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Opens with graphic treatment with sound bites embedded in graphics
ROBERT PITOFSKY
Consumers don't know too much about the anti-trust laws. They're highly technical and
complicated and they don't even know they're being had.
JEFF DOWNEY
The average person has to realize that while these antitrust concepts may be
amorphous legal principles, in practical application they have benefits for
everyday consumers.
JOHN CONNOR
We've had antitrust laws in this country for 115 years. Their purpose is to make
the playing field fair for buyers and sellers – to set rules that allow
full competition to flower.
TITLE UP: Fair
Fight in the Marketplace
Montage of 1950's film sequences of competitive
events: tug-of-war, wrestling, high jump, boxing match
ANNOUNCER
"Friendly competition. A desire to win. An enthusiasm that knows
no bounds. That's the spirit. The spirit of young America.
NARRATOR Competition—it
just seems to be part of who we are as Americans. We love a good contest among
rivals. A fight, fair and square, that's decided according to the rules of the
game.
A
fast-paced, modern montage representing a day in the life of the American
economic engine: bustling shopping malls, commodities trading, mega-merger
headlines, assembly lines, day trading, farm production, manufacturing, grocery
line check-outs, overnight delivery...
NARRATOR
Our economic system is driven by competition - giving us new products, new
services, even entire new industries.
This has resulted in creating one of the most productive and dynamic
economies in the world. But like any contest, the system works according to the
rules that govern it. When firms collude to set prices, or use their market
position to restrain trade, consumers pay the price. Which is why antitrust
laws were created: to make the fight in the marketplace a fair one.
CONNOR The
American economy is by and large very competitive. In industry after industry,
you see large numbers of companies battling hard to keep their market shares,
to make customers happy, to produce high quality products at lower and lower
prices over time. However, there
are some industries where prices can be controlled, not through an open bidding
process, not through an open competitive fight, but through the decisions of a
small number of decision makers who are driven by the hope of exorbitant
monopoly profits.
Host on camera
NARRATOR Our
antitrust laws were originally created at the end of the 19th
century in response to the excesses of corporations that controlled oil, steel,
railroads, and other industries. President Benjamin Harrison called them
"dangerous conspiracies against the public good." Since then, antitrust law
has set the ground rules for the pursuit of profits within our economy. Although
antitrust laws arose during the time of horse and buggies, the grievances that
prompted their creation remain today.
Period
photos, illustrations, political cartoons, and footage
Pictures (including caricatures and political cartoons) depict the US business landscape near the turn of the 19th century. Copy of Sherman Antitrust Act.
RUDY PERITZ, Professor of Law, NY Law School
In the 1890s there was a concern about the corrupting influence of great
concentrations of power of corporations and individuals who could use their
wealth to buy the kinds of legislation that they wanted. And so firms got
larger. Competitors banded together rather than competing. And every industry
from the railroads to makers of matchsticks and crepe paper were either forming
cartels or merging.
NARRATOR
Ohio Senator John Sherman feared this concentration of wealth and power in the hands of a
few large business interests, which back then were known as "trusts." Congress
eventually agreed, and in 1890, passed the Sherman Act to establish rules of competitive behavior in
the marketplace. The new statute became known as the Sherman "anti-trust" act.
GENE CREW, Attorney, Microsoft case
The wisdom behind the Sherman is incredible. Two sentences. One says let there be competition, the
other one says let it be fair. And that's the balance we have and those are the
rules.
Historic pictures of John D. Rockefeller, the early oil and automobile industry, and
Standard Oil
NARRATOR
It wasn't until 1906, during Teddy Roosevelt's administration, that the Sherman Act was put to the
test when the Federal government took on the poster-child of monopolies, the
Standard Oil Company.
RUDY PERITZ
John D. Rockefeller's Standard Oil Company was driving small competitors out of
business, imposing contracts on railroads. And not only that, but Rockefeller
got a piece of every shipping charge that was paid to the railroads by his
competitors!
NARRATOR
Ultimately, the U.S. Supreme Court determined Standard Oil's tactics to be monopolistic and
in restraint of trade. Rockefeller's billion-dollar company was then broken
into 34 smaller
entities that restored competition to the marketplace. Just imagine what it
would be like today if there was only one oil company and every gas station had
the same owner.
TV ANCHORMAN
The Bell System cracked today. The American Telephone and Telegraph Company agreed to
split up its communications empire into at least two smaller companies.
Early AT&T footage
NARRATOR
Seventy years later, the antitrust laws forced the breakup of another powerful
monopoly: the American Telephone and Telegraph Company. At the time, AT&T
had a stranglehold on all aspects of the telephone business, from long-distance
service to the telephones themselves.
MCI commercial sound-up
NARRATOR
With AT&T's breakup, new competitors entered the market; long-distance costs
dropped dramatically; and new products appeared. Many believe the arrival of
technologies like cell phones and high-speed modems was sped up because
multiple telecommunications companies were competing for customer dollars.
Contemporary cell phone technology
PITOFSKY
In the 1960s, the United States had by far the most vigorous antitrust enforcement
system in the world. By the 1980s
we probably had the least vigorous antitrust system in the world -close to it.
Antitrust was almost asleep in the 1980s. Since then, the effort has been to
try and find a middle ground.
Host on camera
NARRATOR
So, is there still a role for antitrust law in today's fast-paced global economy? Are
the laws still relevant more than a century after their creation? Or are they
just an obstruction to creating success in a free market? We'll look at three
recent high-profile cases involving major corporations that reveal the schemes
and methods of offenders - and see just what's at stake for consumers.
ARCHIVAL CARTOON
Two businessmen on phone
Sam: "Susdy old boy, I've got a great idea. Between us, we control 70% of the
country's soap sales. Let's raise and fix our prices. Controlling 70% of the
marketplace, why we'll clean up!"
Sudsy's devilish side: "Terrific. We'll make millions."
Sudsy's angelic side: "I smell trouble!"
Sudsy [to angel] "Quiet!" OK, Sam, it's a deal!"
Sudsy's angelic side: "You'll be sorry!"
Sudsy's devilish side squirts angelic side with ink, laughs
Graphic Intro:
Defendant:
Archer Daniels Midland
Violation:
Collusion to Fix Prices
SCOTT HAMMOND, DoJ Attorney
These are very very difficult crimes to detect.
JIM GRIFFIN, DoJ Attorney
Victims don't know that they'd been victimized. That can
happen for years, and victims don't know.
CONNOR
Probably less than one-third are discovered by the
authorities. And it's those kinds of percentages that continue to draw
businessmen into the game of price fixing.
NARRATOR
Archer Daniels Midland, or ADM, is a giant in the
agricultural products processing industry. In the early 90s, ADM developed a
new division to make the amino acid Lysine -- a feed additive used by ranchers
for livestock and poultry. It was a lucrative business for the handful of
lysine manufacturers, but ADM executives hatched a plan for a price-fixing
conspiracy to boost corporate profits even higher.
GRIFFIN
The world's major lysine producers had gotten together and
basically divided the world market. They determined how much they would
produce, how much each producer would sell, and at what price.
CONNOR
In a conspiracy of this type, they essentially divided up
the customers among themselves, and stopped competing for those markets.
HAMMOND
Hard-core antitrust offenses such as price fixing, bid
rigging -- is simply theft by well-dressed thieves. It's fraud, plain and
simple.
NARRATOR
Victims of such price-fixing schemes are people like
California egg farmer Paul Bahan, whose business is vulnerable to even small
price changes.
Paul Bahan in front of chicken sheds
PAUL BAHAN, Egg Farmer
The amino acids are very important as part of the feed to
the chickens. They're the most expensive part of the feed ration, and we're in
a business where a penny is huge. And I'm talking about a penny a dozen, not a
penny an egg. To give you an idea, if my costs of production is a penny greater
than it needs to be, in a small farm like this, to me that's $160,000 a year.
It's one significant component in the end of what I do, in this going away.
GRIFFIN
Initially the harm certainly is felt by the initial
purchaser – farmers. But ultimately, at some level, every one of us felt
the pinch of this cartel, in slightly higher prices for the end product.
BAHAN
I've still got to buy amino acids. They're still only four
or five people or whatever producing this stuff. I don't think your average
consumer cares, quite frankly. I don't know if they care or not. They should
because they're getting ripped off. You know, when my costs go up, I have
little choice but to exert pressure on the marketplace that I sell into.
ADM stock price
CONNOR
At the end of three years, when they had raised prices over
that period, they made an estimated 200 to 250 million dollars of additional
profits. Of course it's a very profitable way to do business -- in the United
States it's a felony. It's illegal.
FBI surveillance tapes of Lysine conspirators joking
about FBI, and then going on to discuss the world price for Lysine.
NARRATOR
Unbeknownst to the conspirators, one of the meeting
participants, ADM executive Mark Whitacre, was working with the FBI. He had set
up a hidden camera and microphone, which gave investigators in the room next
door a ringside seat to the criminal dealings.
Sound up of FBI tapes joking about FBI and FTC
HAMMOND
You can see five gentlemen sitting around a smoke-filled
hotel room, where they literally fixed the price of this lysine product around
the world down to the penny, effective the very next day. They understood
perfectly that what they were doing was illegal -- that's very clear. And they
also never thought they'd get caught. And so they laughed about the FBI, and
they laughed about their customers, and they joked about how they were able to
get away with their crime.
CONNOR
The officers of those companies -- and this is on tape --
very frequently repeated a kind of mantra. They said, "our customers are
our enemy, and our rivals are our friend."
Exec in FBI footage
"They are not my friends. You're my friend.
I wanna be closer to you than I am to any customer cause you can make us
money.
GRIFFIN
My initial reaction when I heard about them and was reading
some briefing books was [disbelievingly] "nobody really said that."
And then I watched the tapes.
Exec in FBI footage
"Let's put the prices on the board. Let's all agree that's what we're gonna
do and then walk out of here and do it."
NARRATOR With a mass of damning evidence, the government was able to
mount an aggressive case that led to the conviction of three ADM executives,
who collectively spent 99 months in jail. ADM's fine was 100 million dollars.
Press conference footage
JANET RENO
This $100 million criminal fine should send a message
worldwide, that if you engage in collusive behavior that robs United States
consumers there will be vigorous investigation and tough, tough penalties.
HAMMOND
This was our first fine above ten million dollars. We've now
fined over forty companies above ten million dollars. But even more so, I don't
know that we appreciated at that time, or could have imagined at that time what
effect it would have had on our partners abroad.
CONNOR
Many other countries are changing their laws now and making
price fixing not just a civil violation, but a criminal offense with serious
fines and serious prison sentences.
BAHAN
If they think they're going to go to jail and essentially be outed for the crooks that
they are—I think that's a deterrent. I'd like to think it's a deterrent.
I don't know what else we're gonna do.
ARCHIVAL
FILM
[Labor union film from 50s, two people
discussing prices]
Man 1: You're wrong.
Man 2: No, you're wrong.
Man 1: Look, it's simple. The more you produce, the more you buy. Production goes up,
prices come down.
Man 2: Yeah, but what if the manufacturer doesn't let the prices come down?
Man 1: He's got to.
Man 2: [disbelievingly] He's got to, my foot!
Man 1: All right, you wait and see.
Man 2: You wait and see.
Graphic Intro
Defendant:
Mylan Pharmaceuticals
Violation:
Conspiring to Restrict Supply
MEREDYTH ANDRUS
The net effect on consumers was that they had to make choices between whether to spend
money this month on groceries or to buy their drugs.
JUDY SOBZINSKI
I can't fathom how these type of people can even sleep at night knowing how they are
price-gouging the consumer.
On-camera with host
NARRATOR
Mylan Pharmaceuticals is one of the nation's largest generic drug manufacturers. In
1998, individual states joined with the Federal Trade Commission in charging
Mylan with conspiring to withhold essential ingredients used to make a generic
drug for the treatment of severe anxiety. Generic drugs typically sell for
significantly less than branded drugs, and are one of the consumer's main
protections against the high prices of medication. At least, that's the way
it's supposed to work.
Footage of pharmacy and prescription drugs
JEFF DOWNEY, Plaintiff Attorney
This case was an antitrust case that alleged that Mylan Pharmaceuticals had attempted to
cut off supplies to their competitors for two popular anti-anxiety drugs.
Essentially, the case alleged that by cutting off essential ingredients to
those products, Mylan was able to raise prices some to 2 to 3 thousand percent.
Lifestyle shots with elderly and medications
KATHLEEN FOOTE, Attorney, California state AG office
These two drugs in particular were very often given to older people. They had a
particular utility that wasn't shared by other kinds of anti-anxiety
medications on the market.
NARRATOR
Like growing numbers of Americans, Judy Subzinski suffered panic attacks that made
it difficult for her just to get through the day. Under her doctor's care, she
came to rely on Mylan's reasonably-priced anti-anxiety medication in order to
live a normal life.
JUDY SOBZINSKI, Patient
If I didn't have that medication I would have terrible anxiety and panic attacks. I
wouldn't be able to function properly. I would be on edge constantly.
CRAIG STERN, Pharmaceutical Consultant
When Mylan foreclosed the market by cornering the raw materials, they took products
that cost two to three or four cents a tablet, and increased them to where they
were costing 50, 60, 65 cents a tablet.
SOBZINSKI
I probably paid a couple thousand dollars extra from what I would have had to pay
over the time of when the price rise was in effect.
MEREDYTH ANDRUS, Attorney, Maryland state AG
You're talking about people who are already anxious, depressed, upset – when
they couldn't buy the medication that allows them to feel better, it
exacerbated their problem. We had witnesses contact us who told us they were
forced to make choices between buying their pharmaceuticals and buying food,
paying rent.
Footage of Judy writing letter
SOBZINSKI
It got to a point where I wrote a letter to Mylan the CEO sent me a letter three or four
weeks later, to tell me that he was very sorry but the reason that the price
had gone up was because the raw materials had gone up so drastically that there
was nothing they could do, they had to raise their prices. And that was that.
DOWNEY
Various complaints were relayed to one of Mylan's top executives, who was a vice president,
whose response was, "F-- those customers, they don't set prices."
SOBZINSKI
When I found out that what that CEO wrote to me was total baloney, had no truth to it
whatsoever, that they were the cause of this price increase, I was very angry.
Very, very angry.
NARRATOR
The nature of Mylan's violations motivated the Federal Trade Commission to pursue
significant penalties on behalf of consumers.
PITOFSKY
The real question in the case was what the remedy ought to be. Mylan had probably
profited in a little over a year to the tune of over a hundred million dollars.
FOOTE
In this particular case there was a multi-state settlement, other states were involved
in addition to California, and there was a hundred million dollar settlement.
That went to reimburse consumers, and it also went to reimburse state agencies,
ours and others, that had been affected by the over-charges.
SOBZINSKI
Now I know not to trust. To be more inquisitive, to dig more to try
to find out what's really going on.
ARCHIVAL FILM
[50s film of bully sitting on smaller kid]
Buly: Are you gonna be on my side if I let you up?
Kid: Sure, I'm on your side – just let me up. I'll do anything you say.
Bully: Ok, you're on my side."
Graphic Intro
Defendant: Microsoft
Violation: Illegal Maintenance of Monopoly
EUGENE CREW
Microsoft's conduct stifled innovation, eliminated competition, denied consumers choice,
and this for the foreseeable future.
RICK RULE, Microsoft Attorney
Look, if they bring a better product to the consumer and consumers like it and they're
buying it because they like it better than what else is out there in the
marketplace, Microsoft shouldn't be stopped from doing that. Everybody's better
off.
Host on camera
NARRATOR
It was the defining antitrust case of a generation. United States vs. Microsoft. The
case alleged that the giant software company based in Redmond, Washington,
crippled competitors' abilities to bring product to market, instead of winning
in the marketplace through innovation. On the surface, it was a struggle for
dominance over the internet browser between rivals Microsoft and Netscape. But
in fact, the stakes were much higher.
KEN AULETTA, Author
It took one of Bill Gates' assistants to go to Cornell University in, I think it was 95
or six, and discover -- my God, everyone is on this thing called the internet.
And we're not! And this company Netscape is providing a browser that's a window
to the internet, and we don't own it! And it could become an operating system
to compete with Microsoft's operating system, and that's menace.
ARCHIVAL CARTOON
"The management of every business has a continuing problem: to improve their product
to stay ahead of their competition or else!"
JEFF BLATTNER, Former US Deputy Assistant AG
Beginning in the mid-1990s, Microsoft embarked on a deliberate campaign to eliminate
Netscape and Sun Microsystems as competitive threats to the Windows operating
system. And the scheme involved both going to distributors, such as Internet
service providers and PC manufacturers, and effectively preventing them from
doing business with Netscape or with Sun for it's Java platform, and putting
Microsoft's version of the browser inextricably in the operating system, so
that the operating system used Microsoft's browser, regardless of what the
consumer actually wanted.
RULE
The government had staked out a position that what Microsoft had done had violated
the law, and Microsoft defended it, on the ground that what they were doing was
innovation.
MARTINA LAUCHENGCO JONES, former Microsoft & Netscape employee
They have an absolutely intense focus on the competition, more so than any other company
I have ever seen. That initially can be a good thing, because it drives a
tremendous amount of feature innovation, with the products at Microsoft. But it
ultimately, at the business level, becomes something very poisonous. And at the
executive level, it's not about whether or not we innovated our products and
they became great. It becomes about whether or not that competitor is dead.
CREW
There are two ways for someone like Microsoft to compete. One is on the merits --
innovation, lower prices, better products -- or not competition on the merits.
Which is, eliminate your competitor. Block your competitor from getting access
to resources they need, or blocking them to access to outlets that they need.
This is not competition on the merits. None of those acts benefit consumers.
JONATHAN KRIM, Journalist
Should the browser be the only browser that works in Windows, and more to the point,
should the browser that Microsoft makes be so tightly woven into the operating
system that any other browser that might be in the operating system doesn't
work as well? And that was what the case was really all about.
NARRATOR
The case, which was seen as a test of antitrust law in the age of technology, was heard
by Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson of the US District Court in Washington, D.C.
THOMAS PENFIELD JACKSON, U.S. District Court Judge (retired)
I didn't see any reason why conventional antitrust analysis couldn't be used to approach
the problems represented here. We're talking about markets, we're talking about
consumers, we're talking about consumer choice, we're talking about the pricing
of commodities.
NARRATOR
Part of Microsoft's defense hinged on whether it could prove to the judge that its
browser, Internet Explorer, was not a separate product competing with
Netscape's, but merely an extension of its Windows operating system.
JUDGE JACKSON
There was a lot of evidence. We had a trial that went on for six or eight months.
Ultimately, it was proven to me that they were indeed separable products.
NARRATOR
In the end, Judge Jackson ruled that Microsoft had illegally maintained their monopoly
and blocked competing Internet browsers from reaching consumers. Microsoft engaged
in a pattern of interference and intimidation, using its monopoly power in the
operating system market to punish any computer maker that tried to install a
rival browser. As a remedy, Judge Jackson recommended that Microsoft be broken into
two separate companies, one for the operating system and the other for
applications such as the browser.
JUDGE JACKSON
The case made by the government convinced me that nothing less than a division of the
company into two parts would resolve the problem of the anti-competitive effect
of Microsoft's business activities.
NARRATOR
Although Judge Jackson's remedy was not implemented, the ruling itself was upheld unanimously by a court of appeals. The ruling also paved the way for claims resulting in billions of dollars in
private damages. But despite the findings by the
courts, the federal government and some of the states that brought the suit
decided to settle the case after the 2000 presidential election.
Press conference footage
JOHN ASHCROFT, former US Attorney General
Today we're announcing a strong, historic settlement reached by the Department of Justice
and the Microsoft Corporation that will put an end to Microsoft's unlawful
conduct.
NARRATOR
The final settlement, rendered by the Court of Appeals, left Microsoft intact, while
imposing various types of competitive restraints and requirements. While some thought the remedy was
well-balanced, others were frustrated that it
didn't go far enough.
RULE
At the end of the process, after the court of appeals' decision, it was kind of a
validation that yes the antitrust laws have a role to play, yes they indicate
conduct that crosses the line versus that that doesn't. But they're also
sufficiently flexible to allow companies to compete and innovate and benefit
consumers.
BLATTNER
I think it's fair to say that the judgment has had very little, if any effect on the
marketplace. It has not spurred innovation, it has not spurred competition, it
has not significantly changed the browser market or personal computing.
CREW
We do know, that but for Microsoft's conduct, there would have been more innovation,
better products, lower prices. Because that's what naturally results from
competition.
NARRATOR
One of the central issues of the Microsoft case was to confirm the role of antitrust
protection in allowing innovations to get to the
market so that consumers can choose the products they prefer.
AULETTA
Every time I go out to interview as a journalist the Bill Gates' and Rupert Murdochs
of this world, one of the things that encourages me is how frightened they are.
As powerful as they are, they are frightened. And what are they frightened
about? They're frightened of someone they've never heard of, who's out there
inventing some new product that will menace their domination.
Archival cartoon of boy inventing rocket-pack in his garage
KRIM
You have an idea in this country, and what's at the base of
our culture is you can make it, you can bring it to market, you can sell it,
you can get rich maybe. That's an American dream that antitrust has a role in
protecting. And it also protects average consumers who don't want to have to
pay exorbitant prices for products because there' s only one.
Archival movie of car salesman lowering price to make a sale to a picky customer
RUDY PERITZ
The Sherman Act of 1890 and the antitrust laws are one of
the great American inventions. And it is an American invention. And it's also
one of the most successful American exports. There was no antitrust law before
there was one in the United States. And now there are antitrust laws in at
least 100 countries.
NARRATOR
Although not enshrined in the Bill of Rights or the Constitution, antitrust laws are
clearly fundamental to our country's system of free enterprise. They may seem
remote and complicated, yet they effect our everyday lives. They preserve
competition, in the way products and services are delivered, and the prices we
pay. They ensure the very dynamism of our economy. In the final analysis,
antitrust law gives consumers assurance that the fight in the marketplace can
be a fair one.
Credits & Music
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