FTC v. Amazon Court Filing, retrieved on Sep 26, 2023, is part of HackerNoon’s Legal PDF Series. You can jump to any part in this filing here. This is part 62 of 80.
471. State Plaintiffs re-allege and incorporate by reference the allegations in paragraphs 1-470 above.
472. At all relevant times, Amazon has had monopoly power in the worldwide market for online marketplace services for U.S. customers.
473. Amazon has willfully maintained its monopoly power through its course of anticompetitive and exclusionary conduct, including Amazon’s anti-discounting practices, which stifle price competition and tend to create an artificial price floor, and Amazon’s practice of coercing sellers who want their products to be Prime eligible into using Fulfillment by Amazon, which makes it more difficult and more expensive for rivals to offer increased product selection.
474. Although each of these acts is anticompetitive in its own right, these interrelated and independent actions have had a cumulative and synergistic effect that has harmed competition and the competitive process.
475. Amazon’s conduct has harmed and continues to harm competition, and Plaintiff States have therefore suffered and continue to suffer harm to their general economies and to their residents.
476. There is no valid procompetitive justification for Amazon’s anticompetitive and exclusionary conduct in the online marketplace services market.
477. Amazon’s anticompetitive and exclusionary conduct constitutes unlawful monopoly maintenance, in violation of Section 2 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. § 2.
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This court case 2:23-cv-01495 retrieved on October 2, 2023, from ftc.gov is part of the public domain. The court-created documents are works of the federal government, and under copyright law, are automatically placed in the public domain and may be shared without legal restriction.