Word: antitrust
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...criminal-justice system could use some streamlining, especially now that the Justice Department has one overriding mission, to prevent terrorism. But Ashcroft's plans raise plenty of questions. For one thing, if he reallocates agents and money to find future Mohamed Attas, other priorities--from civil-rights enforcement to antitrust efforts--may wither. Last week Ashcroft ensured that one conservative cause wouldn't be forgotten: reversing a Clinton Administration ruling, he allowed his department's drug agents to go after Oregon doctors who prescribe narcotics for suicide under that state's Death with Dignity law. (On Thursday a federal judge...
...company stood on the brink of a court-ordered breakup. Then an appeals court reversed the breakup order while keeping intact much of the lower court's anti-Microsoft rulings. Two weeks ago, the Justice Department, answering to a new President and distracted by Sept. 11, hastily inked an antitrust agreement in which the monopolist basically agreed to play nice. Now, with only minor changes to that deal, nine of the 19 original litigants, including New York, Ohio and Illinois, have found they too can do business with Mr. Bill. Under the terms of the agreement, Microsoft foots their legal...
Person of the Week VIGILANTE He may not have known when or what they will hit, but U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft warned Americans that terrorists were plotting ... something. Then he went on to tackle a different sort of adversary, announcing a tentative settlement of the Microsoft antitrust suit...
...wife of British Prime Minister Tony Blair than for her day job as a lawyer, but that didn't stop GE from hiring Booth to help with its appeal before the European Commission in the company's attempt to buy Honeywell. The move was blocked in July over antitrust concerns. Booth, 47, a mother of four, has worked primarily in employment law, and last month joined a new firm specializing in human rights...
Supporters of the antitrust lawsuit are worried that last week's announcement by Justice may be only the first shoe to drop. The next, they fear, could be a fuller capitulation, with the government settling the suit on terms that will let Microsoft continue to abuse its monopoly position. But Justice insists it's just trying to balance morality and mortality. "We hope," a top official said last week, "to bring the Microsoft case to a resolution in all of our lifetimes...