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Today β€” 27 February 2025Main stream

These companies had regulatory headaches. Then came Trump.

27 February 2025 at 02:07
Trump with gavel.
President Donald Trump's administration is dropping some lawsuits and investigations into major businesses.

Kyle Mazza/Anadolu via Getty Images; Chelsea Jia Feng/BI

  • The Trump administration is dropping regulatory cases.
  • Crypto firms including Coinbase and Robinhood have already benefited.
  • Antitrust enforcement against tech giants, however, is expected to continue under the current DOJ.

There will be winners and losers as the new Trump administration rewrites how business is regulated.

And after only its first month, a pattern is emerging, with four major Biden administration cases dropped and others left firmly standing.

Crypto? There are clear winners already, with Coinbase, OpenSea, and Robinhood seeing federal officials swiftly closing shop on probes and enforcement lawsuits.

Meanwhile, some legal experts predict an uptick in traditional securities cases and a continuation of the Biden DOJ's aggressive antitrust enforcement in cases against Apple, Google, Meta, Amazon, and Ticketmaster.

"Gail Slater, who's going to be confirmed head of the DOJ antitrust division pretty soon, is an experienced antitrust lawyer, and her confirmation hearings suggested she was pretty much going to stay the course," said attorney and Brookings fellow Bill Baer, who led the DOJ's antitrust division during the second Obama administration.

Here are the fortunate corporations whose federal cases or probes have been β€” or promised to be β€” dropped since Trump took office.

SpaceX
SpaceX logo on a phone
The Justice Department dropped a suit alleging hiring discrimination.

VCG/VCG via Getty Images

The Department of Justice plans to drop a lawsuit against SpaceX that it filed in 2023. In the lawsuit, officials accused Elon Musk's rocket company of discriminating against refugees and asylees in its hiring process.

SpaceX promptly sued to block the lawsuit, which was paused as both sides readied their cases. Yet on February 20, the Justice Department asked a federal judge to lift the original stay so that it could dismiss the case entirely.

In the initial suit, the department alleged that SpaceX discouraged refugees and asylees from applying to work at the company by incorrectly stating in job listings that it could only hire US citizens. The case referenced a tweet Musk sent in 2020 in which he said that "US law requires at least a green card" to be hired at SpaceX, as the rockets are "advanced weapons and technology."

Musk has become a centerpiece of Trump's second term and is closely linked to the White House DOGE Office, which has embarked on a mission to reshape the federal government and dismantle agencies. While the White House itself said in a court filing that Musk doesn't have any "actual or formal authority," he appears extremely close to Trump. Many Democrats and watchdog groups have questioned whether there are conflicts of interest given Musk's power in the private and, now, public sector.

Coinbase
A phone with Coinbase logo on it
The SEC's case against Coinbase lasted nearly two years.

Jaque Silva/NurPhoto via Getty Images

On February 21, the cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase said the Securities and Exchange Commission was ending a nearly two-year lawsuit against the company. The decision likely foreshadows an era of lighter crypto regulation during a second Trump term.

The SEC had accused Coinbase, the biggest US crypto exchange, of being an unregistered securities exchange, broker, and clearing agency. The company's CEO, Brian Armstrong, celebrated the decision, saying it was a "huge day" for Coinbase and calling the case "bogus."

Other industry leaders also welcomed the news, as BI previously reported. Though Trump once doubted crypto's merits, he's since become closely linked to the industry, releasing his own memecoin and creating a group to pursue regulatory changes.

Under former President Joe Biden, the SEC and its chair, Gary Gensler, drew the ire of much of the crypto community.

A spokesperson for the SEC declined to comment on this story.

OpenSea
NFT symbol above OpenSea logo
The SEC was investigating whether OpenSea was an unregistered securities marketplace.

Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto via Getty Images

OpenSea, which which lets users sell non-fungible tokens (NFTs), said the SEC was closing its investigation into the company on February 21. The investigation began in August 2024, when the SEC issued a Wells notice, which is typically sent before launching a formal suit, and alleged the company might have been functioning as an unregistered securities marketplace.

OpenSea's founder and CEO cheered the decision in a post on X, writing, "This is a win for everyone who is creating and building in our space. Trying to classify NFTs as securities would have been a step backward β€” one that misinterprets the law and slows innovation."

Robinhood
Robinhood's logo on a phone
The SEC had been investigating Robinhood's crypto unit.

Illustration by Thomas Fuller/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images

On February 24, the financial services platform Robinhood said in a blog post that the SEC would drop its investigation into the company's crypto unit, after sending a Wells Notice in May of 2024. The SEC told Robinhood in a letter that the investigation was over and it didn't plan to pursue a lawsuit, the post said.

"We appreciate the formal closing of this investigation, and we are happy to see a return to the rule of law and commitment to fairness at the SEC," Robinhood's chief legal, compliance and corporate affairs officer said in the post.

Cases to keep an eye on
A mouse hovers over the homepage screen of Ticketmaster
Trump's administration is expected to continue antitrust enforcement.

Matt Cardy/Getty Images

There has been no public sign of Trump's DOJ backing down after inheriting seven ongoing and massive federal antitrust-enforcement lawsuits β€” against Ticketmaster, Google, Meta, Amazon, and Apple.

The Ticketmaster case seeks to break up parent company Live Nation's concert venue, promotion, and ticketing arms, and has 27 states signed on as co-plaintiffs who could carry it forward should the Trump DOJ pull out. The case remains scheduled for trial in the spring of 2026.

The two Google cases are in their final stages.

The first, from 2020, was actually filed at the end of the first Trump administration and led a DC judge to find in August that Google maintained a search-engine monopoly. It will be another year of litigation before the search-engine case goes to trial on what the remedy should be, with the Biden DOJ having demanded that Google sell its Chrome browser.

In the second Google case, filed in 2023, the DOJ alleged at a September bench trial that the company has an adtech monopoly. A decision by a federal trial in Alexandria, Virginia is pending.

Two Amazon cases β€” one challenging the company's dealings with vendors, the other challenging its Prime subscriptions model β€” are working their way through the federal courts in Seattle, as is a government antitrust lawsuit against Apple.

The Federal Trade Commission's 2020 antitrust lawsuit against Meta is set for a bench trial before a DC judge on April 14. The FTC's new chairman, Andrew Ferguson, has vowed to go after Big Tech and its
"vendetta against competition," though it's expected he'll seek policy and contract changes rather than major breakups of any of these big companies.

Spokespeople for the FTC and DOJ did not immediately respond to requests for comment on this story.

Read the original article on Business Insider
Before yesterdayMain stream

Ex-Abercrombie & Fitch CEO requests a hearing to determine if he's mentally fit to be tried on sex-trafficking charges

10 December 2024 at 11:37
Mike Jeffries
Mike Jeffries, the former CEO of Abercrombie & Fitch, is asking a judge to rule on whether he is mentally fit for trial.

AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell

  • Attorneys for Mike Jeffries asked a judge to rule on whether he is mentally fit for trial.
  • Federal prosecutors would likely challenge the move, adding months to pretrial proceedings.
  • The former Abercrombie CEO is accused of running an international sex-trafficking business.

The former CEO of Abercrombie & Fitch is seeking to delay his federal sex-trafficking case on mental competency grounds.

Attorneys for the brand's former top executive, Mike Jeffries, asked a Manhattan judge on Monday to schedule a hearing to determine whether Jeffries is competent to stand trial, a spokesperson for the US attorney's office of the Eastern District of New York told Business Insider in a statement. Federal prosecutors are expected to challenge the move, which could add months to pretrial proceedings.

The defense would have until December 24 to file papers telling US District Judge Nusrat Choudhury how much of their competency motion can be sealed. The rest of the competency battle will play out throughout the first months of 2025.

The spokesperson said the defense has until February 6 to file a doctor's report supporting the competency motion, and the prosecution has until April 8 to file their own doctor's report. The competency hearing itself has yet to be scheduled, the spokesperson said. Jeffries is due back in court on March 13, 2025.

"We filed a motion to Determine Mr. Jeffries' Competency to Stand Trial, which will be dealt with in Court as, and when, appropriate β€” according to the Judge," Brian Bieber, an attorney for Jeffries, told BI in a statement. A competency hearing is meant to determine whether a defendant is able to understand the charges against them and the role of the judge, prosecutor, and defense attorney.

On October 22, Jeffries, his partner, and a third man were arrested in Florida on federal sex-trafficking charges. Prosecutors allege they ran an international sex-trafficking and prostitution business. The men used Jeffries' position at the company to coerce dozens of men, many of whom wanted to become Abercrombie models, to partake in "sex events" in America and abroad, prosecutors say. Jeffries and Matthew Smith, his partner, have been accused of paying for men to travel to their New York homes and international hotels, where they performed sex acts.

Jeffries, 80, served as Abercrombie's CEO from 1992 to 2014. The indictment alleges that the sex-trafficking spanned from about 2008 to 2015, though Breon Peace, the US attorney for the Eastern District of New York, said his office believes "dozens and dozens of men" were victims between 1992 and 2015.

During his time at Abercrombie, Jeffries steered the brand toward a more sexualized image, complete with shirtless models greeting shoppers. He was first hired by Les Wexner, a Jeffrey Epstein associate. At the peak of his career, Jeffries earned an annual eight-figure salary. His retirement package was reportedly around $25 million and he earned yearly payments of $1 million that ended last year.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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