Tunney Act Explained

Shorttitle:Antitrust Procedures and Penalties Act (APPA)
Othershorttitles:APPA
Longtitle:An act to reform consent decree procedures, to increase penalties for violation of the Sherman Act, and to revise the Expediting Act as it pertains to Appellate Review
Nickname:Tunney Act
Enacted By:93rd

The Tunney Act, officially known as the Antitrust Procedures and Penalties Act, is antitrust legislation passed in the United States in 1974.

Submitted by John V. Tunney, the law has as its main point the court review Justice Department decisions regarding mergers and acquisitions.[1] It has been referred to in the AT&T actions with regards to SBC and BellSouth,[2] along with the acquisition of Sprint by T-Mobile proposed in 2018.[3]

External links

Text of Act

Notes and References

  1. News: Federal Judge Wraps Up Hearings Into CVS-Aetna Deal . June 6, 2019 . Thomas M.. Burton. .
  2. News: Judge Looks Into Modifying Terms of 2 Phone Mergers. Stephen. Labaton. July 8, 2006. .
  3. News: Notice of Antitrust Division of Proposed Final Judgement and Competitive Impact Statement. Aug 12, 2019. Federal Register.