JUSTICE SEES NO MONOPOLY IN
SEATTLE.
NewsInc • May 16, 2005 • Department of Justice. Antitrust Division investigation
on Seattle Times and Seattle Post-Intelligencer
agreement
Late Friday afternoon the anti-trust division of the U.S. Justice
Department said that it had closed an investigation into the
22-year-old agreement between the Seattle Times and the Seattle
Post-Intelligencer, saying that it had found no evidence of any
wrongdoing.
The division said in a that it "did not find sufficient
basis" to say that the Times had do anything wrong in recent years
to endanger the Post-Intelligencer's long-term survival.
But the justice department also said it would re-open the
investigation should one of the papers close.
The two papers have been locked in a legal war for two years, with
the Times saying that it has the right to end the joint operating
agreement between the two because it lost money for three consecutive
years, 2000-2002.
The P-I, owned by The Hearst Corp., has argued that the Times
overspent on its editorial product during that time in an attempt to
create enough losses to shut down the JOA.
Kerry Coughlin, the spokeswoman for the Seattle Times, told Reuters
that the fact that the Justice Department had dropped its
investigation, "validates what we knew, which is that we did not
engage in any anti-competitive conduct."
In a statement, Hearst said, "Our goal is to continue
JOA-publication of the Seattle Post-Intelligencer and to prevent the
Seattle Times Co. from turning Seattle into a one-newspaper town."
An early ruling in the suit and counter-suit regarding the shutdown
of the JOA is being appealed to the Washington State Supreme Court.
Interesting that Justice decided that a late Friday release of this
information was necessary. It would suggest there wasn't a lot of
enthusiasm about dropping the investigation (but, I've been wrong
before).
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