earned by the acquired firm 
    from customers who switch as a result of the price increase. If a 
    20% equity interest has been acquired, only 20% of that revenue 
    would be recaptured. Thus, all other things equal, acquisition of a 
    larger equity interest in the acquired firm will generate larger 
    adverse price effects than would the acquisition of a smaller 
    interest.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        In light of the high level of concentration in mobile wireless 
    telephone services markets, and the fact that AT&T and Sprint PCS 
    services appear to be close substitutes for one another for a 
    significant segment of customers, the Department was concerned that the 
    acquisition of a substantial portion of the equity of Sprint PCS by 
    AT&T could reduce AT&T's incentive to compete aggressively in those 
    areas in which Sprint PCS is a significant rival and thereby lead to 
    higher prices or reduced service quality for mobile wireless telephone 
    services.\8\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \8\ Acquisitions of shares with significant voting rights may 
    raise additional competitive concerns, beyond those described here 
    in connection with acquisitions of equity interests. An acquisition 
    of voting rights may allow the acquiring firm to exert control or 
    influence over the competitive behavior of the acquired firm in ways 
    that reduce competition. These concerns are not present in this 
    case. Sprint will retain a majority of the voting power (53%) of the 
    Sprint PCS shares and the voting rights conferred by TCI's Sprint 
    PCS investment are insignificant. Furthermore, Section VI.D. of the 
    proposed Final Judgment will prohibit the trustee from even voting 
    those shares during the pre-divestiture period. The Department also 
    considered whether the proposed acquisition would distort the 
    incentives of Sprint PCS to compete in this market and concluded 
    that this was not a significant risk. The defendants will be under a 
    court order to divest the Sprint PCS stock. Thus, there is no 
    prospect that AT&T will ultimately control Sprint PCS and no reason 
    to believe that Sprint PCS's incentives to compete with AT&T during 
    the pre-divestiture period will be diminished.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        It appears unlikely that, in the immediate future, entry into the 
    relevant markets will be sufficient to mitigate this competitive harm. 
    For at least the next two years, the only potential entrants will be 
    firms using the spectrum already allocated for PCS by the FCC. While 
    the FCC may eventually allocate additional spectrum which could be used 
    to provide mobile wireless telephone services, it is unlikely that such 
    spectrum could be allocated and licensed, and that licensees could 
    construct their networks and begin offering service, within the next 
    two years. Additional entry within the next two years may come from 
    firms using the spectrum that the FCC has already allocated for PCS. 
    However, in
    
    [[Page 2512]]
    
    that time frame, it appears unlikely that a firm could acquire a 
    sufficient number of PCS licenses and construct its networks so as to 
    be able to offer geographic coverage comparable to AT&T's and Sprint 
    PCS's nearly nationwide footprint.
        For these reasons, the Department concluded that the merger as 
    proposed may substantially lessen competition, in violation of section 
    7 of the Clayton Act, in the provision of mobile wireless telephone 
    services in those markets where AT&T is one of two cellular licensees 
    and where Sprint PCS also provides mobile wireless telephone 
    services.\9\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \9\ AT&T also offers mobile wireless telephone services in other 
    geographic areas, using PCS licenses. AT&T's market share in those 
    markets, which it has only recently entered, is considerably smaller 
    than its share in markets where AT&T has a cellular license. The 
    Department has reached no judgment as to the competitive effects of 
    the proposed merger in those markets. To the extent that the merger 
    might produce anticompetitive effects in those markets, however, the 
    divestiture requirements in the proposed Final Judgment would 
    provide an effective remedy.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    III. Explanation of the Proposed Final Judgment
    
        The proposed Final Judgment will preserve competition in the sale 
    of mobile wireless services in the relevant geographic markets by 
    requiring the defendants to execute a complete divestiture of the 
    Sprint PCS stock. This divestiture will eliminate the change in market 
    structure caused by the merger; after this divestiture, AT&T would be 
    unable to recapture any of the revenues that might be diverted from 
    AT&T to Sprint PCS as a result of an increase in the price of AT&T's 
    mobile wireless telephone services.
        In merger cases in which the Department seeks a divestitute remedy, 
    the Department requires completion of the divestiture within the 
    shortest time period reasonable under the circumstances. In this case, 
    the proposed Final Judgment requires that Liberty's holdings of Sprint 
    PCS be reduced to 10% or less of the outstanding Sprint PCS stock by 
    May 2002, approximately three years from the expected date of entry of 
    the decree, and that the holding be divested completely by May 2004, 
    approximately five years from the expected entry of the decree.
        These time periods for divestiture are significantly longer than 
    the Department ordinarily would accept. The Department believes they 
    are appropriate in this case, however, because of concerns that a more 
    rapid divestiture might harm competition by adversely affecting 
    Sprint's ability to raise capital to complete the build out of its 
    wireless network. Sprint anticipates that it will have near-term needs 
    for a substantial amount of capital, both debt and equity, in order to 
    purchase and deploy additional infrastructure for its wireless network. 
    A complete divestiture in the time period required by the Department in 
    the typical case (e.g., six months) potentially could adversely affect 
    the value of new stock that would be issued by Sprint, thereby 
    increasing its cost of raising additional capital and potentially 
    delaying or limiting the completion of Sprint's wireless network 
    construction efforts.\10\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \10\ Sprint has also expressed concerns that if AT&T were to 
    control the divestiture of Sprint PCS stock, it could strategically 
    time the sale of those shares so as to exacerbate, rather than 
    mitigate, any possible adverse effect on the value of Sprint PCS 
    stock that might be issued by Sprint. Unlike the usual divestitures 
    in consent decrees entered into by the Department, the acquiring 
    firm here (AT&T) will not be permitted a period of time to 
    accomplish the divestiture; rather, it will go immediately to a 
    trustee who will effect the sale of the stock.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Sprint's wireless business has recently been restructured through 
    transactions in which TCI's former partnership interest in the business 
    was converted to TCI's current holding of Sprint PCS stock. In 
    connection with that restructuring, Sprint, TCI, and others negotiated 
    contractual limitations on the ability of TCI to sell its Sprint PCS 
    shares during the period in which Sprint would be seeking to raise 
    capital for its build out. The proposed Final Judgment will not 
    interfere in any way with TCI's compliance with its contractual 
    obligations pursuant to the Sprint PCS restructuring.
        The terms of the proposed Final Judgment reflect a balancing of the 
    potential harm to competition that might arise from a divestiture that 
    proceeds either too slowly or too rapidly. By permitting the 
    divestiture of the Sprint PCS shares to be accomplished by a trustee 
    over a period of five years, the proposed Final Judgment should 
    minimize the risk of any potential adverse effect on Sprint's build out 
    of its wireless network. The anticompetitive effects that could arise 
    from the ownership of a substantial interest in Sprint's PCS business 
    by a subsidiary of AT&T are addressed by the requirement that a major 
    portion of the Sprint PCS holding be divested within three years, and 
    that there be a complete divestiture within five years. In addition, 
    other supplementary provisions in the Final Judgment, described below, 
    are designed to reduce the risk that AT&T's partial ownership of Sprint 
    PCS would create anticompetitive incentives during the interim period 
    before the completion of the required divestitures.
        Section VI.A. of the proposed Final Judgment requires all economic 
    benefits of the Sprint PCS Holding to inure exclusively to the benefit 
    of the holders of Liberty Media Tracking Shares, and forbids AT&T from 
    engaging in any transaction that would directly or indirectly transfer 
    such benefits to AT&T or to any other class of AT&T shareholders. It 
    also requires AT&T to adhere to the Policy Statement Regarding Liberty 
    Tracking Stock Matters that is an exhibit to its merger agreement. 
    Section VI.B. requires TCI to complete the amendment of the Liberty 
    certificate of incorporation and bylaws, contemplated by its merger 
    agreement with AT&T, and to appoint the Class B and Class C Directors 
    of Liberty, prior to the consummation of the merger. Section VI.C. 
    requires AT&T to form the Capital Stock Committee contemplated by its 
    merger agreement. The Policy Statement, the amendment of Liberty's 
    certificate of incorporation and bylaws, and the Capital Stock 
    Committee are integral parts of the framework establishing the 
    governance arrangements for Liberty, and controlling certain financial 
    relationships between and among the various classes of stock issued by 
    AT&T Corp., including the Liberty Media Tracking Stock. Section VI.F. 
    of the proposed Final Judgment is also intended to ensure substantial 
    separation between Liberty's Sprint PCS holding and AT&T's wireless 
    business, by restricting Liberty's ability to acquire any interest in 
    AT&T's wireless business.
        Collectively, these provisions are meant to promote a ``hold 
    separate'' relationship between AT&T and its Sprint PCS holdings during 
    the pre-divestiture period, (i) reducing the risk that Liberty will be 
    operated for the benefit of holders of other classes at AT&T stock 
    (including those other shareholders who will collectively own and 
    control AT&T's wireless business), rather than for the benefit of the 
    Liberty Tracking Stock shareholders, and (ii) reducing the risk that 
    AT&T could recapture any of the revenues that might be diverted to 
    Sprint PCS as a result of an AT&T price increase, because the holders 
    of the Liberty Media tracking stock, rather than the shareholders of 
    AT&T's wireless business, would be the beneficiaries to the extent that 
    AT&T customers switch to Sprint PCS.
        As a general matter, the Department does not believe that decree 
    restrictions dealing with corporate governance arrangements and the 
    separation of economic interests among different
    
    [[Page 2513]]
    
    components of a single corporate enterprise are an appropriate remedy 
    for the anticompetitive effects that might arise from mergers and 
    acquisitions. Such restrictions will have limited efficacy as a long-
    term protection against anticompetitive effects, and may require 
    ongoing oversight of the conduct of a corporation's internal affairs 
    that neither the Department nor a Court is well-suited to perform on an 
    ongoing basis. The proposed settlement of this case adopts such 
    provisions only because of the unique factors that are present here, 
    and only as an interim measure designated to mitigate any 
    anticompetitive incentives that could otherwise arise during the 
    unusually lengthy period permitted for complete divestiture.
        Sections IV and V of the proposed Final Judgment set forth the 
    process and substantive requirements for the complete divestiture of 
    the Sprint PCS Holding, a divestiture that will cure the potential 
    anticompetitive effects of the AT&T/TCI merger. Prior to the closing of 
    the merger, TCI is required to establish a trust, appoint a trustee, 
    and transfer the Sprint PCS Holding to the trust. TCI must secure the 
    Department's approval of both the terms of the trust agreement and the 
    appointment of the trustee nominated by TCI. The trustee will have the 
    obligation and the sole responsibility for executing the divestiture of 
    the Sprint PCS Holding.\11\ The trustee is required, by Section V.B., 
    to exercise this responsibility in a manner reasonably calculated to 
    maximize the value of the Sprint PCS Holding to the holders of Liberty 
    Media Tracking Shares. The trustee is prohibited from considering 
    possible costs or benefits of a sale to AT&T (Section V.B.), from 
    consulting with AT&T, with any Liberty director appointed by AT&T, or 
    with any Liberty director, officer, or shareholder who owns a 
    substantial interest in AT&T, concerning the sale of the Sprint PCS 
    stock (Section V.C.). The trustee will, however, consult with the Class 
    B and Class C directors of Liberty, who will be appointed by TCI prior 
    to the completion of the merger. The trustee is also prohibited from 
    voting the Sprint PCS shares.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \11\ The Sprint PCS shares may be sold either in the public 
    markets or in a private sale negotiated with an identified buyer. 
    With respect to a private sale, the proposed Final Judgment requires 
    prior notice to the Department, so that the Department can ensure 
    that such a sale would not raise competitive concerns. There is no 
    such requirement with respect to sales in the public market, where 
    there is no means of determining in advance who the buyer would be.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        By requiring the trustee to act solely in the interests of the 
    Liberty Media Tracking Stock shareholders, the proposed Final Judgment 
    seeks to minimize any possibility that the divestiture would be carried 
    out in a manner designed to provide anticompetitive benefits to AT&T's 
    wireless business.
        Collectively, these provisions of the proposed Final Judgment are 
    meant to provide a structural remedy (i.e., complete divestiture) for 
    the anticompetitive effects that might otherwise result from the 
    acquisition; to minimize the risk that this strucural remedy might 
    adversely affect competition by impairing Sprint's ability to raise 
    capital to complete its wireless build out (by affording a reasonable 
    period of time in which to complete the divestiture); and to minimize 
    the possibility of interim competitive harm during the period prior to 
    completion of the divestiture.
        In order to ensure compliance with the Final Judgment, Section VII 
    authorizes plaintiff to conduct an inspection of the defendant's 
    records. Plaintiff may copy any records under the control of the 
    defendant, interview officers, employees and agents of the defendant, 
    and request that the defendant submit written reports. The inspection 
    is subject to any legally recognized privilege. All information 
    obtained by plaintiff under section VII will be held as confidential 
    except in the course of legal proceedings to which the United States is 
    a party, or for purposes of securing compliance with the Final 
    Judgment, or as otherwise required by law.
        Section IX of the proposed Final Judgment provides that the Court 
    will retain jurisdiction over this action, and permits the parties to 
    apply to the Court for any order necessary or appropriate for the 
    modification of the Final Judgment. In the Department's view, a 
    complete legal and economic separation between AT&T's wireless business 
    and the Sprint PCS Holdings would constitute a material change in 
    circumstances that would justify termination of the divestiture 
    obligation. Section IX also provides for the Court's continuing 
    jurisdiction to interpret or enforce the Final Judgment.
    
    IV. Remedies Available to Potential Private Litigants
    
        Section 4 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. 15, provides that any 
    person who has been injured as a result of conduct prohibited by the 
    antitrust laws may bring suit in federal court to recover three times 
    the damages the person has suffered, as well as costs and reasonable 
    attorneys' fees. Entry of the proposed Final Judgment will neither 
    impair nor assist the bringing of any private antitrust damage action. 
    Under the provisions of section 5(a) of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. 
    16(a), the proposed Final Judgment has no prima facie effect in any 
    subsequent private lawsuit that may be brought against defendants.
    
    V. Procedures Available for Modification of the Proposed Final Judgment
    
        The plaintiff and defendants have stipulated that the proposed 
    Final Judgment may be entered by the Court after compliance with the 
    provisions of the APPA, provided that the United States has not 
    withdrawn its consent. The APPA conditions entry upon the Court's 
    determination that the proposed Final Judgment is in the public 
    interest.
        The APPA provides a period of at least sixty (60) days preceding 
    the effective date of the proposed Final Judgment within which any 
    person may submit to the United States written comments regarding the 
    proposed Final Judgment. Any person who wishes to comment should do so 
    within sixty (60) days of the date of publication of this Competitive 
    Impact Statement in the Federal Register. The United States will 
    evaluate and respond to the comments. All comments will be given due 
    consideration by the Department of Justice, which remains free to 
    withdraw its consent to the proposed Final Judgment at any time prior 
    to entry. The comments and the response of the United States will be 
    filed with the Court and published in the Federal Register.
        Written comments should be submitted to: Donald J. Russell, Chief, 
    Telecommunications Task Force, Antitrust Division, United States 
    Department of Justice, 1401 H Street, NW, Suite 8000, Washington, DC 
    20530.
    
    VI. Alternatives to the Proposed Final Judgment
    
        The plaintiff considered, as an alternative to the proposed Final 
    Judgment, action to block consummation of the merger. The plaintiff is 
    satisfied, however, that the divestiture of the Sprint PCS Tracking 
    Stock and other relief contained in the proposed Final Judgment will 
    preserve competition in the provision of mobile wireless telephone 
    services, and that there is no competition-related reason to seek to 
    block the merger.
    
    VII. Standard of Review Under the APPA for Proposed Final Judgment
    
        The APPA requires that proposed consent judgments in antitrust 
    cases brought by the United States be subject to a sixty (60) day 
    comment period, after
    
    [[Page 2514]]
    
    which the court shall determine whether entry of the proposed Final 
    Judgment ``is in the public interest.'' In making that determination, 
    the court may consider--
    
        (1) The competitive impact of such judgment, including 
    termination of alleged violations, provisions for enforcement and 
    modification, duration or relief sought, anticipated effects of 
    alternative remedies actually considered, and any other 
    considerations bearing upon the adequacy of such judgment;
        (2) The impact of entry of such judgment upon the public 
    generally and individuals alleging specific injury from the 
    violations set forth in the complaint including consideration of the 
    public benefit, if any, to be derived from a determination of the 
    issues at trial.
    
    15 U.S.C. 16(e) (emphasis added). As the United States Court of Appeals 
    for the D.C. Circuit recently held, this statute permits a court to 
    consider, among other things, the relationship between the remedy 
    secured and the specific allegations set forth in the government's 
    complaint, whether the decree is sufficiently clear, whether 
    enforcement mechanisms are sufficient, and whether the decree may 
    positively harm third parties. See United States v. Microsoft, 56 F.3d 
    1448, 1461-62 (D.C. Cir. 1995).
        In conducting this inquiry, ``[t]he Court is nowhere compelled to 
    go to trial or to engage in extended proceedings which might have the 
    effect of vitiating the benefits of prompt and less costly settlement 
    through the consent decree process.'' \12\ Rather,
    
        \12\ 119 Cong. Rec. 24598 (1973). See United States v. Gillette 
    Co., 406 F. Supp. 713, 715 (D. Mass. 1975). A ``public interest'' 
    determination can be made properly on the basis of the Competitive 
    Impact Statement and Response to Comments filed pursuant to the 
    APPA. Although the APPA authorizes the use of additional procedures, 
    15 U.S.C. 16(f), those procedures are discretionary. A court need 
    not invoke any of them unless it believes that the comments have 
    raised significant issues and that further proceedings would aid the 
    court in resolving those issues. See H.R. Rep. 93-1463, 93d Cong. 2d 
    Sess. 8-9 (1974), reprinted in U.S.C.C.A.N. 6535, 6538.
    
    [a]bsent a showing of corrupt failure of the government to discharge 
    its duty, the Court, in making its public interest finding, should * 
    * * carefully consider the explanations of the government in the 
    competitive impact statement and its responses to comments in order 
    to determine whether those explanations are reasonable under the 
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    circumstances.
    
    United States v. Mid-America Dairymen, Inc., 1977-1 Trade Cas. (CCH) 
    para. 61,508, at 71.980 (W.D. Mo. 1977).
        Accordingly, with respect to the adequacy of the relief secured by 
    the decree, a court may not ``engage in an unrestricted evaluation of 
    what relief would best serve the public.'' United States v. BNS, Inc., 
    858 F.2d 456, 462 (9th Cir. 1988) (citing United States v. Bechtel 
    Corp., 648 F.2d 660, 666 (9th Cir.), cert. denied, 454 U.S. 1083 
    (1981)); see also Microsoft, 56 F.3d at 1460-62. Precedent requires 
    that
    
    the balancing of competing social and political interests affected 
    by a proposed antitrust consent decree must be left, in the first 
    instance, to the discretion of the Attorney General. The court's 
    role in protecting the public interest is one of insuring that the 
    government has not breached its duty to the public in consenting to 
    the decree. The court is required to determine not whether a 
    particular decree is the one that will best serve society, but 
    whether the settlement is ``within the reaches of the public 
    interest.'' More elaborate requirements might undermine the 
    effectiveness of antitrust enforcement by consent decree.\13\
    
        \13\ Bechtel, 648 F.2d at 666 (emphasis added); see BNS, 858 
    F.2d at 463; United States v. National Broadcasting Co., 449 F. 
    Supp. 1127, 1143 (C.D. Cal. 1978); Gillette, 406 F. Supp. at 716. 
    See also Microsoft, 56 F.3d at 1461 (whether ``the remedies 
    (obtained in the decree are) so inconsonant with the allegations 
    charged as to fall outside of the `reaches of the public interest' 
    '').
    
        The proposed Final Judgment, therefore, should not be reviewed 
    under a standard of whether it is certain to eliminate every 
    anticompetitive effect of a particular practice or whether it mandates 
    certainty of free competition in the future. Court approval of a final 
    judgment requires a standard more flexible and less strict than the 
    standard required for a finding of liability. ``[A] proposed decree 
    must be approved even if it falls short of the remedy the court would 
    impose on its own, as long as it falls within the range of 
    acceptability or is `within the reaches of public interest.' '' \14\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \14\ United States v. American Tel. and Tel. Co., 552 F. Supp. 
    131, 151 (D.D.C. 1982), aff'd sub nom., Maryland v. United States, 
    460 U.S. 1001 (1983) (quoting Gillette Co., 406 F. Supp. at 716); 
    United States v. Alcan Aluminum, Ltd., 605 F. Supp. 619, 622 (W.D. 
    Ky. 1985).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    VIII. Determinative Documents
    
        There are no determinative materials or documents within the 
    meaning of the APPA that were considered by the United States in 
    formulating the proposed Final judgment.
    
          Respectfully submitted,
    Donald J. Russell,
    Chief, Telecommunications Task Force, U.S. Department of Justice, 
    Antitrust Division, 1401 H Street, NW, Suite 8000, Washington, DC 
    20530, (202) 514-5621.
        Dated: December 30, 1998.
    
    Certificate of Service
    
        I hereby certify that copies of the foregoing Plaintiff's 
    Competitive Impact Statement were served by hand and/or first-class 
    U.S. mail, postage prepaid, this 30th day of December, 1998 upon 
    each of the parties listed below:
    Betsy Brady, Esq (by hand), Vice President-Federal Government Affairs, 
    Suite 1000, 1120 20th Street, NW, Washington, DC 20036, (Counsel for 
    AT&T Corp.).
    Kathy Fenton (by hand), Jones, Day, Reavis and Pogue, Suite 700, 1450 G 
    Street, NW, Washington, DC 20005, (Counsel for Tele-Communications, 
    Inc.).
    Peter A. Gray,
    Counsel for Plaintiff.
    [FR Doc. 99-824 Filed 1-13-99; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4410-11-M
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
01/14/1999
Department:
Antitrust Division
Entry Type:
Notice
Document Number:
99-824
Pages:
2506-2514 (9 pages)
PDF File:
99-824.pdf