-------- Original Message --------
Subject: whoo-hoo lookee who got caught
Date: Tue, 8 Aug 2000 16:06:10 -0400
From: "Crank" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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http://dailynews.yahoo.com/h/nm/20000808/re/compactdiscs_lawsuit_dc_5.html

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Twenty-eight U.S. states filed suit on Tuesday
accusing
the world's five largest record labels and three large music retailers
of
fixing prices of compact discs. The states are seeking ``hundreds of
millions of dollars'' in damages.

The suit, filed in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New
York, centers on a policy called ``minimum advertised pricing'' (MAP),
under
which the labels subsidized advertising for retailers that agreed not to
sell CDs below a minimum price determined by the labels.

New York State Attorney General Eliot Spitzer said in a statement,
``This
illegal action...has not been music to the ears of the public. Because
of
these conspiracies, tens of millions of consumers paid inflated prices
to
buy CDs...''

The suit alleges that the MAP policy increased CD prices in violation of
state and federal antitrust law, kept CD prices artificially high, and
penalized retailers who did not participate.

The five labels are Time Warner Inc.'s (NYSE:TWX - news) Warner Brothers
music group; Sony Corp.'s (6758.T) Sony Music Entertainment; Seagram
Co.'s
(Toronto:VO.TO - news) Universal Music Group; BMG, the music unit of
Bertelsmann AG (BTGGga.D), and EMI Group Plc (EMI.L).

Also named as defendants were three retailers: MusicLand Stores Corp.
(NYSE:MLG - news), which owns the Sam Goody chain of stores, Trans World
Entertainment Corp. (NasdaqNM:TWMC - news), which owns the Camelot Music
chain, and Tower Records.

Spitzer told a press conference the states were still calculating the
amount
of the damages but said they would come to ``hundreds of millions of
dollars,'' or ``several dollars per CD.''

A Warner Music Group spokesman said the lawsuit has no merit. ``We
continue
to believe that MAP served a valid business purpose and benefited
consumers
by substantially furthering retail competition and that it was an
appropriate and lawful practice.''

His statement was echoed by a BMG spokesman, who called the practice
``legitimate and appropriate and we are confident that the courts will
reach
the same conclusion.''

EMI also said the claims had no merit and would defend itself
vigorously.

MusicLand, Tower, Sony and Universal executives declined to comment.
Trans
World executives were not immediately available for comment.

In a settlement with the U.S. Federal Trade Commission announced in May,
the
five labels agreed to ban the MAP policy for seven years. The settlement
did
not require the labels to pay any damages, nor did the labels admit any
wrongdoing.

Spitzer said the FTC estimated damages to consumers at $480 million. He
called the figure ``a number that fair-minded people can rely upon.''

Many executives in the music industry have taken issue with the FTC's
damage
estimate. ``We have no idea how they arrived at that number,'' said
Pamela
Horowitz, president of the National Association of Recording
Merchandisers
(NARM).

She noted that based on the estimates of the labels' trade group
Recording
Industry of Association, the U.S. market for compact discs totaled about
$14.6 billion in 1999, which is based on the labels' list prices.

NARM's 1999 estimate of actual selling prices totaled $10 billion. And
while
she noted that there are differences in the ways that the two trade
groups
derive their numbers, the difference ``indicates a retail marketplace
aggressively competing for the consumer.''

The FTC was not available for comment.

According to the states' lawsuit, the MAP policy was put in place
beginning
in February 1995.

At that time, large department stores and consumer electronics retailers
began selling CD's below cost as a ``loss leader,'' in an effort to get
people into the stores to buy big-ticket items, labels said.

The labels say they started the MAP policy in an effort to help smaller
music retailers compete with chains such as Wal-Mart Stores Inc.
(NYSE:WMT -
news) and Circuit City Stores Inc. (NYSE:CC - news). They say smaller
retailers do not have the option of offsetting losses from cut-price CD
sales with sales of other products.

The labels say they received no financial gain from the MAP policy.
``The
wholesale price we charged retailers was the same whether or not they
participated in MAP,'' one label executive said.

But the states allege that if a retailer advertised a price below the
agreed
minimum, the retailer risked ``the loss of all promotional funds
available
from that (label) for a period of 60 to 90 days...(and) would jeopardize
promotional funds for an entire chain.''

Labels were providing ``upwards of millions of dollars in advertising
funds
to retailers per year,'' according to the lawsuit.

New York and Florida were leading the complaint, Spitzer said, joined by
Arizona, Arkansas, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Indiana,
Iowa,
Kansas, Maryland, Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, Nevada, New Mexico,
North
Carolina, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Texas,
Utah,
Vermont, Washington, West Virginia and Wisconsin.

The U.S. territories Northern Mariana Islands and Puerto Rico were also
included.

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