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Quarterly Cartel Catch-Up: Recent Developments In Criminal Antitrust For Busy Corporate Counsel – 1st Quarter 2021 | Morrison & Foerster LLP

To embed, copy and paste the code into your website or blog: A new year, a new administration in the United States, and new cartel enforcement leadership in the United Kingdom have begun. In the United States, first-of-their-kind criminal charges have been brought involving labor and wages in an industry that had previously been largely untouched by cartel prosecutors. Federal legislation will now protect whistleblower employees, thereby encouraging them to report on their company’s anticompetitive conduct. A lot has happened since we last caught up on developments in cartel enforcement. Big changes are expected. Trillions of dollars are proposed to be spent by the federal government in the name of pandemic relief, just as the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) has begun bringing criminal charges through its Procurement Collusion Strike Force. Let’s catch up. 

More vaping lobbyists linked to Big Tobacco

More vaping lobbyists linked to Big Tobacco Share A second lobby group that played a key role behind the scenes in a government backbench revolt that killed vaping regulation last year has links to tobacco industry funding. As 28 backbenchers were pushed on June 23 to sign a letter condemning a proposed ban on importing nicotine solution for e-cigarettes, sparking a Senate inquiry, Legalise Vaping Australia set up a fighting fund in partnership with the Australian Retail Vaping Industry Australia, a lobby group which was secretly funded by Philip Morris. The links further expose the hidden money trail behind e-cigarettes, which have otherwise been promoted as hurting the tobacco companies.

Banned Coast car salesman fined 8k

ONE of the Gold Coast s worst car salesman placed 25 advertisements for the sale of used vehicles just days after being fined $1000 for making misleading claims. Parvis Amiri, also known as Pablo Amiri, of Labrador, had his motor dealer s licence suspended for six months in October, 2019 for failing to release a consumer from a contract and refund her when she attempted to exercise her cooling off rights. In January, 2020, he was fined $1000 for making misleading claims to a consumer about a vehicle s warranty and for accepting a deposit from another consumer but failing to complete the contract or refund the deposit.

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