Talk:List of price fixing cases/Archives/2017


List of largest price fixing settlements

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Infineon, which in September, 2004, pleaded guilty to antitrust charges in the investigation. Less than three months later, four Infineon executives agreed to prison terms of up to six months and individual fines of up to $250,000 each for their role in the conspiracy.
German chip maker Infineon has admitted to fixing prices on RAM and will pay a US$160 million fine.
Elpida will have to pay up US$84 million in fines
The Justice Dept. has levied more than $600 million in combined fines against Hynix, as well as Samsung and Infineon, for price-fixing.
New York's attorney general says three Asia-based companies have agreed to pay $571 million to settle claims by officials in eight states that they conspired to inflate prices for liquid crystal display screens used in televisions and computer monitors.
Three executives, Junichi Funo, Hirotsugu Nagata and Tetsuya Ukai, also agreed to plead guilty and to serve prison time in the U.S. ranging from a year and a day to 18 months
Nine producers of memory chips – including Samsung, Infineon, Hynix and Toshiba – are to pay a total €331m ($409m) in fines, in the first settlement deal over cartel offences with the European competition authorities.
The record labels agreed to settle — for $143 million
LG Display, Sharp, and Chunghwa Picture Tubes have agreed to plead guilty to allegations of price fixing.
Samsung, Sharp and five other LCD makers have agreed to pay more than $553 million to settle claims of price fixing.
The largest settlement payout will come from LG Display Co., which has agreed to pay $380 million in damages. AU Optronics Corp. will also settle for $170 million, while Toshiba Corp. agreed to pay $21 million.
Apple agreed Wednesday to pay $450 million to settle an antitrust lawsuit accusing the company of conspiring with publishers to set the price of e-books.
Italian services firm Saipem said Wednesday that it will appeal a $37,000 fine handed down in connection with a corruption trial in Algeria.
Italian services firm Saipem said Wednesday that it will appeal a $37,000 fine handed down in connection with a corruption trial in Algeria.

 Ark25  (talk) 13:27, 1 June 2013 (UTC)