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90 A.B.A. J. 55 (2004)
Antitrust American Style

handle is hein.journals/abaj90 and id is 303 raw text is: xni'rus
American Style

Prosecutors Fear
Their Cartel-Busting
Efforts Will Fizzle if
U.S. Courts Are
Opened to Global
Price-Fixing
Litigation
JOHN   GIBEAUT

EBSTER'S DICTIONARY HARDLY CON-
tained enough superlatives for Jus-
tice Department officials in May 1999
when they announced guilty pleas by
the leaders of an international cartel
that for nearly a decade had raked in
billions of dollars by globally fixing
the prices of vitamins. The vitamin
cartel is the most pervasive and harm-
ful criminal antitrust conspiracy ever
uncovered, declared then-Antitrust Division chief Joel I. Klein. The
criminal conduct of these companies hurt the pocketbook of virtually
every American consumer-anyone who took a vitamin, drank a glass
of milk or had a bowl of cereal.
Pleading guilty were Swiss-based . Hoffman-La Roche Ltd., the
world's largest vitamin manufacturer, and the German company BASF
AG, the world's No. 2 producer.
The plea cost Hoffman La-Roche a $500 million fine, the largest the
Justice Department has ever obtained in a criminal case. BASF paid a
$225 million penalty for its role, enough for second place on the all-time
antitrust list. By late 2003, the criminal fine tally stood at nearly $1 bil-
lion from a dozen corporate defendants and 13 individuals.
And for the first time, a European national willfully submitted to U.S.
jurisdiction in an antitrust case. Swiss citizen Kuno Sommer, Hoffman-
La Roche's former marketing director, pleaded guilty, paid a $100,000
fine and spent four months in a federal prison. By the end of last year,
the remaining individuals also had gone to prison or were on their way.
Some 75 spin-off private civil cases in federal court also have collec-
tively settled for more than $2 billion, while state antitrust actions con-
tinue. Foreign governments, including the European Union, Canada
and Australia, have levied close to another $1 billion in fines against
cartel members. Private suits for damages are under way in Australia,
John Gibeaut is a senior writerfor the ABA Journal. His e-mail address is
gibeauij@saff. abanel.otg.

4pri/ 2004 ABA JOURNAL

ABA CONNECTION

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