FTC Chairman Deborah Majoras Says No To Recusal Request

By Dan Keane
21:36, December 14th 2007
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FTC Chairman Deborah Majoras Says No To Recusal Request

In a statement posted on FTC website, Chairman Deborah Platt Majoras said she won’t recuse herself from the commission which is reviewing Google-Double Click transaction.

Majoras’ statement was issued after two privacy groups said FTC Chairman should recuse herself because DoubleClick had hired her old law firm, Jones Day, to represent them before the European Commission. John Majoras, her husband, remains at Jones Day.

On April 14, Google announced a definitive agreement to acquire DoubleClick Inc. for $3.1 billion in cash from San Francisco-based private equity firm Hellman & Friedman along with JMI Equity and management.

One week later Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC), a consumer privacy group, filled a complaint to Federal Trade Commission to investigate and block Google's proposed $3.1 billion deal to buy Double Click, unless the companies will improve consumer privacy protections. Electronic Privacy Information Center argued that the merger would violate agreed limits on how much data advertisers collect on consumers. "Google's proposed acquisition of DoubleClick will give one company access to more information about the Internet activities of consumers than any other company in the world," the complaint by the privacy activist groups argues. The Center for Digital Democracy and the U.S. Public Interest Research Group joined EPIC's complaint.

The $3.1 billion DoubleClick acquisition deal made by Google has also raised serious complaints from its Internet and media rivals. Microsoft, Yahoo!, AOL, AT&T, Time Warner and some other companies strongly suggest that anti-trust regulators should place under scrutiny Google’s deal.

On December 12 EPIC and the Center for Digital Democracy filled a motion with the Secretary of the Federal Trade Commission, seeking the disqualification of FTC Chairman Deborah Platt Majoras.

According to the motion, Chairman Majoras recused herself in the FTC’s review of the Proctor & Gamble acquisition of Gillette “because her former law firm, Jones Day, represented P&G

before the Commission, and Majoras’ husband remains an active partner with the firm.”

In her response to the motion, Deborah Majoras said she won’t recuse herself and her husband was is longer an equity partner in the firm.

“After reviewing the relevant facts and consulting with the FTC’s Designated Agency Ethics Official, Deputy General Counsel Christian S. White, the General Counsel, my fellow Commissioners, and members of my staff, I have determined not to recuse myself from this matter because the relevant laws and rules, as detailed below, neither require nor support recusal”, the FTC’s statement reads.

“Because my husband is not an equity partner in Jones Day, any decisions that I may make in any case in which Jones Day represents a party cannot be said to directly and predictably affect my husband’s interest in Jones Day. Hence, I do not have a financial conflict in this matter” Majoras added.

Another commissioner, William Kovacic, said that his wife also was a Jones Day lawyer who was not working on the Google-DoubleClick deal.

“As of January 1, 2006, my wife, Kathryn Fenton, converted to a nonequity status at the law firm of Jones Day and became a fixed participation partner in that firm. As a fixed participation partner, her compensation will not be increased or affected by changes in the firm’s income. Further, all benefits received by Ms. Fenton from Jones Day are the same as those earned by other similarly situated non-equity partners in the firm.”

The other three commissioners, Pamela Jones Harbour, Jon Leibowitz and J. Thomas Rosch all agreed. “We agree with the analyses in Chairman Majoras's and Commissioner Kovacic’s responses, and see no legal grounds that would disqualify them from participating in the investigation of the Google-DoubleClick transaction,” they wrote in a joint statement.

In Europe, antitrust regulators said last month that they were conducting their own investigation and would make a decision by April 2, 2008.



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