I’ve received several comments on the idea of an Antitrust Whistleblower Statute. Some of the top comments are:
- Didn’t you retire? No.
- Well, you should have. I sometimes think the same thing, but what could be more fun than being an antitrust lawyer?
- Your website design stinks and for a nominal fee I can fix it and help you lose weight. I’m not worried about the website design. But, please email me with the weight loss help.
- There were concerns that, particularly with international cartels, a whistleblower award could be excessive. We agree that some allowance should be made to address this possibility. John Connor offered this helpful comment: “What is an appropriate standard for the size of the award? Using a percentage the employer’s fine is likely to be excessive. What about 5 or 10 years’ of the whistle-blower’s compensation?”
- There were some questions as to whether cartel whistleblower bounty provisions exist in other countries. That is a good question. We are researching that and will follow up.
- Several people noted that an antitrust whistleblower idea is not a new idea and has never received support in the past from the Antitrust Division or Congress. This is true, and we may get nowhere with our proposal this time. But, as we’ve noted, the leniency “cash cow” is slowing down and the SEC whistleblower provision has been a huge success (by most people’s estimation). Sometimes persistence pays off and the time may have come has come for a successful antitrust whistleblower push. And, I may humbly suggest that Kimberly Justice and I may have some insights based on our many years with the Antitrust Division that have not been considered before. We’ll see.
P.S.
The Grassley-Leahy Criminal Antitrust Anti-Retaliation Act of 2017, was just passed unanimously in the Senate. The legislation would make it unlawful for an employer to retaliate against an employee who reports a violation of antitrust laws or a crime connected to antitrust laws. This is the third time this legislation has passed the Senate unanimously, but it has never even been taken up by the House.
Stay tuned….
Thanks for reading.
Joe Murphy says
Robert – I assume you know in the UK that the CMA pays I believe it is 100,000 pounds for whistleblowers. Probably too low, since I don’t think they have had many or any.
One good thing about the SEC model is that it encourages people to report in-house first before calling the SEC. The same would be good here, plus companies could then pursue leniency. The SEC model also addresses “front-running”, i.e., company compliance people going to the SEC before those who raised issues internally, i.e., if I call the helpline to report a violation, the helpline people should not be allowed to beat me to the punch.
A question: would whistleblowing only apply for cartel conduct, or other types of violations, like gun jumping, RP violations, monopolization?
If the law protects whistleblowers be sure it protects those who report in-house, not just those who go to the government.
Cheers, Joe