Washington, D.C. — Senator Tom Cotton (R-Arkansas) today led four of his colleagues in a letter to Department of Justice Inspector General Michael Horowitz and Federal Trade Commissioner Inspector General Andrew Katsaros, demanding an investigation into systemic media leaks. These leaks, all to the same media outlet, resulted in negative headlines about the Biden-Harris administration’s antitrust targets and potentially violated ethics rules.
Co-signers to the letter included Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Kentucky), Senators Thom Tillis (R-North Carolina), Bill Cassidy (R-Louisiana), and Pete Ricketts (R-Nebraska).
In part, the senators wrote:
“These leaks result in negative headlines about the administration’s targets while the targeted companies have no way to respond, as they haven’t yet seen the potential lawsuits. Both DOJ and FTC have ethics rules that prohibit leaking civil cases before the cases are filed.”
Full text of the letter may be found here and below.
October 24, 2024
The Honorable Michael Horowitz
United States Department of Justice
Office of the Inspector General
950 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20530
Mr. Andrew Katsaros Inspector General
Federal Trade Commission
600 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20580
Dear Inspectors General Horowitz and Katsaros,
We write asking you to investigate whether the Department of Justice and the Federal Trade Commission have violated their own ethics rules by systematically leaking potential antitrust cases to a specific media outlet.
Since 2023, Bloomberg News has broken the news in at least twelve instances that DOJ or FTC was “preparing” or “poised” to take legal action before a lawsuit was filed. Indeed, the same journalist reported on eleven of these cases. This pattern strongly suggests that certain officials at DOJ and FTC are intentionally publicizing legal action days or weeks before filing.
These leaks result in negative headlines about the administration’s targets while the targeted companies have no way to respond, as they haven’t yet seen the potential lawsuits. Both DOJ and FTC have ethics rules that prohibit leaking civil cases before the cases are filed.[*]
Bloomberg News reporting DOJ and FTC antitrust actions before the filing of a lawsuit
January 23, 2023: DOJ Poised to Sue Google Over Digital Ad Market Dominance
February 23, 2023: DOJ Preps Antitrust Suit to Block Adobe’s $20 Billion Figma Deal
May 15, 2023: Amgen’s $28 Billion Horizon Deal Faces Unexpected FTC Hurdle
June 29, 2023: Lina Khan Is Coming for Amazon, Armed With an FTC Antitrust Suit
October 16, 2023: Real Estate Brokers Pocketing Up to 6% in Fees Draw Antitrust Scrutiny
February 20, 2024: FTC, States to Sue Over Kroger-Albertsons Deal Next Week
March 20, 2024: Justice Department to Sue Apple for Antitrust Violations
April 10, 2024: Nippon Steel Bid to Buy US Steel Gets Extended Antitrust Review
April 17, 2024: Tapestry’s $8.5 Billion Capri Deal Faces Planned FTC Lawsuit
May 22, 2024: US Justice Department to Seek Breakup of Live Nation-Ticketmaster
July 10, 2024: FTC Preparing Suit Against Drug Middlemen Over Insulin Rebates
September 23, 2024: Visa Faces Justice Department Antitrust Case on Debit Cards
These leaks aren’t just unethical, but they harm these companies’ employees, shareholders, and others. If the companies have engaged in wrongdoing, by all means the government should try them in a court of law. But the Biden-Harris administration shouldn’t try them in the liberal media. These leaks appear to be simply one more instance of this administration weaponizing the administrative state against politically disfavored opponents and critics, much like DOJ investigating parents at school-board meetings or the FTC targeting Elon Musk and Twitter for insufficient censorship of conservatives.
We urge you to investigate promptly these systematic, unethical, and potentially illegal leaks.
Sincerely,